| Literature DB >> 29212508 |
Kathleen R Bogart1, Veronica L Irvin2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Twenty-five to 30 million Americans live with a rare disease (RD) and share challenges unique to RD. The majority of research on RDs has focused on etiology, treatment and care, while the limited health-related quality of life (HRQL) research has been restricted to single RDs, small samples, or non-validated measures. This study reports HRQL among adults with diverse RDs, and compares their scores to those of the U.S. population and people with common chronic health conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Depression; PROMIS; Quality of life; Rare disease; Rare disorder
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29212508 PMCID: PMC5719717 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-017-0730-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Sociodemographic and rare disease characteristics among 1218 participants in the U.S
| Characteristic | Frequency | Percent | M (SD) | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 51.50 (14.56) | 18–89 | ||
| Duration of RD symptoms in years | 18.84 (16.49) | 0–75 | ||
| Years since RD diagnosis | 9.76 (11.46) | 0–70 | ||
| Number of RDs perparticipant | ||||
| 1 | 1058 | 87% | ||
| 2 | 130 | 11% | ||
| 3 | 22 | 2% | ||
| 4 | 4 | <1% | ||
| 5 | 4 | <1% | ||
| Gender | ||||
| Female | 935 | 77% | ||
| Male | 279 | 23% | ||
| Other | 4 | <1% | ||
| Income | ||||
| under $10,000 | 58 | 5% | ||
| $10,000–20,000 | 95 | 8% | ||
| $20,001–30,000 | 118 | 10% | ||
| $30,001–45,000 | 127 | 11% | ||
| $45,001–60,000 | 161 | 14% | ||
| $60,001–75,000 | 128 | 11% | ||
| $75,001–90,000 | 107 | 9% | ||
| $90,001 and above | 376 | 32% | ||
| Race/ethnicity | ||||
| American Indian orAlaska native | 11 | 1% | ||
| Asian | 23 | 2% | ||
| Black or African American | 13 | 1% | ||
| Hispanic or Latino/a | 31 | 3% | ||
| Native Hawaiian orPacific Islander | 2 | 6% | ||
| White | 1149 | 94% | ||
| Other | 31 | 3% | ||
Percentages do not add to 100 due to rounding
Rare disease classifications among 1218 participants with rare diseases in the U.S
| Orphanet Classification | Frequency | Percent |
|---|---|---|
| Bone | 19 | 1% |
| Cardiac | 3 | <1% |
| Developmental defect | 71 | 5% |
| Endocrine | 52 | 4% |
| Eye | 3 | <1% |
| Gastroenterologic | 11 | 1% |
| Hematologic | 27 | 2% |
| Hepatic | 12 | 1% |
| Immune | 93 | 7% |
| Inborn errors of metabolism | 31 | 2% |
| Infectious | 16 | 1% |
| Neoplastic | 268 | 19% |
| Neurologic | 581 | 41% |
| Otorhinolaryngologic | 41 | 3% |
| Psychiatric | 2 | <1% |
| Renal | 5 | <1% |
| Respiratory | 14 | 1% |
| Skin | 52 | 4% |
| Systemic and rheumatological | 118 | 8% |
| Urogenital | 1 | <1% |
| Total | 1420 | 100 |
Intercorrelations of socio-demographic and rare disease characteristics and Health-Related Quality of Life outcomes in 1218 participants
| Age | Gender | Duration of symptoms | Years since diagnosis | Number of rare diseases | Race | Income | Fatigue | Pain interference | Anxiety | Depression | Physical function | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | .23** | |||||||||||
| Duration of symptoms | .07* | −.07* | ||||||||||
| Years since diagnosis | .12** | 0.03 | .58** | |||||||||
| Number of rare diseases | −.08** | −0.05 | .10** | .06* | ||||||||
| Race | .03 | −.09** | .01 | .03 | .03 | |||||||
| Income | .19** | .09** | −.13** | .05 | −.06 | .09** | ||||||
| Fatigue | −.29** | −.21** | .08** | −.12** | .17** | .01 | −.20** | |||||
| Pain interference | −.08** | −.12** | .15** | .00 | .19** | −0.03 | −.22** | .53** | ||||
| Anxiety | −.30** | −.19** | −.01 | −.10** | .03 | −.04 | −.20** | .47** | .38** | |||
| Depression | −.25** | −.15** | .01 | −.08** | .03 | −.03 | −.20** | .53** | .40** | .76** | ||
| Physical function | −.07* | .00 | −.07* | .01 | −.12** | .03 | .21** | −.45** | −.51** | −.25** | −.34** | |
| Ability to participate in social roles | .05 | .11** | −.08** | .08** | −.17** | −0.03 | .17** | −.65** | −.54** | −.39** | −.48** | .72** |
Race was coded as person of color = 0, white = 1. Gender was coded as female = 0 and male =1
* p < .05, ** p < .01
Fig. 1PROMIS mean scores for main sample of persons with RD and by RD category. Error bars represent 95% CI. Black lines indicate U.S. population mean, and gray lines indicate means for common chronic diseases. [6, 18] Higher numbers mean higher amounts of the measured construct, so high scores on anxiety, depression, fatigue, and pain interference indicate poor HRQL, while low scores on physical function and ability to participate in social roles and activities means poor HRQL. Main sample n = 1218; neurologic n = 480; neoplastic n = 221; systemic and rheumatological n = 66; developmental anomalies n = 58; and immune n = 56