| Literature DB >> 30617599 |
Chris Morton1, Sara Muller2, Milica Bucknall2, Kate Gilbert3, Christian D Mallen2, Samantha L Hider2,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION/Entities:
Keywords: Patient involvement; Polymyalgia rheumatica; Research priorities; Surveys and questionnaires
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30617599 PMCID: PMC6544756 DOI: 10.1007/s10067-018-04405-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Rheumatol ISSN: 0770-3198 Impact factor: 2.980
Important aspects of living with PMR. Participants were asked to select five priorities
| Selected as a priority, | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Aspect of living with PMR | Males | Females | All |
| Managing stiffness | 140 (75) | 274 (76) | 415 (75) |
| Managing pain | 130 (70) | 275 (76) | 406 (74) |
| Management of steroids and other medications | 140 (75) | 259 (72) | 400 (73) |
| Outlook for recovery | 135 (73) | 239 (66) | 376 (68) |
| Things you can do to help yourself | 118 (63) | 235 (65) | 355 (65) |
| Day to day activities | 101 (54) | 196 (54) | 298 (54) |
| Non-medical treatments | 24 (13) | 80 (22) | 105 (19) |
| Developing giant cell arteritis | 37 (20) | 67 (19) | 104 (19) |
| Work | 36 (19) | 43 (12) | 80 (15) |
| Contact with other people with the condition | 22 (12) | 52 (14) | 74 (13) |
Responses are presented in descending order of frequency
aPercentages include participants that did not select any priorities
Priorities for PMR research. Participants could select any number of priorities
| Selected as a priority, | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Area of PMR research | Males | Females | All |
| Pain, stiffness and fatigue | 142 (76) | 288 (80) | 431 (78) |
| Diagnosis | 131 (70) | 260 (72) | 393 (71) |
| Steroid management | 123 (66) | 218 (60) | 342 (62) |
| Things patients with PMR can do for their condition | 107 (58) | 227 (63) | 335 (61) |
| Multiple health conditions | 47 (25) | 129 (36) | 178 (32) |
| Alternative and complementary therapies | 39 (21) | 114 (32) | 154 (28) |
| Developing giant cell arteritis | 39 (21) | 99 (27) | 138 (25) |
| Role of health professionals | 35 (19) | 79 (22) | 116 (21) |
| Other (see Table | 10 (5) | 32 (9) | 42 (8) |
Responses are presented in descending order of frequency
aPercentages include participants that did not select any priorities
Priorities for PMR research described using the free text ‘other’ option and categorised using content analysis
| Area of PMR research | Selected as a priority, |
|---|---|
| Side effects of treatment | 7 (20) |
| Causes of PMR | 6 (17) |
| Early diagnosis | 6 (17) |
| Self-management of symptoms | 5 (14) |
| Achieving remission | 4 (11) |
| Availability of advice and information | 2 (6) |
| Atypical presentation | 2 (6) |
| Treatment pathways | 1 (3) |
| Effect on ability to work | 1 (3) |
| Testing for GCA by an ophthalmologist | 1 (3) |
aPercentage of admissible responses to the ‘other’ option
Fig. 1Study flow diagram
Characteristics of n = 550 participants
| Variable | ||
|---|---|---|
| Sociodemographic | ||
| Gender | Female | 361 (66) |
| Age | Mean (SD), 74.1 (8.5) | |
| Employment status | Employed | 50 (9) |
| Retired | 446 (81) | |
| Unemployed/seeking work | 2 (< 1) | |
| Not working due to ill health | 8 (1) | |
| Housewife/husband | 29 (5) | |
| Other | 12 (2) | |
| Ethnicity | White | 539 (99) |
| Other | 7 (1) | |
| PMR characteristics | ||
| Current PMR symptoms | Yes | 374 (68) |
| No | 152 (28) | |
| Years since diagnosis | Median (IQR), 2.0 (1.3, 2.6) | |
| Health information-seeking behaviour | ||
| Received written information about PMR from their doctor | Yes | 273 (50) |
| No | 261 (47) | |
| Has internet access | Yes | 302 (55) |
| No | 233 (42) | |
| Used the internet to research PMR | Yes | 234 (43) |
| No | 294 (53) | |
| Contacted a patient support group | Yes | 10 (2) |
| No | 527 (96) | |
| Needs help reading documents from their doctor or pharmacy | Always | 15 (3) |
| Often | 17 (3) | |
| Sometimes | 57 (10) | |
| Rarely | 53 (10) | |
| Never | 394 (72) | |
aPercentages may not add to 100 due to missing data
IQR, interquartile range; SD, standard deviation