| Literature DB >> 30886969 |
Sarah Munro1,2, Luke Spooner3, Katherine Milbers3,2, Marie Hudson4, Cheryl Koehn5, Mark Harrison3,2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is growing evidence that it may be possible to identify people at high risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Assuming that effective interventions were available, this could mean that treatments introduced in the pre-symptomatic phase could prevent or delay the onset of the disease. Our study aimed to identify the potential attributes involved in decision-making around whether or not to take preventive treatment for RA, in order to inform the development of a discrete choice experiment (DCE) to ascertain consumer preferences for a preventive treatment program for RA.Entities:
Keywords: Arthritis; Decision making; Discrete choice experiment; Focus groups; Health/economics; Rheumatoid/therapy; Rheumatology/economics
Year: 2018 PMID: 30886969 PMCID: PMC6390586 DOI: 10.1186/s41927-018-0026-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Rheumatol ISSN: 2520-1026
Summary of Major Themes and Related Subthemes
| Theme | Sub-Themes | |
|---|---|---|
| Living with Rheumatoid Arthritis | Living with RA | |
| Being Proactive about My Health | ||
| Wanting a Better Quality of Life | ||
| Trying to Avoid the Side Effects of Medications | On Health (not deteriorating for patients) | |
| On Lifestyle (not getting worse for both patients and first-degree relatives) | ||
| Having Concerns about the Impact of the Test | ||
| Preventing Rheumatoid Arthritis | Questioning if Preventive Treatment Is Appropriate | |
| Needing More Evidence | Due to uncertainty about the treatment | |
| Due to gaps in knowledge about RA | ||
| Implementing Preventive Treatment for RA | In clinical practice with patients | |
| At the health system level | ||
| Wanting Alternatives to Medication: For Preventive Treatment | ||
Thematic Framework for “Living with Rheumatoid Arthritis”
| Living with Rheumatoid Arthritis | Being Proactive about My Health | Wanting a Better Quality of Life | Trying to Avoid the Side Effects of Medication | Having Concerns about the Impact of the Test | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient | “I was just devastated, I couldn’t even, for an afternoon get dressed, couldn’t pull up the zipper on my pants, and I just lost so much weight.”b | “You want to do something about it [RA]. It’s not just a matter of kind of thinking you’re going to get over it”a | “[Treatment would] minimize sort of like the long term impact of maybe like hunching and succumbing to the pain. So that was really good.”b | “And of course the medication is affecting all the other things, the liver, the kidneys. Your skin, your hair, like everything. Eyes.”b | “And you could have some kind of decision tree or flow chart. Okay, so I’ve got this positive marker, now what?”b |
| First Degree Relative | “She [family member] had a life and then once the disease came and took it from her, she didn’t [anything] anymore. She couldn’t do things.”b | “If there were perhaps a treatment that were extremely preventive and very effective at lessening the risk of developing such a disease, I absolutely would take the test because that to me leads to something that is preventive. That leaves me being able to take some action”a | “If that was a risk for the medication, it’s also a risk for the RA. You’re almost guaranteed to get serious infections and TB is completely likely. So would I rather get those now when I’m strong enough and healthy enough to fight them” | “Especially because of watching my mom with prednisone, if there’s anything that increase the mental risk, that would be like huge for me.”a | “And for me adding any kind of anxiety to it, not because [a test result] necessarily jars me into a realism that I’m not comfortable with, but because I don’t think it adds anything.”b |
| Rheumatologist | “They [first degree relatives] want to know [about RA risk] because they think that they can prevent disease in themselves.” | “Well, if I know I’m going to have Lupus then my insurance goes into the toilet, you know, and I don’t want that, so I don’t want to know. I don’t want my family to know.”b |
a and b next to quotes indicate moderate and high importance/representativeness, respectively
Thematic Framework for “Preventing Rheumatoid Arthritis”
| Questioning if Preventive Treatment Is Appropriate | Needing More Evidence: Due to uncertainty about the treatment | Needing More Evidence: Due to gaps in knowledge about RA | Implementing Preventive Treatment for RA: In clinical practice with patients | Wanting Alternatives to Medication: For preventive treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | “Because it [RA treatment] is going to stop your pain when you take it anyways, why would you want to take that before if it has a lot of risk involved?” | “How the treatment affects or it works, down to a cellular level. The methods and results of testing. All possible side effects, short-term, long-term, and complementary lifestyle choices.”a | “If we don’t know the cause [of RA], everything is suspect that we do. You know? And especially all the treatments”a | “People should know why they should take the drugs because, for people like me who were in denial or just thought I would eat better and exercise and do yoga and whatnot I’d be fine and I don’t need all these drugs.” | “Your whole generation just looks at so many different options.”a |
| First Degree Relatives | “From where it would be coming from, Dr.--- was like, ‘Hey, you know, there’s this treatment. You know, I know how badly it effects your mother. I think that you are possibly at risk for having it,’ and he suggested it to me, I would definitely take a look at it.”b | “There would always be that little bit in the back of my mind that would go, ‘Okay, how far is the treatment going to be advanced by the time that I get there.’ You know, like in another 15, 20 years of medical science how much is the treatment for people with it going to be advanced?”b | “And I’ve heard theories, everything from it [RA] skips generations to it’s immediate, to you know it only affects the women in one side of the family. I’ve heard a whole bunch of different crazy different things.”b | “So let’s say that it’s a 60% chance that it’s absolutely going to prevent rheumatoid arthritis later in my life, and there’s a herbal treatment which is, like, 55%, 50%. That massively changes what my personal treatment plan is.”b | |
| Rheumatologists | “But from our point of view is it safe to say though that we, too, if there was good evidence that normalizing endosmosis, or that weight loss or smoking cessation reduces [RA], we would be more at ease with that sort of intervention than an intervention that involves medications with toxicity?”b | “I think that a really, really strong, good solid scientific placebo control or analyzed control, let’s do it, I’ll push for it. But before that it is do no harm and that is how I approach my patient.”a | “I think that if you’re able to profile rheumatoid as to those patients who have really terrible diseases, you know, you can get it under control … and you were able to give something really, I would feel that those patients that I would be willing to do [preventive treatment].”a | “Is there a marketing approach that would change actual behavior or compliance in all that sort of thing. I think that’s one thing medicine really hasn’t -- you know, drug companies do it all the time, but that is to sell drugs to us not to the patient”b | “Patients want a cure, and patients want a cure naturally, right? And natural is perceived as being with no risk, which is not always true.” |
a and b next to quotes indicate moderate and high importance/representativeness, respectively
Summary of potential attributes, their levels, and supporting quotes compiled from the Framework Analysis
| Final Attributes | Lay Terminology | Key Quotations from Qualitative Data | Suggested Labels of Possible Levels |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1) Accuracy of Test | How accurate is the test in predicting rheumatoid arthritis | “I guess I want to know how accurate the test is, and if there is any chance that you could maybe be told like oh, there is a very good chance of you getting it, but maybe finding out later that that actually wasn’t true.” – First-degree relative | • High |
| 2) Certainty in Estimates | How strong is the evidence for the test and preventive treatments | “Whether there was enough evidence to show that that treatment actually has a chance of preventing.” – Patient | • Moderate |
| 3) Method of Administration | Whether it is an infusion, injection, tablet. | “You know, I went to Europe last year with my wife. We were gone for, you know, half a year. Now if I wasn’t able to do that because I had to go to a specific doctor twice a week to get this thing, no thanks. I’m good.” – First-degree relative | • Infusion |
| 4) Risk of RA and Risk Reduction with Treatment | The risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis without vs. with treatment | “Me personally, never [would consider testing]. Unless it’s 100% positive. Just with the test turn out.” - Patient | • High |
| 5) Risk and Seriousness of Side Effect | The risk of a side effect from treatment | “And I’ve had side effects with - I had a heart attack. I had my kidneys at stage - just the stage before. I needed to have dialysis, so. You know, there is side effects that you get that you have to watch out for.” - Patient | • Major irreversible; minor reversible |
| 6) Who Recommends | Whether it is a health care professional, patient, or relative who recommends it | “[If I] learn that I had a high risk of developing RA, I would probably talk about it to people and then that is why I came up with who recommends it being important. And I think I would have to hear it from at least two sources to act on it,” – First-degree relative | • Health care professional |
| 7) Opinion of Health Care Professional | Whether a health care professional or patient supports/wants to take test and/or preventive treatment | “I think that I also have a lot of trust at this point in what health care professionals say. And a lot of my own opinions, and ultimately in the end, like it would be my own opinion, but I just think a lot of my own opinion would come from what the doctor said” - First-degree relative | • Health care professional doesn’t prefer |