| Literature DB >> 27338883 |
J Mathers1, C Rick1, C Jenkinson2, R Garside3, H Pall4, R Mitchell5, S Bayliss1, L L Jones1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review and synthesise qualitative research studies that have explored patients' experience of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in advanced Parkinson's disease (PD).Entities:
Keywords: Deep Brain Stimulation; Patient experience; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27338883 PMCID: PMC4932278 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Flow diagram of included and excluded studies. DARE, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects; DBS, deep brain stimulation; HTA, Health Technology Assessment; PD, Parkinson's disease; SSCI, Social Sciences Citation Index.
Key characteristics of included papers
| First author | Year published | Country | Study focus/aim* | Participants | Data collection method | Data collection time point | Analysis method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haahr | 2011 | Denmark | To explore patients' life world and way of managing life with advanced PD prior to DBS and what they expect from life following this treatment | 11 participants; 8 men, 3 women; mean age at | Audio recorded in-depth interviews | Pre-DBS: ∼2 weeks prior to surgery | Guided by the hermeneutic phenomenological methodology of van Manen |
| Agid | 2006 | France | To understand the personal, familial and social difficulties experienced by patients with PD following neurosurgery | 29 patients; mean age 52.4 years; mean disease duration 10.8 years | Audio recorded repeated in-depth open interviews | Pre-DBS and post-DBS at two time points: prior to and 24 months after surgery | Not reported |
| Haahr | 2013 | Denmark | To explore the lived experience of being a spouse to a person living with advanced PD, before and during the first year of DBS | 9 spouses of patients with PD; 3 men, 6 women; mean age of the spouses at their partners’ disease onset 46 years (range 27–61); mean age of the spouses at the time of their partners’ treatment with DBS 61 years (range 41–76) | Audio recorded longitudinal qualitative in-depth interviews | Pre-DBS and post-DBS at 4 time points: 2–4 | Thematic analysis influenced by the hermeneutic phenomenological methodology of van Manen |
| Gisquet | 2008 | France | To understand the personal, familial and professional difficulties experienced by patients in France who have a neurodegenerative disease and undergo cerebral implants | 30 participants; 17 men, 13 women; age range 39–79 years | Audio recorded cross-sectional interviews | Pre-DBS and post-DBS at 3 time points: prior to surgery, 1 day to 6 months and at least 2 years after surgery | Thematic analysis |
| Haahr | 2010 | Denmark | To explore and describe the lived experience of patients living with advanced PD during the first year of treatment with DBS | 9 participants†; 6 men and 3 women; mean age at DBS 61 years (range 47–67); | Audio recorded longitudinal qualitative in-depth interviews | Post-DBS at 3 time points: 6–8 weeks, 6 and 12 months after surgery | Guided by the hermeneutic phenomenological methodology of van Manen |
| Ahlberg | 2011 | Sweden | To explore perspectives of the way patients speech and communication changed as a result of subthalamic nucleus DBS treatment for PD | 4 participants; 2 men, 2 women; aged 61–79 years; years since onset 10–32 years | Video recorded cross-sectional semistructured interviews in the participant's home | Post-DBS at 1 time point: at least 2 years after surgery (range 2–10 years) | Qualitative content analysis |
| Hariz and Hamberg | 2014 | Sweden | To explore patients with PD own perceptions of living with an implanted device | 42 participants; 31 men, 11 women; mean age at DBS 61.3 years (range 41–79); mean age at interview 64.1 years (range 44–81); mean age at diagnosis 52.6 years (range 33–70) | Audio recorded cross-sectional semistructured interviews either face to face in the participant's home/at the hospital or via telephone (n=5) | Post-DBS at 1 time point: mean 2.8 years after surgery (range 0.5–8 years) | Similarities and differences in technique in grounded theory |
*As described in the papers.
†Same participants as Haahr et al26 (Haahr et al27 includes spouses from the same data set).
DBS, deep brain stimulation; PD, Parkinson's disease.
Presence of core cross-cutting themes interpreted within the chronology for each study
| Reference | Loss | Loss of control | Hope | Normality | Transitions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haahr | Yes (in Haahr | Yes | Yes | Yes† | Yes |
| Haahr | Yes | Yes† | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Haahr | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not covered | NA‡ |
| Gisquet | Yes | Yes—core concept in paper | Yes | Yes† | Yes |
| Ahlberg | Yes (but postsurgery loss associated with voice) | Yes† | Yes | Yes† | Yes |
| Hariz and Hamberg | Not covered | Yes | Yes | Yes† | Yes |
| Agid | Yes | Not covered | Not covered | Yes† | Yes |
*Index paper from which mapping of the comparisons across the cohort of papers was undertaken. †Findings translated into those of other papers. ‡Paper focuses on predeep brain stimulation perspectives.
NA, not available.
Figure 2Chronology of patient's and spouses’ experiences of Parkinson's disease and deep brain stimulation.