School of Medicine and Psychology, Australian National University, 54 Mills Road, Canberra, 2601, ACT, Australia.
Department of Health Economics, Wellbeing and Society, National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, 63 Eggleston Road, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia.
Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2024 Aug 14;19(1):297. doi: 10.1186/s13023-024-03319-2.
People with a rare disease commonly experience long delays from the onset of symptoms to diagnosis. Rare diseases are challenging to diagnose because they are clinically heterogeneous, and many present with non-specific symptoms common to many diseases. We aimed to explore the experiences of people with myositis, primary immunodeficiency (PID), and sarcoidosis from symptom onset to diagnosis to identify factors that might impact receipt of a timely diagnosis.
This was a qualitative study using semi-structured interviews. Our approach was informed by Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). We applied the lens of uncertainty management theory to tease out how patients experience, assess, manage and cope with puzzling and complex health-related issues while seeking a diagnosis in the cases of rare diseases.
We conducted interviews with 26 people with a rare disease. Ten participants had been diagnosed with a form of myositis, 8 with a primary immunodeficiency, and 8 with sarcoidosis. Time to diagnosis ranged from 6 months to 12 years (myositis), immediate to over 20 years (PID), and 6 months to 15 years (sarcoidosis). We identified four themes that described the experiences of participants with a rare disease as they sought a diagnosis for their condition: (1) normalising and/or misattributing symptoms; (2) particularising by clinicians; (3) asserting patients' self-knowledge; and (4) working together through the diagnosable moment.
Managing medical uncertainty in the time before diagnosis of a rare disease can be complicated by patients discounting their own symptoms and/or clinicians discounting the scale and impact of those symptoms. Persistence on the part of both clinician and patient is necessary to reach a diagnosis of a rare disease. Strategies such as recognising pattern failure and accommodating self-labelling are key to diagnosis.
患有罕见病的人通常从出现症状到确诊会经历很长的延迟。罕见病的诊断具有挑战性,因为它们在临床上具有异质性,并且许多疾病的症状并不具有特异性。我们旨在探讨肌炎、原发性免疫缺陷(PID)和结节病患者从症状出现到诊断的经历,以确定可能影响及时诊断的因素。
这是一项使用半结构式访谈的定性研究。我们的方法受到解释现象学分析(IPA)的启发。我们应用不确定性管理理论的视角,揭示患者在寻求罕见病诊断时如何体验、评估、管理和应对棘手且复杂的与健康相关的问题。
我们对 26 名患有罕见病的患者进行了访谈。10 名参与者被诊断为某种形式的肌炎,8 名患有原发性免疫缺陷,8 名患有结节病。从诊断到确诊的时间从 6 个月到 12 年不等(肌炎),立即到超过 20 年不等(PID),6 个月到 15 年不等(结节病)。我们确定了四个主题,描述了参与者在寻求疾病诊断时的罕见病经历:(1)症状正常化和/或归因错误;(2)临床医生的个体化;(3)坚持患者的自我知识;(4)通过可诊断的时刻共同努力。
在罕见病诊断之前管理医疗不确定性可能会变得复杂,因为患者可能会低估自己的症状,或者临床医生可能会低估这些症状的严重程度和影响。临床医生和患者都需要坚持,才能确诊罕见病。识别模式失败和适应自我标记等策略是诊断的关键。