Department of Public Health and Primary Care Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Department of Rheumatology, King's College Hospital London, London, UK.
Rheumatology (Oxford). 2024 May 2;63(5):1259-1272. doi: 10.1093/rheumatology/kead369.
A limited range of neuropsychiatric symptoms have been reported in systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases (SARDs), with varied symptom prevalence. This study aimed to investigate a wider range of potential symptoms than previous studies, compare patient self-reports with clinician estimates, and explore barriers to symptom identification.
Mixed methods were used. Data from SARDs patients (n = 1853) were compared with controls (n = 463) and clinicians (n = 289). In-depth interviews (n = 113) were analysed thematically. Statistical tests compared means of survey items between patients and controls, 8 different SARD groups, and clinician specialities.
Self-reported lifetime prevalences of all 30 neuropsychiatric symptoms investigated (including cognitive, sensorimotor and psychiatric) were significantly higher in SARDs than controls. Validated instruments assessed 55% of SARDs patients as currently having depression and 57% anxiety. Barriers to identifying neuropsychiatric symptoms included: (i) limits to knowledge, guidelines, objective tests and inter-speciality cooperation; (ii) subjectivity, invisibility and believability of symptoms; and (iii) under-eliciting, under-reporting and under-documenting. A lower proportion of clinicians (4%) reported never/rarely asking patients about mental health symptoms than the 74% of patients who reported never/rarely being asked in clinic (P < 0.001). Over 50% of SARDs patients had never/rarely reported their mental health symptoms to clinicians, a proportion underestimated at <10% by clinicians (P < 0.001).
Neuropsychiatric symptom self-reported prevalences are significantly higher in SARDs than controls, and are greatly underestimated by most clinicians. Research relying on medical records and current guidelines is unlikely to accurately reflect patients' experiences of neuropsychiatric symptoms. Improved inter-speciality communication and greater patient involvement is needed in SARD care and research.
在系统性自身免疫性风湿病(SARD)中已经报道了有限范围的神经精神症状,但症状的流行程度各不相同。本研究旨在调查比以前的研究更广泛的潜在症状范围,比较患者的自我报告和临床医生的估计,并探讨识别症状的障碍。
采用混合方法。将 SARD 患者(n=1853)的数据与对照组(n=463)和临床医生(n=289)进行比较。对 113 名患者进行了深入访谈,并进行了主题分析。统计检验比较了患者和对照组、8 种不同的 SARD 组和临床医生专业之间调查项目的平均值。
自我报告的 30 种神经精神症状(包括认知、感觉运动和精神)的终生患病率在 SARD 中明显高于对照组。经过验证的工具评估了 55%的 SARD 患者目前患有抑郁症,57%的患者患有焦虑症。识别神经精神症状的障碍包括:(i)知识、指南、客观测试和跨专业合作的局限性;(ii)症状的主观性、不可见性和可信度;以及(iii)引出不足、报告不足和记录不足。报告从未/很少询问患者精神健康症状的临床医生比例(4%)低于报告从未/很少在诊所被询问的患者比例(74%)(P<0.001)。超过 50%的 SARD 患者从未/很少向临床医生报告过他们的精神健康症状,而临床医生对此的估计比例不到 10%(P<0.001)。
与对照组相比,SARD 患者的神经精神症状自我报告患病率明显更高,而且大多数临床医生对此严重低估。依赖病历和当前指南的研究不太可能准确反映患者的神经精神症状体验。SARD 护理和研究需要加强跨专业沟通和更多的患者参与。