Skougaard M, Stisen Z R, Jørgensen T S, Egeberg A, Hansen R L, Perez-Chada L M, Mogensen M, Merola J F, Gerwien J G, Kristensen L E
The Parker Institute, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Clinical Immunology, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark.
Scand J Rheumatol. 2023 May;52(3):259-267. doi: 10.1080/03009742.2022.2044116. Epub 2022 Mar 18.
To examine the prevalence of sleep disturbances, quantified by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA), psoriasis (PsO) and healthy controls (HCs), explore associations between PSQI and clinical and patient-reported outcomes, and evaluate the effect of treatment on PSQI.
Patients were included from the Parker Institute's PsA patient cohort to evaluate the prevalence of sleep disturbances. Univariate and multivariate regression analyses were used to explore associations between sleep disturbance and outcome measures. Treatment effect in PsA patients was assessed with a mixed-effect model for repeated measures.
In total, 109 PsA patients, 20 PsO patients, and 20 HCs were included. Sleep disturbances were reported by 66.1% of PsA patients, 45.0% of PsO patients, and 15.0% of HCs. Univariate regression analyses revealed statistically significant associations (p < 0.001) between PSQI and Disease Activity Score (DAS28CRP), tender points, visual analogue scale (VAS) patient global and pain, Psoriatic Arthritis Impact of Disease fatigue, Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ), and painDETECT score. Multivariate regression analysis demonstrated VAS patient global, VAS pain, and tender points as being independently associated with PSQI. The mixed-effect model revealed no effect of treatment.
More PsA patients than PsO patients and HCs reported sleep disturbances. Sleep disturbances were associated with inflammatory and non-inflammatory measures possibly explaining the limited effect of treatment. This demonstrates the need for interdisciplinary approaches to improve the management of sleep disturbance in PsA.: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02572700).
采用匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)量化评估银屑病关节炎(PsA)患者、银屑病(PsO)患者及健康对照者(HCs)睡眠障碍的患病率,探讨PSQI与临床及患者报告结局之间的关联,并评估治疗对PSQI的影响。
纳入帕克研究所PsA患者队列中的患者以评估睡眠障碍的患病率。采用单因素和多因素回归分析来探讨睡眠障碍与结局指标之间的关联。采用重复测量的混合效应模型评估PsA患者的治疗效果。
共纳入109例PsA患者、20例PsO患者和20例HCs。66.1%的PsA患者、45.0%的PsO患者和15.0%的HCs报告有睡眠障碍。单因素回归分析显示,PSQI与疾病活动评分(DAS28CRP)、压痛点数、视觉模拟量表(VAS)患者整体评分和疼痛评分、银屑病关节炎疾病疲劳影响、健康评估问卷(HAQ)以及疼痛DETECT评分之间存在统计学显著关联(p<0.001)。多因素回归分析表明,VAS患者整体评分、VAS疼痛评分和压痛点数与PSQI独立相关。混合效应模型显示治疗无效果。
报告有睡眠障碍的PsA患者多于PsO患者和HCs。睡眠障碍与炎症和非炎症指标相关,这可能解释了治疗效果有限的原因。这表明需要采用跨学科方法来改善PsA患者睡眠障碍的管理。:ClinicalTrials.gov(NCT02572700)