Department of Psychology, MSH Medical School Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
BMJ Open. 2022 Nov 17;12(11):e067821. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-067821.
Seven of 10 patients with non-dialysis chronic kidney disease (CKD) experience burdensome persistent somatic symptoms (PSS). Despite the high prevalence and relevance for quality of life, disease progression and mortality, the pathogenesis of PSS in CKD remains poorly understood. The SOMA.CK study aims to investigate biopsychosocial predictors and their interactions for PSS in non-dialysis CKD and to develop a multivariate prognostic prediction model for PSS in CKD.
The study is a mixed-methods cohort study with assessments at baseline, 6 and 12 months. It aims to include 330 patients with CKD stages G2-4 (eGFR=15-89 mL/min/1.73 m). Primary outcome is the CKD-specific somatic symptom burden assessed with the CKD Symptom Burden Index. Secondary outcomes include quality of life, general somatic symptom burden and functioning. The interplay of biomedical (eg, biomarkers, epigenetics), treatment-related (eg, therapies and medication) and psychosocial variables (eg, negative affectivity, expectations) will be investigated to develop a prognostic prediction model for PSS. In an embedded mixed-methods approach, an experimental study in 100 patients using an affective picture paradigm will test the effect of negative affect induction on symptom perception. An embedded longitudinal qualitative study in 40-50 newly diagnosed patients will use thematic analysis to explore mechanisms of symptom development after receiving a CKD diagnosis. SOMA.CK is part of the interdisciplinary research unit 'Persistent SOMAtic Symptoms ACROSS Diseases'.
The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Hamburg Medical Association (2020-10195-BO-ff). Findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, scientific conferences, the involvement of our patient advisory board and the lay public. Focusing on subjective symptom burden instead of objective disease markers will fundamentally broaden the understanding of PSS in CKD and pave the path for the development of mechanism-based tailored interventions.
ISRCTN16137374.
10 名非透析慢性肾脏病(CKD)患者中有 7 名患有负担沉重的持续性躯体症状(PSS)。尽管 PSS 对生活质量、疾病进展和死亡率具有高度相关性和重要性,但 CKD 中 PSS 的发病机制仍知之甚少。SOMA.CK 研究旨在调查非透析 CKD 中 PSS 的生物心理社会预测因素及其相互作用,并为 CKD 中 PSS 开发一个多变量预后预测模型。
该研究是一项混合方法队列研究,在基线、6 个月和 12 个月时进行评估。它旨在纳入 330 名 CKD 2-4 期(eGFR=15-89ml/min/1.73m)患者。主要结局是使用 CKD 躯体症状负担指数评估 CKD 特异性躯体症状负担。次要结局包括生活质量、一般躯体症状负担和功能。将研究生物医学(例如生物标志物、表观遗传学)、治疗相关(例如治疗和药物)和心理社会变量(例如负性情绪、期望)的相互作用,以开发 PSS 的预后预测模型。在一个嵌入式混合方法方法中,对 100 名患者使用情感图片范式进行的实验研究将测试负性情绪诱导对症状感知的影响。在新诊断的 40-50 名患者中进行嵌入式纵向定性研究,使用主题分析来探索接受 CKD 诊断后症状发展的机制。SOMA.CK 是跨疾病持续性躯体症状跨学科研究单位的一部分。
该研究已获得汉堡医学协会伦理委员会的批准(2020-10195-BO-ff)。研究结果将通过同行评议的出版物、科学会议、我们的患者咨询委员会的参与以及普通公众进行传播。专注于主观症状负担而不是客观疾病标志物,将从根本上拓宽对 CKD 中 PSS 的理解,并为开发基于机制的针对性干预措施铺平道路。
ISRCTN85566137。