Wu Ruihan, Zhou Jiali, Liu Huafen, Liu Shanshan, Ma Xiaojie, Li Tian, Tao Jingjing, Cai Zhongxiang
Department of Nursing, Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan, China.
Department of Cardiology, Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan, China.
Front Psychol. 2025 Aug 15;16:1633445. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1633445. eCollection 2025.
Cardiovascular disease with multimorbidity imposes substantial long-term financial burdens. Financial toxicity, the financial burden associated with healthcare, is increasingly recognized as a psychosocial stressor affecting health outcomes among chronically ill populations. However, its psychological heterogeneity in non-cancer patients is understudied. We aimed to identify financial toxicity profiles, their determinants, and associations with anxiety/depression in cardiovascular non-cancer multimorbidity.
This study used a cross-sectional design. Utilizing latent profile analysis to identify distinct financial toxicity subgroups. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were employed to explore factors associated with subgroup membership. Inverse probability of treatment weighting based on covariate balancing propensity scores was applied to assess the associations between financial toxicity profiles and psychological distress. Doubly robust regression models were utilized to validate the robustness of the observed associations.
Financial toxicity was categorized into three latent profiles: mild (63.8%), moderate (11.0%), and none (25.2%). Demographic, economic, social support, and coping variables significantly differed across profiles. In weighted regression models using inverse probability of treatment weighting based on covariate balancing propensity scores, both mild and moderate toxicity were associated with elevated anxiety ( = 1.88 and 8.68, respectively) and depression scores ( = 4.21 and 11.92; all < 0.01) compared to the no-toxicity group. These associations remained robust in doubly robust models adjusting for covariates (GAD-7: = 1.72 and 8.31; PHQ-9: = 4.08 and 11.48).
Financial toxicity is prevalent and heterogeneous in cardiovascular multimorbidity. Its distinct profiles predict elevated psychological distress, supporting targeted interventions to alleviate financial burden and enhance mental health resilience.
患有多种疾病的心血管疾病会带来巨大的长期经济负担。财务毒性,即与医疗保健相关的经济负担,越来越被认为是一种影响慢性病患者健康结局的社会心理压力源。然而,其在非癌症患者中的心理异质性研究不足。我们旨在确定财务毒性概况、其决定因素以及与心血管非癌症多种疾病患者焦虑/抑郁的关联。
本研究采用横断面设计。利用潜在类别分析来识别不同的财务毒性亚组。采用单变量和多变量逻辑回归分析来探索与亚组成员资格相关的因素。基于协变量平衡倾向得分的治疗加权逆概率用于评估财务毒性概况与心理困扰之间的关联。使用双重稳健回归模型来验证观察到的关联的稳健性。
财务毒性分为三种潜在概况:轻度(63.8%)、中度(11.0%)和无(25.2%)。不同概况的人口统计学、经济、社会支持和应对变量存在显著差异。在基于协变量平衡倾向得分的治疗加权逆概率的加权回归模型中,与无毒组相比,轻度和中度毒性均与焦虑(分别为1.88和8.68)和抑郁得分升高(分别为4.21和11.92;均P<0.01)相关。在调整协变量的双重稳健模型中,这些关联仍然稳健(广泛性焦虑量表-7:分别为1.72和8.31;患者健康问卷-9:分别为4.08和11.48)。
财务毒性在心血管多种疾病中普遍存在且具有异质性。其不同概况预示着心理困扰加剧,支持采取有针对性的干预措施来减轻经济负担并增强心理健康恢复力。