| Literature DB >> 31528844 |
Emma Dures1,2, Clive Bowen3, Mel Brooke3, Jane Lord2, William Tillett4,5, Neil McHugh5, Sarah Hewlett1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: PsA is an inflammatory condition that can cause pain, fatigue, swelling and joint stiffness. The consequences include impaired physical function, a high psychosocial burden, reduced quality of life and work disability. The presenting symptoms can be non-specific and varied, leading to delays in diagnosis or referral to specialist teams. The aim of this study was to explore patients' experiences of being diagnosed and the initial management of PsA.Entities:
Keywords: diagnosis; psoriatic arthritis; psychological distress; qualitative; rheumatology; self-management; specialist care; treatment decisions
Year: 2019 PMID: 31528844 PMCID: PMC6735807 DOI: 10.1093/rap/rkz022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Adv Pract ISSN: 2514-1775
Core interview questions
| A: initial symptoms | First symptoms noticed |
| What these symptoms indicated | |
| Response to these symptoms | |
| Time before seeking medical advice | |
| B: interaction with health-care professionals | Reasons for contacting a health-care professional/GP |
| Health-care professional/GP response to symptoms | |
| Referral to rheumatology | |
| Initial interactions with rheumatology | |
| Thoughts and feelings about diagnosis | |
| Views on health care/care pathways | |
| C: post-diagnosis | Treatment-related decisions |
| Impact of PsA and treatment |
GP: general practitioners.
Demographic and clinical data
| Gender |
| TDX | Medications |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | 51 | 6 | MTX | Y | 2.625 |
| M | 72 | 6 | MTX; folic acid | NS | 0.875 |
| F | 66 | 12 | SSZ; paracetamol plus codeine | Y | 1.75 |
| F | 32 | 24 | Zapain, SSZ; LEF, MTX | Y | 0.125 |
| F | 71 | 1 | None | Y | 1.5 |
| F | 61 | 15 | paracetamol; tramadol; omeprazole | Y | 2 |
| F | 48 | 3 | MTX, zapain, ibuprofen | N | 1.5 |
| F | 53 | 4 | MTX; folic acid | Y | 0.875 |
| M | 64 | 1 | CSs; (due to start MTX + folic acid) | N | 0.75 |
| F | 57 | 15 | SSZ; MTX; prednisolone; naproxen; omeprazole | N | 1.5 |
| F | 21 | 16 | Adcal – D3 | N | 0 |
| M | 55 | NS | None | N | 0 |
| F | 36 | 18 | SSZ; omeprazole | N | 0.875 |
| F | 48 | 12 | MTX; folic acid; fentbid forte gel | Y | 0 |
| M | 73 | 2 | Voltarol | N | 0.125 |
In years.
Self-report of current active disease (N: no; NS: not sure; Y: yes).
Heath Assessment Questionnaire: disability index of daily physical activities, with scores ranging from zero (without any difficulty) to three (cannot be done at all).
TDX, time since diagnosis, in months.
Labels of main themes and sub-themes
| Main theme | Sub-themes |
|---|---|
| 1. From symptom onset to specialist care: ‘it was the blind leading the blind’ | Making sense of symptoms |
| Mis-diagnosis and missed opportunities | |
| Fast and easy access to expertise | |
| 2. Diagnosis as a turning point: ‘having somebody say you’ve got something wrong with you, I was euphoric’ | Validation and reassurance |
| Weighing up treatment options | |
| Taking on self-management | |
| Acknowledging loss and change |
Data excerpts evidencing theme 1 sub-themes
| Theme 1: symptom onset to specialist care: ‘it was the blind leading the blind’ |
|---|
| (i) Making sense of symptoms |
| When my hands started swelling, yes that’s when I began to think maybe I should do something about it, because they were getting quite painful and I was having more trouble doing things (F, 71 years old) |
| I’ve put my body through such a lot, and now it’s kicking me and telling me I’m getting my own back (M, 56 years old) |
| I wasn’t sure if it was stress related because I was going through a divorce at the time (F, 36 years old) |
| I think it was the blind leading the blind for a little bit. The doctor going ‘I don’t know’ and me going ‘well I don’t know’ (F, 32 years old) |
| I started mapping out a life plan of everything I did, my diet, what time I was getting up, absolutely everything, and I couldn’t see a pattern, it didn’t seem to be linked to exercise or anything, it didn’t seem to flare up when I did more or less (M, 55 years old) |
| I did have three blood tests for RA with the doctor, so it wasn’t as though nothing was done (F, 61 years old) |
| Because I wasn’t getting anywhere fast, and because it had had such a massive impact on my lifestyle, I actually felt I didn’t want to live (F, 48 years old) |
| Every day I’d wake up with a different joint, and I felt very depressed about it, very miserable, I stopped going out, I stopped socializing, and I felt like I was becoming disabled (F, 36 years old) |
| I couldn’t hold a cup at one point, and to go from being perfectly alright, to being like that in a space of a couple of months, I just wanted to kill myself, I really did (F, 48 years old) |
| (ii) Mis-diagnosis and missed opportunities |
| I went to the doctor [GP] and it was only in my, just above my thumb and they said it was RSI [repetitive strain injury] (F, 53 years old) |
| After examination and everything, he thought that I had OA (F, 66 years old) |
| … Oh you know, attention-seeking menopausal woman … I feel a bit cross really that they didn’t take it a bit more seriously, because I think how much damage has been done while I haven’t been getting any treatment (F, 57 years old). |
| It was opportunities missed, because the more I read about the inflammation, the systemic inflammation, the more scared I get, and I just want it under control (F, 48 years old) |
| A little bit angry, to be honest, that it wasn’t picked up for years, and possibly my fingers, which look deformed now, could have been stopped (F, 53 years old) |
| Every time I’ve been to have my creams and stuff you need for the psoriasis, none of them have ever assessed me for PsA, which they’re supposed to aren’t they, under the NICE guidelines, you’re supposed to be assessed every year (F, 48 years old) |
| I did read something on the NHS website that if you have psoriasis the doctor’s surgery should check you for arthritis once a year (F, 53 years old) |
| I remember going to the doctor and saying, because I have got psoriasis do you think it’s connected because I have got, my nails are a bit ridged (F, 57 years old) |
| This type of arthritis is normally seen in somebody that would suffer with psoriasis. Now, I don’t, externally. My mum did and my sister does, and my sister has gone on to have systemic lupus (F, 48 years old) |
| Well, I know my grandson has it [PsA], and we were all quite worried about it (M, 72 years old) |
| Members of my family do have PsA, so it was family history in the end (F, 21 years old) |
| (iii) Fast and easy access to expertise |
| I literally went from having a bit of a sore finger, saw a nurse, saw a doctor, went to the hospital, and it happened really quickly, and I was really happy with it (F, 21 years old |
| I haven’t been messed about or anything, the original GP had said right I will do this for you, which he did … so, yeah, I think it’s been really good. I have been treated well (M, 64) |
F: female; GP: general practitioner; M: male.
Data excerpts evidencing theme 2 sub-themes
| Theme 2: diagnosis as a turning point: ‘having somebody say you’ve got something wrong with you, I was euphoric’ |
|---|
| (i) Validation and reassurance |
| Having somebody say, yeah, actually you’ve got something wrong with you, you are in trouble, and I was euphoric at getting, being given a diagnosis (F, 57 years old) |
| Knowing what it was was definitely a big help to me and not knowing what it was was a source of great stress (F, 61 years old) |
| When you see a specialist and someone deals with you, it is, it’s reassuring (M, 51 years old) |
| I feel they want to put a label on it. I’m not wholly in agreement they’ve got it right (M, 55 years old) |
| I do feel now I’ve got to a specialist department, I feel confident that they’re going to do their best for me, as long as I do my bit and do my best myself (F, 57 years old) |
| Having this diagnosis hasn’t stopped the condition, yes, it’s opened up doors for treatment that hopefully will control it (F, 48 years old) |
| It’s [symptoms] still happening and they’ve upped the dosage to try and beat it, but I’ve got confidence at least it will, it won’t be through the lack of trying anyway (M, 51 years old) |
| It’s the emotional support, it’s incredibly important. I think it would be quite easy just to go under with it, and just to end up off work for weeks with depression, because it is depressing, because it affects everything (F, 36 years old) |
| It’s like, how could it go from my toe to taking MTX? It’s, yeah, it’s been very, very hard to get my head around. That’s what I mean about the whole emotional and mental health side of things. There’s nobody there you can talk to about it, because your doctor kind of like, ‘oh well it’s just monthly blood tests’ (F, 48 years old) |
| (ii) Weighing up treatment options |
| He [rheumatologist] said ‘it's your decision whether you want to take strong medication or not’ and I said I'd rather not. It's not bothering me that much, and he seems to agree with my decision. He doesn't think I'm being silly (M, 73 years old) |
| It’s been a discussion always, so I would do research, they have their own knowledge and own experience and then we’d collaborate and make decisions together (F, 21 years old) |
| Everything was explained to me really well. I came in, like, not knowing a thing. I come out not an expert but understanding, you know, what the problem was and stuff (M, 64 years old) |
| The fact that they are going to check liver and kidneys and things like that in blood tests makes it quite scary, because you think obviously these side-effects could be quite, not dangerous, but serious (F, 71 years old) |
| I found it very difficult, so I thought, okay, I need to be in the right place to reduce my alcohol intake mentally and I then need to decide if taking MTX is going to make me ill or not and is it worth it as I’ve lived with this so long already but I don’t want it to get worse (F, 53 years old) |
| I wouldn’t get to the point where I was completely immobilized by it or let the disease damage the joints. I wouldn’t go that far. I would prefer to control it with diet and exercise if there’s a way of doing that (M, 55 years old) |
| I was on MTX. It wasn’t doing an awful lot of good, so they upped the dose from 15 to 20 and then my liver started playing up. My liver was not working, my hair started falling out, all that sort of thing, so they put me back down to 15, and then they started me on, I can’t remember, LEF (F, 48 years old) |
| (iii) Taking on self-management |
| You can do something about it yourself, you know, as regards taking the medication and also doing the exercises, which physio will tell you what to do (M, 72 years old) |
| There was a lot I found I could do, and I’ve lost a lot of weight in the last year. And that’s helped a lot as well. So, I think you just sort of have to know what you can do yourself (F, 32 years old) |
| What I have found helpful, throughout all this, I have tried to meditate, and I was given a relaxation tape, which I do find very helpful (F, 61 years old) |
| That particular appointment was a total waste of time and just left me feeling very depressed and guilty. It makes you feel guilty, as if you’re doing something really wrong all the time (F, 66 years old) |
| (iv) Acknowledging loss and change |
| I had to pack up gardening for a start because I usually go to what I call gardening club on a Thursday, and that’s usually quite physical work. I can’t grip, so I don’t go (M, 72 years old) |
| Still more time off work. Now it’s starting to impact me financially (F, 48 years old) |
| I do worry now that employers are not going to want to employ me (F, 21 years old) |
| I’ve got an elderly mother and I feel so guilty that I can’t help her with anything (F, 61 years old) |
| I am very worried about when it [baby] does arrive, what’s going to happen, I don’t want everything to fall on my partner. He’s been incredibly supportive, but the fear is he will end up becoming my carer (F, 36 years old) |
| I have given up on the hope that my life will ever return to what it was because I feel that I’ve got to be realistic.… But if this is as good as it gets then I need to make a life that’s worth living (F, 48 years old) |
| Once you’ve got it, you’ve basically just got to learn to live with it and control it and do your best really, just accept it. Some things you can’t change (F, 66 years old) |
| I’m still really up and down with it. And there are times when I feel very bleak and depressed about it. And other times where I’ve got more get up and go, and that’s usually when I’m in less pain and less tired (F, 36 years old) |
F: female; M: male.