| Literature DB >> 30886960 |
Hans Haag1,2,3, Tim Liang1,2,3, J Antonio Avina-Zubieta2,4, Mary A De Vera1,2,3.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Concordance; Medication use; Qualitative research; Systematic autoimmune rheumatic disease; Systematic review; Systemic lupus erythematosus
Year: 2018 PMID: 30886960 PMCID: PMC6390776 DOI: 10.1186/s41927-018-0017-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Rheumatol ISSN: 2520-1026
Fig. 1Study Flow for a) Systematic Review and b) Thematic Synthesis of SARD Patients’ Perspectives and Experiences with Medication Use
Characteristics of Qualitative Studies Included in the Systematic Review
| Author | Year | Country | Diseasea (N) | Mean Age | Sex (%F) | Study Methods | Aim |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies with SLE only | |||||||
| Feldman et al. [ | 2013 | USA | 51 (range 25–81) | 100 | Focus groups | To determine interventions perceived to improve care | |
| Mazzoni et al. [ | 2014 | Italy | 50.6 (range 41–61) | 100 | Face-to-face interview | To explore the experiences of problematic support from SLE patients’ perspective | |
| Neville et al. [ | 2014 | Canada | - (range 18–69) | 93.1 | Focus groups | To identify the informational and resource needs of persons with lupus | |
| Singh et al. [ | 2015 | USA | 40.6 (range not given) | – | Nominal group technique | To determine what factors facilitated decisional processes involving medications | |
| Hale et al. [ | 2015 | USA | 41.7 (range 22–57) | 93.3 | Semi-structured interviews | To explore the interactions between body image, self-image, medication use, and adherence to medication use in SLE | |
| Brennan et al. [ | 2016 | UK | – | – | Open-ended questionnaire | To explore perceptions of the quality and impact of social support for individuals with SLE | |
| Tunnicliffe et al. [ | 2016 | Australia | – | 92 | Focus groups | To describe the experiences, perspectives, and health care needs of adolescents and young adults with SLE | |
| Mathias et al. [ | 2017 | USA | 47.0 (range 24–71) | 97 | Semi-structured interviews | To develop a PRO measure which can be used to assess general impact (baseline burden), benefits, side effects, and impacts associated with oral steroid use over time in patients with SLE. | |
| Studies with other SARDs | |||||||
| Mooney et al. [ | 2013 | UK | CSS (3) | 63.6 (range 39–80) | 66.7 | Focus groups | To explore the informational needs of patients with AAV |
| Suarez-Almazor et al. [ | 2015 | USA | 49 (range not given) | 90 | Focus groups | To identify subjective domains that need to be measured in order to improve patient-centered outcome measurement for SSc. | |
| Lackner et al. [ | 2017 | Austria | 62 (range not given) | – | Focus groups | To explore the perspectives and aspects of HRQL in patients with PSS in a qualitative manner. | |
| Studies with mixed patient populations including SLE and other SARDs | |||||||
| Alparslan et al. [ | 2010 | Turkey | Arthritis (60) | – | 67.1 | Semi-structured interviews | To determine the changes and difficulties experienced by patients due to the side effects of steroids and how they affect their lives |
| Larsson et al. [ | 2010 | Sweden | RA (8) | 56 (range 35–79) | 66.7 | Semi-structured interviews | To describe variations in how inpatients with rheumatic diseases perceive drug information provided by a rheumatology nurse |
| Carpenter et al. [ | 2012 | USA | 51 (range 20–82) | 91 | Semi-structured interviews | To determine issues that negatively impacted patients’ ability to participate in social activities with friends | |
| Applebaum et al. [ | 2013 | USA | 16.9 (range 13–21) | 74.3 | Focus groups | To identify the current status of teens embarking on the transition of care process | |
| Cleanthous et al. [ | 2013 | UK | 44 (range 20–73) | 94.1 | Structured interviews | To determine aspects of uncertainty in SLE and RA | |
| RA (15) | 57 (range 29–79) | 66.7 | Semi-structured interviews | ||||
| Knight et al. [ | 2016 | USA | 17 (range not given) | 81 | Semi-structured interviews | To provide a framework for informing subsequent research and care. | |
| Mathias et al. [ | 2017 | USA | 41.6 (range 19–61) | 93 | Semi-structured interviews | To develop a comprehensive, SLE-specific, patient-reported outcome measure to assess patient satisfaction with treatment, treatment options, and medical care. | |
aAbbreviations: SLE Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, SSc Systemic Sclerosis, JIA Juvenile idiopathic arthriti, CSS Churg-Strauss syndrome, GPA Granulomatosis with polyangitis, MPA Microscopic polyangiitis, RA Rheumatoid arthritis, HSP Henoch-Schoenlein purpura, PAN Polyarteritis nodosa, PA Polyarthritis, OA Osteoarthritis
bPolymyositis, scleroderma, and Sjogren’s syndrome
cUndefined
dMixed connective tissue disease, asthma, ulcerative colitis and ten different rheumatologic conditions
eConcomittant Vasculitis (2), Lupus nephritis (2), Sjogren’s syndrome (1)
fMCTD Mixed connective tissue disease
The entries were bolded to show which conditions are SARDs
Illustrative Patient Quotations
| Analytical Theme | Descriptive Themes | Participant quotes and/or author contribution | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Effects of medications on emotional and social well-being | Emotional aspects of treatment | “As a wife. Umm, I would say because of it, I am in the process of a divorce. Yeah, many things wouldn’t have happened. I believe so. Physical. Intimate, let’s put it that way. Because like with all the medicines, with all the flares that I got, I mean, I couldn’t be the wife maybe that he wanted me to be. So then things happened. He found somebody else. Umm, he said that that was just because I was not there for him when he needed me ... Because like, when you take so much medicine in your pores, you can smell the medicine coming out of your pores. So, in that way, I know that there was some rejection because of it.” | [ |
| “It was really hard getting to school. I was on prednisone and got pretty fat, so I was getting bullied a lot. It was hard.” | [ | ||
| “Friends have cancelled dates when they have been ill as they are aware that I need to be careful regarding infections.” | [ | ||
| “This doctor did not want me to have children in any case. She gave me a lot of medicines and she said “absolutely no children.” [...]But I did not give up. I changed my doctor again, and I found this professor S. She agrees with me, in certain things. She removed some medicines and after some months she said “OK, we can try.” So my daughter arrived.” | [ | ||
| “I can’t be in the sun… I can’t go to the beach… I would have to wear like a long-sleeved dress… it’s really depressing.” | [ | ||
| Impacts of healthcare provider relationships on treatment | Feeling of being used | “One of the many barriers is that when you feel the doctor is actually not listening to you ... Just, ‘Continue your medication.’ Then I feel pretty upset about it that, it will make me feel I don’t want to continue about doing anything.” | [ |
| “Participants valued highly the ability of doctors to give clear and accurate information about the condition itself, their treatment options and potential side effects of the treatments. Patient 8 noted, ‘... Well, he was just saying if I didn’t take my medicine I was gonna die’.” | [ | ||
| “I like the information and the explanation of health terms in normal wording. When I get my blood tests back, I don’t know what the terms mean.” | [ | ||
| “I hate it when they use me as a guinea pig, try other treatments and stuff. They just try me on different immunosuppressant drugs; I really suffer a lot with side effects.” | [ | ||
| Gaining control over treatment | Desire to manage side effects | “The prednisone really helped the symptoms, but it made me feel sicker. Like you know the flares went away, but then I was overweight and bloated and you know my joints were swollen from the water. So I felt sicker even though I wasn’t having like you know massive flares.” | [ |
| “Just anything really, to help you to do things for yourself. I mean, I know it is about getting better and all that but there is this sort of isolation aspect and you don’t want to feel that you’ve got something that nobody knows anything about and you can’t find anything about easily.” | [ | ||
| Practical barriers to taking medication | Cost of medications | “It’s one thing to have the illness. That’s bad enough, but the medical bills. .. they’re so much more than I expected and we don’t know how we’re going to pay for all of this.” | [ |
| [ | |||
| [ | |||
| Motivation towards adherence to treatment | Medication to continue living | “My hands were black all the time and my feet...And now...look how nice and pink I am.” | [ |
| “Probably the best thing is that it probably helps with more stuff that I can’t actually physically notice, like the stuff that’s stopping my body from fully attacking itself.” | [ | ||
| “I mean I don’t feel like I’m held back in any way right now. I’m doing everything I want to do – all the clubs and activities I want to do. Psychological health – I would like to think is all there. I mean, sometimes I get stressed out with school and everything, but I feel like everybody does. Yeah, aside from the fact that I’m on medication daily, I consider myself generally – given my circumstances, a generally healthy person, I guess.” | [ | ||
| Understanding the importance of treatment | Belief that their condition isn’t severe enough | “It is like so many of them. I have 15 a day that I take. It is annoying. If I think some are less important then I do not take it” | [ |
| “So my problem is that I don’t know if I am bad enough to need it (the medication), I mean you can’t know, so that’s, a struggle.” | [ | ||
| Fear and concern with side effects of treatment | Fear of side effects | “But, you know, when it comes to like my energy level I don’t know if that’s the steroids or the Lupus. The memory, I don’t know if that’s really with the two of them, or one ofthem, or…you know, some ofthem I don’t really know if it’s the steroids, the Lupus, or another medication that I might be on.” | [ |
| “[Steroids] just causes more issues with my system. [Steroids] makes it go in chaos. I get more wired up. It’s bad enough I don’t sleep as it is, then I really can’t sleep.” | [ | ||
| “I haven’t really had any issues with that I know of, but I’m on so many medications I don’t know what a reaction would be with [hydroxychloroquine], so I can’t really say because of all the medications that I’m on.” | [ | ||
| “Worst thing is the day I received [belimumab] also, you can almost, by the time you leave the doctor’s office you can feel; I’ve talked to other patients there about [belimumab] too, and you can barely make it home; it makes you so tired. I mean you have to drive home after because you have to receive [belimumab] at the doctor’s office…” | [ |