| Literature DB >> 29516169 |
Alessandro Tessitore1, Pietro Marano2, Nicola Modugno3, Francesco E Pontieri4, Nicola Tambasco5, Margherita Canesi6, Anna Latorre7, Leonardo Lopiano8, Mariachiara Sensi9, Rocco Quatrale10, Paolo Solla11, Giovanni Defazio11, Gabriella Melzi12, Anna Maria Costanzo13, Giuliana Gualberti13, Umberto di Luzio Paparatti13, Angelo Antonini14.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Caring for a person with Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with an increased risk of psychiatric morbidity and persistent distress. The objective of this study was to describe the burden and the related factors of caregivers of advanced PD (APD) patients either treated with continuous dopaminergic delivery systems or standard therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced Parkinson’s disease; Caregiver burden; Intestinal infusion; Levodopa/carbidopa; Quality of life
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29516169 PMCID: PMC5937896 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-018-8816-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Demographic characteristics of the patients and caregivers
| LCIG ( | CSAI ( | SOC ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | |||
| Demographics | |||
| Age (years); mean ± SD (range) | 70.26 ± 7.1 (53–84) | 66.0 ± 6.6 (54–77) | 69.57 ± 9.1 (42–88) |
| Female; | 28 (53%) | 9 (47%) | 25 (46%) |
| Male; | 25 (47%) | 10 (53%) | 29 (54%) |
| Employment | |||
| Worker | 0 | 3 (16%) | 5 (9%) |
| Retired | 45 (85%) | 16 (84%) | 48 (89%) |
| House keeper | 7 (13%) | 0 | 1 (2%) |
| Unemployed | 1 (2%) | 0 | 0 |
| Caregivers | |||
| Demographics | |||
| Age (years); mean ± SD (range) | 59.19 ± 13.2 (36–84) | 60.26 ± 12.9 (29–78) | 55.89 ± 12.6 (29–85) |
| Female; | 30 (56%) | 15 (79%) | 43 (80%) |
| Male; | 23 (43%) | 4 (21%) | 11 (20%) |
| Patient relationship; | |||
| Spouse | 33 (62%) | 13 (68%) | 30 (56%) |
| Son/daughter | 16 (30%) | 4 (21%) | 20 (37%) |
| Brother/sister | 1 (2%) | 0 | 3 (5%) |
| Other relative | 3 (6%) | 2 (11%) | 1 (2%) |
| Educational level; | |||
| Elementary/middle school | 29 (55%) | 9 (48%) | 17 (31%) |
| High school | 20 (38%) | 5 (26%) | 28 (52%) |
| Academic degree | 4 (7%) | 5 (26%) | 9 (17%) |
| Employment status; | |||
| Worker | 14 (27%) | 5 (26%) | 20 (37%) |
| Retired | 22 (43%) | 7 (37%) | 12 (22%) |
| Student | 0 | 1 (5%) | 1 (2%) |
| House keeper | 13 (26%) | 6 (32%) | 16 (30%) |
| Unemployed | 2 (4%) | 0 | 5 (9%) |
| Caregiver assistance duration | |||
| Since 6–12 months | 7 (14%) | 0 | 3 (6%) |
| ≥ 12 months | 45 (86%) | 18 (100%) | 50 (94%) |
| Time spent during the day for the assistance | |||
| Day and night (24 h) | 26 (49%) | 12 (63%) | 29 (56%) |
| During daytime | 8 (15%) | 4 (21%) | 9 (17%) |
| From 3 to 6 h per day | 19 (36%) | 3 (16%) | 14 (27%) |
LCIG levodopa/carbidopa intestinal gel, CSAI subcutaneous apomorphine infusion, SOC standard of care, SD standard deviation
PD clinical characteristics and PD-associated symptoms/comorbidities
| LCIG ( | CSAI ( | SOC ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age at PD diagnosis (years), mean ± SD, (range) | 53.89 ± 9.1 (32–72) | 52.42 ± 6.9 (40–62) | 56.74 ± 9.4 (33–76) | 0.524* 0.113** |
| PD duration (years), mean ± SD, (range) | 16.38 ± 5.8 (7–33) | 13.58 ± 4.1 (8–21) | 12.83 ± 5.1 (4–35) | 0.085* 0.0003** |
| Age at onset of motor fluctuations (years), mean ± SD, (range) | 61.91 ± 8.8 (37–78) | 60.53 ± 5.9 (52–72) | 64.35 ± 9.4 (40–86) | 0.529* 0.168** |
| Duration of motor fluctuations (years), mean ± SD, (range) | 8.36 ± 4.8 (1–26) | 5.47 ± 3.5 (2–14) | 5.22 ± 4.1 (1–25) | 0.0099* < 0.000**1 |
| Duration of motor fluctuations (h/day), mean ± SD, (range) | 2.69 ± 2.5 (0–11) | 2.79 ± 1.5 (0–5) | 5.42 ± 2.6 (1–14) | 0.362* < 0.0001** |
| Duration of OFF periods (h/day), mean ± SD, (range) | 1.38 ± 1.5 (0–6) | 2.32 ± 1.7 (0–8) | 5.47 ± 2.2 (3–12) | 0.009* < 0.0001** |
| Duration of dyskinesia (h/day), mean ± SD, (range) | 2.92 ± 3 (0–12) | 2.79 ± 2 (0–8) | 2.85 ± 3 (0–12) | 0.5424* 0.7358** |
| UPDRS-IV Item 39, | ||||
| Not present | 6 (11%) | 1 (5%) | 0 | 0.037* < 0.001** |
| 1–25% | 37 (70%) | 8 (42%) | 9 (17%) | |
| 26–50% | 9 (17%) | 8 (42%) | 36 (67%) | |
| 51–75% | 1 (2%) | 2 (11%) | 8 (15%) | |
| 76–100% | 0 | 0 | 1 (2%) | |
| Hoehn & Yahr in OFF, | 0.121* 0.039** | |||
| 1 | 1 (2%) | 0 | 0 | |
| 1.5 | 2 (4%) | 0 | 1 (2%) | |
| 2 | 5 (9%) | 2 (11%) | 0 | |
| 2.5 | 17 (32%) | 13 (68%) | 10 (19%) | |
| 3 | 21 (40%) | 3 (16%) | 35 (65%) | |
| 4 | 7 (13%) | 1 (5%) | 8 (15%) | |
| PD-associated symptoms N (%) | 98% | 100% | 100% | 0.547* 0.311** |
| Falls | 28 (54%) | 11 (58%) | 31 (57%) | 0.704* 0.364** |
| Confusion | 18 (35%) | 9 (47%) | 17 (31%) | 0.300* 0.784** |
| Forgetfulness | 17 (33%) | 7 (37%) | 18 (33%) | 0.705* 0.890** |
| Bladder control problems | 26 (50%) | 10 (53%) | 27 (50%) | 0.789* 0.922** |
| Increased sweating | 26 (50%) | 12 (63%) | 22 (41%) | 0.291* 0.397** |
| Sexual disturbances | 10 (19%) | 10 (53%) | 20 (37%) | 0.005* 0.036** |
| Apathy | 14 (27%) | 9 (47%) | 16 (30%) | 0.093* 0.711** |
| Having felt sad or in a depressed mood for longer than 2 weeks | 13 (25%) | 5 (26%) | 14 (26%) | 0.877* 0.868** |
| Hallucinations | 10 (19%) | 2 (11%) | 11 (20%) | 0.403* 0.845** |
| Anxiety | 22 (42%) | 12 (63%) | 32 (59%) | 0.105* 0.066** |
| Cognitive function decline | 19 (37%) | 4 (21%) | 16 (30%) | 0.235* 0.493** |
| Sleep disturbances | 29 (56%) | 11 (58%) | 35 (65%) | 0.811* 0.287** |
| Impulse control disorders | 4 (8%) | 4 (21%) | 8 (15%) | 0.108* 0.234** |
| Fatigue | 31 (60%) | 15 (79%) | 34 (63%) | 0.111* 0.636** |
*LCIG vs CSAI; **LCIG vs SOC; NA, not available
Fig. 1Distribution of ZBI-subscores in the three groups of caregivers
Correlation and association of ZBI score according to demographics and PD characteristics
| ZBI total score and | |
|---|---|
| Spearman correlation | |
| Patient’s age (years) | 0.906 |
| Caregiver’s age (years) | 0.935 |
| PD duration (years) | 0.811 |
| Duration of motor fluctuations (years) | 0.729 |
| Duration of motor fluctuations (h/day) | 0.736 |
| Duration of dyskinesias (h/day) | 0.470 |
| Duration of OFF periods (h/day) | 0.372 |
| CGI-I score | 0.303 |
| PDQ-8 score | 0.002 |
| ANOVA models (univariate) | |
| Patient’s gender | 0.380 |
| Caregiver’s gender | 0.093 |
| Presence of PD-associated symptoms | 0.924 |
| Caregiver’s duration of assistance | 0.347 |
| Caregiver’s change in work | 0.001 |
| Caregiver’s change in capability to perform family duties/leisure activities | < 0.001 |
| Need of professional assistance | 0.019 |
| Hoehn & Yahr stage | 0.848 |
| Caregiver’s time spent for assistance | 0.168 |
| UPDRS-IV item 39 | 0.474 |
| Patient’s judgment on quality of life | 0.010 |
| Caregiver’s occupational status | 0.577 |
| No. of outpatient visits in the last 6 months due to PD | 0.203 |
| No. of accesses to emergency departments in the last 6 months due to PD | 0.757 |
| No. of hospitalizations in the last 6 months due to PD | 0.415 |
| Caregiver’s judgment on quality of life | < 0.001 |
Advanced therapeutic scheme in the two groups (LCIG and CSAI)
| Parameter | LCIG ( | CSAI ( |
|---|---|---|
| Duration of infusion (h/day); mean ± SD (range) | 14.1 ± 2.1 (11.0–24.0) | Not applicable |
| Levodopa equivalent daily dose (LEDD) (mg); mean ± SD (range) | 1112.6 ± 473.4 (532–2960) | 1665.3 ± 1309.0 (180–5600) |
| Duration of treatment (months); mean ± SD (range) | 17.8 ± 9.1 (5.98–41.89) | 24.7 ± 9.9 (5.65–40.15) |
| Patients using concomitant anti-parkinson medications during the day; | 14 (26.4%) | 13 (68.4%) |
| Number of anti-parkinson drug units/day; mean ± SD (range) | 1.4 ± 0.7 (1–3) | 6.7 ± 4.4 (1–19) |
Standard treatment before LCIG or CSAI implementation and in patients continuing with SOC
| Parameter | No. of tablets/day (mean ± SD) (range) | LEDD (mg) (mean ± SD) (range) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard treatments before LCIG ( | |||
| Oral levodopa | 50 (94%) | 6.0 ± 1.4 (2–9) | 972.5 ± 417.9 (250–2350) |
| Dopamine agonists | 33 (62%) | 1.5 ± 0.7 (1–3) | 274.6 ± 123.9 (100–560) |
| COMT inhibitors | 23 (43%) | 4.3 ± 1.9 (1–10) | 322.6 ± 230.8 (100–1200) |
| MAO inhibitors | 17 (32%) | 1.1 ± 0.2 (1–2) | 100.0 ± 0.0 (100–100) |
| Othersa | 12 (23%) | 2.6 ± 2.4 (1–10) | 204.3 ± 108.3 (100–360) |
| Standard treatments before CSAI ( | |||
| Oral levodopa | 19 (100%) | 6.3 ± 1.8 (4–10) | 1185 ± 686.3 (500–2500) |
| Dopamine agonists | 12 (63%) | 2.4 ± 2 (2–8) | 437.2 ± 596.5 (105–2000) |
| COMT inhibitors | 13 (68%) | 4.4 ± 1.8 (2–8) | 442.7 ± 403.1 (75–1400) |
| MAO inhibitors | 3 (16%) | 1 ± 0 (1–1) | 100 ± 0 (100–100) |
| Amantadine | 1 (5%) | 2 | 200 (200–200) |
| Standard treatments in SOC-continuing patients ( | |||
| Oral levodopa | 54 (100%) | 5.6 ± 1.8 (2–12) | 732.6 ± 230.1 (200–1200) |
| Dopamine agonists | 36 (67%) | 1.4 ± 1.2 (1–8) | 211.6 ± 81.0 (100–360) |
| COMT inhibitors | 20 (37%) | 4.5 ± 1.4 (2–7) | 548.7 ± 414.0 (132–1400) |
| MAO inhibitors | 19 (35%) | 1.3 ± 1.2 (1–6) | 237.5 ± 388.9 (100–1200) |
| Othersb | 15 (28%) | 2.3 ± 1.3 (1–5) | 293.2 ± 443.9 (100–1625) |
SD standard deviation
aOthers in LCIG group = amantadine (n = 9), apomorphine pen (n = 1), rasagiline (n = 1), rotigotine (n = 1)
bOthers in the SOC group = amantadine (n = 11), levodopa/carbidopa/entacapone (n = 1), trihexyphenidyl hydrochloride (n = 1), clonazepam (n = 1)
Source of knowledge for patients and caregiver on the advanced therapies and on MD implementing centers
| LCIG ( | CSAI ( | SOC ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Information on MD centers | |||
| General practitioner | 11 (21%) | 4 (21%) | 13 (24%) |
| Community neurologist | 21 (40%) | 5 (26%) | 15 (28%) |
| Media | 7 (13%) | 1 (5%) | 5 (9%) |
| Patients’ association | 2 (4%) | 2 (11%) | 4 (7%) |
| Others patients | 13 (25%) | 6 (32%) | 12 (22%) |
| Other sources of information | 11 (21%) | 5 (26%) | 12 (22%) |
Reasons for change from standard treatment to LCIG or CSAI and reasons to remain in SOC
| Reasons for patients who decided to switch | LCIG ( | CSAI ( |
|---|---|---|
| Caregiver was willing and available to assist patient in managing the advanced PD treatment for a long period | 36 (68%) | 14 (74%) |
| The patient could no longer tolerate poor quality of life | 42 (79%) | 16 (84%) |
| The patient presented significant disabilities, with serious loss of autonomy | 45 (86%) | 13 (68%) |
| The caregiver wished to reduce the stress he/she was undergoing | 8 (15%) | 3 (16%) |
| The patient and/or caregiver showed interest in advanced treatment options | 23 (43%) | 9 (47%) |
| Complexity of conventional treatments/scarce compliance | 10 (19%) | 3 (16%) |
Fig. 2Global judgment of caregivers (a) and patients (b) on their current quality of life compared to previous standard treatment and Clinical Global Impression–Global Improvement Scale (CGI-I) by physician (c)
Fig. 3PDQ-8 subitems distribution in the three groups of patients