| Literature DB >> 33107998 |
Nichola Cooper1, Alexandra Kruse2, Caroline Kruse2, Shirley Watson3, Mervyn Morgan4, Drew Provan5, Waleed Ghanima6,7, Donald M Arnold8, Yoshiaki Tomiyama9, Cristina Santoro10, Marc Michel11, Serge Laborde12, Barbara Lovrencic13, Ming Hou14, Tom Bailey15, Gavin Taylor-Stokes15, Jens Haenig16, James B Bussel17.
Abstract
Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) has a substantial, multifaceted impact on patients' health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Data describing which aspects of ITP physicians and patients perceive as having the greatest impact are limited. The ITP World Impact Survey (I-WISh) was a cross-sectional survey, including 1507 patients and 472 physicians, to establish the impact of ITP on HRQoL and productivity from patient and physician perspectives. Patients reported that ITP reduced their energy levels (85% of patients), capacity to exercise (77%), and limited their ability to perform daily tasks (75%). Eighty percent of physicians reported that ITP symptoms reduced patient HRQoL, with 66% reporting ITP-related fatigue substantially reduced patient HRQoL. Patients believed ITP had a substantial impact on emotional well-being (49%) and 63% worried their condition would worsen. Because of ITP, 49% of patients had already reduced, or seriously considered reducing their working hours, and 29% had considered terminating their employment. Thirty-six percent of patients employed at the time of the survey felt ITP decreased their work productivity, while 51% of patients with high/very high symptom burden reported that ITP affected their productivity. Note, I-WISh demonstrated substantive impact of ITP on patients' HRQoL both directly for patients and from the viewpoint of their physicians. Patients reported reduced energy levels, expressed fears their condition might worsen, and those who worked experienced reduced productivity. Physicians should be aware not only of platelet counts and bleeding but also the multi-dimensional impact of ITP on patients' lives as an integral component of disease management.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33107998 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.26036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047