| Literature DB >> 29915990 |
Amy Simon1, Farrah Pompilus2, William Querbes3, Alex Wei3, Sara Strzok2, Craig Penz3, Desiree Lyon Howe4, Jessica R Hungate4, Jae B Kim3, Sonalee Agarwal3, Patrick Marquis2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Acute intermittent porphyria is a rare metabolic disorder that affects heme synthesis. Patients with acute intermittent porphyria may experience acute debilitating neurovisceral attacks that require frequent hospitalizations and negatively impact quality of life. Although clinical aspects of acute intermittent porphyria attacks have been documented, the experience of patients is not well known, particularly for those more severely affected patients who experience frequent attacks. The aim of the present study was to qualitatively characterize the experience of patients with acute intermittent porphyria who have frequent attacks, as well as the impact of the disease on daily living.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29915990 PMCID: PMC6132435 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-018-0319-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Fig. 1Patients’ descriptions of their: a porphyria attacks and b chronic symptoms
Patient demographics and clinical information
| Characteristic | Patients ( |
|---|---|
| Age, (years) | |
| Mean (SD) | 40 (11) |
| Range | 24–61 |
| Sex | |
| Female | 15 (79) |
| Male | 4 (21) |
| Employment status | |
| Not employed | 12 (63) |
| Full-time employment | 4 (21) |
| Part-time employment | 3 (16) |
| Education level | |
| Post-graduate degree | 5 (26) |
| Degree | 4 (21) |
| Some college education | 3 (16) |
| Trade program/certification | 3 (16) |
| High school/GED equivalent | 3 (16) |
| Some high school education | 1 (5) |
| Income | |
| < US$60,000 | 8 (42) |
| $US60,000–$100,000 | 7 (37) |
| > US$100,000 | 2 (11) |
| Not specified | 2 (11) |
| Marital status | |
| Married | 11 (58) |
| Single | 4 (21) |
| Divorced/separated | 4 (21) |
| Time since symptom onset, (years) | |
| < 3 | 2 (11) |
| 3–10 | 8 (42) |
| > 10 | 9 (47) |
| Time since porphyria diagnosis, (years) | |
| < 3 | 5 (26) |
| 3–10 | 10 (53) |
| > 10 | 4 (21) |
| Taking hemin prophylactically | |
| Yes | 11 (58) |
| No | 8 (42) |
| Reporting chronic symptoms between attacks | |
| Yes | 18 (95) |
| No | 1 (5) |
| Taking pain medication between attacks | |
| Yes | 12 (63) |
| No | 7 (37) |
Data are n (%) unless otherwise stated
GED general educational development, SD standard deviation
Patients’ descriptions of attack pain and chronic pain
| Description | Severity | Duration | Location | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attack pain | “It’s a real hot feeling like it feels like there’s hot coals packed in there. And it feels like someone’s like poking in more of them, and there’s all this pressure, you know, like stretching and burning … And then that like carries on. And then whenever, oh, and then sometimes also I’ll feel like hot knives stabbing me.” (Patient No. 16) | “… but the pain I would say right now the pain is probably well over a 10.” (Patient No. 12) | “Usually [the abdominal pain lasts] until I’m able to get to the hospital and get on IV pain medicine.” (Patient No. 15) | “So mostly burning in my abdomen, nausea, then the burning in my abdomen kind of radiates to my back, like on either side of my spine, and then I have like shooting, stabbing, burning pain in my lower back and down my legs, especially in my glutes.” (Patient No. 20) |
| Chronic pain | “I actually did have to take pain medicine today because I feel my stomach has a dull, throbbing feeling.” (Patient No. 10) | “A normal day I feel decent. My pain from one to 10 on an attack is a 10. But my pain on a normal day is about a two, a three.” (Patient No. 08) | “Almost every day with the exception of me being a couple days a month. I would say about five, four to five days I’m in pain.” (Patient No. 10) | “Kind of a, a dull burning in the liver area as well as in the digestive area, colon such as that.” (Patient No. 01) |
ER emergency room, IV intravenous
Patients’ descriptions of the impact of acute intermittent porphyria
| Topic | Exemplar quotes |
|---|---|
| Sleep | “I don’t really sleep well at night at all from the porphyria because my back hurts and my feet hurt and my legs, they hurt a lot. I don’t know if it’s like restless leg syndrome, but it’s like I keep moving type of thing … I’ll jerk and it wakes me up when I do sleep, so I have a lot of problems with sleeping. And so when I wake up in the morning I’m always fatigued.” (Patient No. 01) |
| Social | “I think the unpredictability [of] porphyria is frustrating. It’s difficult to make plans far out because of porphyria. I’ve missed friends’ weddings. I’ve had to cancel trips. Even appointments that day—I think one of the biggest ways that porphyria impacts your life is that it’s completely unpredictable. There’s no way I could be a reliable employee to somebody because I could not guarantee that I will be there tomorrow for work.” (Patient No. 06) |
| Financial | “Well of course not being able to work has impacted our finances quite a bit and then the hospital bills have also been impacting our finances a lot.” (Patient No. 02) |
| Nutritional | “My diet has changed by 80, 90% because I can’t [eat] anything anymore.” (Patient No. 08) |
| Lifestyle | “So, things that I would want to do—travel, go places—if I get sick and I’m somewhere where they don’t know what—I mean, very few doctors understand what porphyria is or even how to treat it … That’s a huge concern. So we don’t travel much. It’s, you know, it limits your life.” (Patient No. 17) |
| Psychologic | “I have to take all these stupid medications, and there’s so much stigma in society about prescription pain meds and stuff nowadays. So now it’s like this complete shaming process that I’m experiencing, even though I’m in no way addicted to anything. I’d throw it all away if all this would go away, but I have to now feel like I’m some kind of horrible person because I have pain and need pain medication. So I get to be shamed every time I go to the pharmacy to get my medicine.” (Patient No. 16) |
| Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is a rare, often mis/underdiagnosed, inherited metabolic disease characterized by acute potentially life-threatening attacks and in some patients, chronic debilitating multi-systemic symptoms and manifestations that negatively impact patients’ daily functioning and quality of life. |
| This qualitative research study undertook one-to-one interviews with 19 patients with AIP to characterize their symptoms and the impact of the disease burden on their daily lives. |
| Patients with AIP having frequent attacks may have both attack and chronic disease symptoms, suggesting in some patients, AIP is not just an ‘intermittent’ disease but also has chronic symptoms, many of which are disabling. |