| Literature DB >> 29848385 |
M Elaine Husni1, Anthony Fernandez2, Brett Hauber3, Rakesh Singh4, Joshua Posner5, Jessie Sutphin6, Arijit Ganguli4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The perceived bother of skin and joint-related manifestations of psoriatic disease may differ among patients, rheumatologists, and dermatologists. This study identified and compared the patient and dermatologist/rheumatologist-perceived bother of psoriatic disease manifestations.Entities:
Keywords: Joint symptoms; Patients; Physicians; Psoriasis; Psoriatic arthritis; Psoriatic disease; Skin symptoms
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29848385 PMCID: PMC5977464 DOI: 10.1186/s13075-018-1601-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Items included in the patient and physiciana surveys
| Category | Item | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Skin symptoms | Itching skin | Physically irritated skin resulting in the urge to scratch |
| Redness of skin | Red or salmon-pink color of psoriasis-affected skin | |
| Flaking skin | Skin shedding | |
| Painful skin | Painful, inflamed, or broken skin | |
| Nail problems | Discoloration or pitting of the fingernails or toenails or separation of the nail from the nail bed | |
| Difficulty choosing clothing | Skin problems influencing the clothing you wear | |
| Embarrassment | Being embarrassed or self-conscious because of your skin | |
| Joint symptoms | Joint pain, soreness, or tenderness | Stiffness, pain, throbbing, swelling, and tenderness in one or more joints |
| Swelling of fingers or toes | Sausage-like swelling of one or more fingers or toes | |
| Fatigue | Tiredness and lack of energy that does not go away with sleep | |
| Morning stiffness | Stiffness after resting that makes it difficult to move your joints | |
| Eye problems | Eye swelling, redness in or around your eyes, eye pain, and/or blurry vision | |
| Difficulty dressing | Difficulty tying shoelaces and buttoning your clothes | |
| Difficulty walking | Difficulty walking at a normal speed | |
| Impacts on daily activities | Difficulty with work or school activities | Difficulty doing your normal work or schoolwork because of your psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis |
| Difficulty with social or leisure activities | Difficulty doing your normal social or leisure activities because of your psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis | |
| Difficulty going shopping or doing housework or yard work | Difficulty going shopping or looking after your home or yard because of your psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis | |
| Difficulty sleeping | Having poor sleep quality or sleep interruptions because of your psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis | |
| Discomfort while doing everyday tasks | Discomfort doing everyday tasks, such as eating, bathing, or going to the bathroom, because of your psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis | |
| Problems with relationships | Problems with partner, close friends, or family because of your psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis |
a In the physician survey, the word “your” was removed or substituted with “the patient’s” or “the” as appropriate but it otherwise kept the same wording. See Additional file 2 for the full physician survey
Fig. 1Example of a best–worst scaling question from the patient survey: “Please indicate which one of the 5 symptoms listed below would bother you the most, and which one would bother you the least if you experienced these symptoms”
Patient profiles in the physician survey
| Patient profile | Description |
|---|---|
| Patient 1 (mild) | ■ Each of these patients is [gender] |
| Patient 2 (moderate) | ■ Each of these patients is [gender] |
| Patient 3 (severe) | ■ Each of these patients is [gender] |
BSA body surface area
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic | Patients ( |
|---|---|
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 42 (14) |
| Female | 101 (51%) |
| Employed (full-time, part-time, or self-employed) | 153 (77%) |
| Has had psoriasis for at least 1 year/5 years/10 years | 148 (74%)/60 (30%)/29 (15%) |
| Has had psoriatic arthritis for at least 1 year/5 years/10 years | 124 (62%)/34 (17%)/12 (6%) |
| More than five hand areas covered with psoriasis patches in the past week | 88 (44%) |
| Mean (SD) rating for overall skin symptom rating in the past week (0, did not affect how I felt at all; 10 severely affected how I felt) | 6.8 (2.5) |
| Mean (SD) rating for overall joint symptom rating in the past week (0, did not affect how I felt at all; 10 severely affected how I felt) | 6.4 (2.6) |
| Percent ever using treatment for psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis (checked all that applied) | |
| Creams, lotions, ointments, foam | 84 |
| Oral prescription medicines | 54 |
| Light therapy | 27 |
| Injectable medicines | 39 |
| Infusions at the doctor’s office | 17 |
| Other | 3 |
| None of the above | 1 |
Data presented as n (%) unless stated otherwise
SD standard deviation
Fig. 2Best–worst scaling relative-bother estimates: dermatologists, rheumatologists, and patients (N = 500). Bars for each estimate indicate 95% confidence intervals
Fig. 3Best–worst scaling relative-bother estimates: time since diagnosis subgroups (N = 200). Bars for each estimate indicate 95% confidence intervals