| Literature DB >> 28692670 |
Joel Raffel1,2, Alison Wallace1, Djordje Gveric1, Richard Reynolds1, Tim Friede3, Richard Nicholas1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is increasing emphasis on using patient-reported outcomes (PROs) to complement traditional clinical outcomes in medical research, including in multiple sclerosis (MS). Research, particularly in oncology and heart failure, has shown that PROs can be prognostic of hard clinical endpoints such as survival time (time from study entry until death). However, unlike in oncology or cardiology, it is unknown whether PROs are associated with survival time in neurological diseases. The Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale-29 (MSIS-29) is a PRO sensitive to short-term change in MS, with questions covering both physical and psychological quality of life. This study aimed to investigate whether MSIS-29 scores can be prognostic for survival time in MS, using a large observational cohort of people with MS. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28692670 PMCID: PMC5503162 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Differences in baseline characteristics between those included and those not included in the study, those with and without imputed data, those with and without prEDSS data, and those with and without longitudinal MSIS-29 data.
| Characteristic | Male sex | Age | Disease duration | Baseline MSIS-29-PHYS | Baseline MSIS-29-PSYCH | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 2,126 | 496 (23.3%) | 54.0 (11.9) | 18.5 (15.0) | 62.0 (20.5) | 23.6 (8.7) |
| No | 788 | 182 (23.1%) | 55.8 (13.3) | 18.4 (11.3) | n/a | n/a |
| 0.894 | 0.827 | |||||
| No | 1,853 | 439 (23.7%) | 53.5 (11.7) | 17.9 (14.5) | 61.4 (20.5) | 23.6 (8.8) |
| Yes | 273 | 57 (20.9%) | 57.4 (12.9) | 23.3 (16.8) | 65.8 (20.4) | 23.3 (8.6) |
| 0.305 | 0.484 | |||||
| Yes | 630 | 152 (24.1%) | 50.9 (12.3) | 16.9 (17.0) | 62.1 (20.4) | 23.8 (8.7) |
| No | 1,496 | 344 (23.0%) | 55.2 (11.5) | 19.2 (13.9) | 61.9 (20.6) | 23.5 (8.7) |
| 0.573 | 0.909 | 0.457 | ||||
| Yes | 872 | 188 (21.6%) | 55.1 (11.1) | 18.2 (13.4) | 60.6 (19.5) | 23.0 (8.3) |
| No | 1,254 | 308 (24.6%) | 53.1 (12.4) | 18.8 (15.9) | 63.0 (21.1) | 24.0 (9.0) |
| 0.107 | 0.407 |
Data are presented as n (percent) or mean (SD). Differences between categorical data (sex) were tested with the chi-square test. Differences between continuous data (age, disease duration, MSIS-29-PHYS, MSIS-29-PSYCH) were tested with the unpaired Student's t-test. Significant p-values are highlighted in bold.
MSIS-29, Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale–29; MSIS-29-PHYS, MSIS-29 physical; MSIS-29-PSYCH, MSIS-29 psychological; n/a, not applicable; prEDSS, patient-reported Expanded Disability Status Scale.
Fig 1Higher MSIS-29-PHYS scores are associated with reduced survival time.
(A) Table: Higher MSIS-29-PHYS score was associated with reduced survival time (greater hazard ratio for death), as were older age at first MSIS-29 completion and male sex. (B) Kaplan–Meier failure curves (n = 2,126). Note that Kaplan–Meier curves do not account for the effect of age and sex on survival time. MSIS-29, Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale–29; MSIS-29-PHYS, MSIS-29 physical.
Variation in characteristics between those with different baseline MSIS-29 scores.
| Characteristic | Male sex | Age | Disease duration | Baseline MSIS-29-PHYS | Baseline MSIS-29-PSYCH | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20–35 | 274 | 44 (16.1%) | 49.1 (11.1) | 15.8 (14.0) | 27.5 (4.7) | 14.6 (5.0) |
| 36–51 | 385 | 70 (18.2%) | 53.0 (11.8) | 17.4 (15.5) | 44.0 (4.5) | 19.8 (6.6) |
| 52–68 | 601 | 146 (24.3%) | 54.9 (12.0) | 19.0 (15.1) | 60.6 (4.8) | 23.6 (7.2) |
| 69–84 | 545 | 137 (25.1%) | 55.4 (12.1) | 19.5 (15.5) | 76.0 (4.6) | 26.7 (7.9) |
| 85–100 | 321 | 99 (30.8%) | 55.1 (11.2) | 19.7 (13.2) | 92.0 (4.9) | 30.5 (9.0) |
| 9–16 | 525 | 115 (21.9%) | 55.3 (12.0) | 19.8 (15.6) | 46.8 (20.0) | 12.9 (2.2) |
| 17–23 | 598 | 143 (23.9%) | 54.6 (12.1) | 18.9 (15.0) | 59.2 (17.6) | 20.1 (2.0) |
| 24–30 | 512 | 124 (24.2%) | 53.6 (11.7) | 17.9 (14.8) | 67.2 (16.4) | 26.7 (2.0) |
| 31–37 | 326 | 83 (25.5%) | 52.4 (11.8) | 18.0 (14.9) | 74.0 (14.7) | 33.7 (2.0) |
| 38–45 | 158 | 30 (19.0%) | 51.4 (11.2) | 16.2 (12.4) | 82.1 (14.7) | 40.8 (2.3) |
| 0.834 | 0.053 |
Data are presented as n (percent) or mean (SD). Differences between categorical data (sex) were tested with the chi-square test. Differences between continuous data (age, disease duration, MSIS-29-PHYS, MSIS-29-PSYCH) were tested with one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Significant p-values are highlighted in bold.
MSIS-29, Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale–29; MSIS-29-PHYS, MSIS-29 physical; MSIS-29-PSYCH, MSIS-29 psychological.
Fig 2Higher MSIS-29-PSYCH scores are associated with reduced survival time.
(A) Table: Higher MSIS-29-PSYCH score was associated with reduced survival time (greater hazard ratio for death), as were older age at first MSIS-29 completion and male sex. (B) Kaplan–Meier failure curves (n = 2,119). Note that Kaplan–Meier curves do not account for the effect of age and sex on survival time. MSIS-29, Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale–29; MSIS-29-PSYCH, MSIS-29 psychological.
Reduced survival time (greater hazard ratio for death) was associated with older age, higher prEDSS score, and higher MSIS-29-PHYS score in the limited cohort with prEDSS score available (n = 625).
| Parameter | Hazard ratio | 95% hazard ratio confidence limits | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | |||
| prEDSS, per 1 SD (2.2) | 1.952 | 1.025 | 3.718 | 0.042 |
| MSIS-29-PHYS, per 1 SD (20.3) | 1.762 | 1.057 | 2.938 | 0.030 |
| MSIS-29-PSYCH, per 1 SD (8.7) | 0.905 | 0.631 | 1.297 | 0.587 |
| Age, per year | 1.070 | 1.042 | 1.099 | <0.001 |
| Sex, male versus female | 1.237 | 0.622 | 2.459 | 0.544 |
MSIS-29, Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale–29; MSIS-29-PHYS, MSIS-29 physical; MSIS-29-PSYCH, MSIS-29 psychological; prEDSS, patient-reported Expanded Disability Status Scale.
Fig 3Longitudinally worsening MSIS-29-PHYS scores are associated with reduced survival time.
Four subgroups are presented in this figure: Subgroup 1—initial MSIS-29-PHYS score 20–84, no worsening after 1 year (solid line); Subgroup 2—initial MSIS-29-PHYS score 20–84, worsening after 1 year (short-dashed line); Subgroup 3—initial MSIS-29-PHYS score 85–100, no worsening after 1 year (dot-dashed line); Subgroup 4—initial MSIS-29-PHYS score 85–100, worsening after 1 year (long-dashed line). (A) Table: Subgroups 1 and 2 had no statistically significant difference in survival time (HR = 1.289, 95% CI 0.843–1.972, p = 0.241). Subgroup 4 had reduced survival time compared with subgroup 3 (HR = 2.266, 95% CI 1.163–4.413, p = 0.016). p < 0.001 for differences between the 4 subgroups. (B) Kaplan–Meier failure curves (n = 872). Note that Kaplan–Meier curves do not account for the effect of age and sex on survival time. HR, hazard ratio; MSIS-29, Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale–29; MSIS-29-PHYS, MSIS-29 physical.