Newlands Abigail F, Kramer Melissa L, Maxwell Kayleigh, Price Jessica L, Finlay Katherine A
School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, UK.
Live UTI Free Ltd, Dublin, Ireland.
Health Psychol Behav Med. 2024 Nov 3;12(1):2420806. doi: 10.1080/21642850.2024.2420806. eCollection 2024.
Recurrent urinary tract infection (rUTI) is associated with significant symptom and quality of life burden. Given the unique challenges in diagnostics and management, healthcare disillusionment and stigmatisation which distinguish rUTI from other urological conditions, specific identification of the key illness processes experienced by this patient population is required. This study aimed to identify the unique illness processes and perceptions that contribute to quality of life in rUTI, through perceived health status, psychological wellbeing, and coping. An international sample of adults living with rUTI (389, 96.9% female) completed a cross-sectional survey comprising the following standardised questionnaires: the EuroQoL EQ-5D-5L, Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9), Generalised Anxiety Disorder 7 (GAD-7), Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale-10 (CD-RISC-10), Pain Catastrophising Scale (PCS). Sociodemographic characteristics were also assessed. Structural equation modelling was conducted to identify the underlying constructs which contributed to psychological wellbeing in rUTI, establishing the 'rUTI Illness Process Model'. The positive relationship between 'perceived health status' and 'psychological wellbeing' was partially mediated by 'rUTI coping', after controlling for the impact of household income and age (< .001). The model demonstrated a large effect size ( = .81) and good local and global fit. Overall, rUTI coping skills, boosted by resilience and weakened by pain catastrophising, contribute to a significant proportion of the positive relationship between perceived health status and psychological wellbeing in rUTI. A uniquely vulnerable patient phenotype emerges from this new research, with patients who are younger and/or of lower socioeconomic status at greater risk of poorer rUTI health outcomes and psychological wellbeing, potentially requiring further support. The rUTI Illness Process Model establishes the crucial need to clinically characterise the individualised illness perceptions and metacognitive strategies held by people living with rUTI, revealing that patient-centred interventions targeting illness perceptions and coping strategies require prioritisation to enhance patient outcomes and the patient experience of living with rUTI.
复发性尿路感染(rUTI)会给患者带来明显的症状负担和生活质量问题。鉴于rUTI在诊断和管理方面面临独特挑战,以及其与其他泌尿系统疾病不同的医疗失望感和污名化现象,需要明确该患者群体所经历的关键疾病过程。本研究旨在通过感知健康状况、心理健康和应对方式,确定导致rUTI患者生活质量的独特疾病过程和认知。一项针对rUTI成年患者的国际样本(389例,96.9%为女性)完成了一项横断面调查,该调查包括以下标准化问卷:欧洲五维健康量表(EuroQoL EQ-5D-5L)、患者健康问卷9项(PHQ-9)、广泛性焦虑障碍量表7项(GAD-7)、康纳-戴维森心理韧性量表10项(CD-RISC-10)、疼痛灾难化量表(PCS)。还评估了社会人口学特征。采用结构方程模型来确定影响rUTI患者心理健康的潜在因素,建立“rUTI疾病过程模型”。在控制家庭收入和年龄的影响后(<0.001),“感知健康状况”与“心理健康”之间的正相关关系部分由“rUTI应对方式”介导。该模型显示出较大的效应量(=0.81),局部和整体拟合良好。总体而言,rUTI应对技能受心理韧性增强,受疼痛灾难化削弱,在很大程度上促成了rUTI患者感知健康状况与心理健康之间的正相关关系。这项新研究揭示了一种独特的脆弱患者表型,即年龄较小和/或社会经济地位较低的患者,rUTI健康状况较差和心理健康问题的风险更高,可能需要进一步的支持。rUTI疾病过程模型明确了临床上对rUTI患者个体疾病认知和元认知策略进行特征化的迫切需求,表明针对疾病认知和应对策略的以患者为中心的干预措施需要优先考虑,以改善患者结局和rUTI患者的生活体验。