| Literature DB >> 33751494 |
Randall Winnette1, Susan Martin2, Nimanee Harris3, Linda S Deal4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Although alopecia areata (AA) profoundly impacts patients' physical appearance, emotional state, and daily activities, no treatment approved for AA currently exists. Patient-reported outcome (PRO) instruments currently used to capture patients' AA experiences do not meet the requirements to support claims of treatment benefit as described in the US Food and Drug Administration's 2009 PRO guidance. Our objective was to explore the consequences and priority treatment outcomes among individuals with AA and develop a PRO measure consistent with regulatory requirements that assesses these priorities and represents clinical benefit from the AA patient perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Activity; Alopecia areata; Consequence; Development; Emotional; Hair loss; Impact; Patient-reported outcome; Qualitative; Symptom
Year: 2021 PMID: 33751494 PMCID: PMC8018914 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-021-00508-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Literature search strategy
| Search | Terms | Records |
|---|---|---|
| Disease | ||
| #1 | #1 “Alopecia Areata”[Mesh] OR “alopecia areata”[Title/Abstract] OR “alopecia circumscripta”[Title/Abstract] OR “alopecia totalis”[Title/Abstract] OR “alopecia universalis”[Title/Abstract] | 1,457 |
| Burden | ||
| #2 | #2 #1 AND (“Alopecia Areata/psychology”[Mesh] OR “Quality of Life”[Mesh] OR “Activities of Daily Living”[Mesh] OR “Stress, Psychological”[Mesh] OR “Patient Satisfaction”[Mesh] OR “Emotions”[Mesh] OR “Anxiety”[Mesh] OR “Depression”[Mesh] OR “Life Change Events”[Mesh] OR “quality of life”[Title/Abstract] OR stress*[Title/Abstract] OR burden[Title/Abstract] OR impact[Title/Abstract] OR psychologic*[Title/Abstract] OR psychiatric[Title/Abstract] OR psychosocial[Title/Abstract] OR capabilit*[Title/Abstract] OR embarrass*[Title/Abstract] OR emotion*[Title/Abstract] OR “self-conscious”[Title/Abstract] OR anxiety[Title/Abstract] OR depress*[Title/Abstract] OR neurotic*[Title/Abstract] OR “life quality”[Title/Abstract] OR “QoL”[Title/Abstract] OR “hrql”[Title/Abstract] OR “hrqol”[Title/Abstract] OR “well being”[Title/Abstract] OR “SF-6D”[Title/Abstract] OR “SF-36”[Title/Abstract] OR “activities of daily living”[Title/Abstract] OR “daily life activities”[Title/Abstract] OR “patient satisfaction”[Title/Abstract] OR patient experience*[Title/Abstract] OR patient’s experience*[Title/Abstract] OR patients’ experience*[Title/Abstract] OR “functional ability”[Title/Abstract] OR “functional capacity”[Title/Abstract] OR “functional status”[Title/Abstract] OR “social life”[Title/Abstract]) | 250 |
| Patient’s perspective | ||
| #3 | 3 #2 AND (“Qualitative Research”[Mesh] OR “Focus Groups”[Mesh] OR “Interviews as Topic”[Mesh] OR “Patient Reported Outcome Measures”[Mesh] OR “Self Report”[Mesh] OR “Self-Assessment”[Mesh] OR “Outcome Assessment (Health Care)”[Mesh] OR “Surveys and Questionnaires”[Mesh] OR qualitativ*[Title/Abstract] OR focus group*[Title/Abstract] OR interview*[Title/Abstract] OR oral histor*[Title/Abstract] OR self report*[Title/Abstract] OR self assess*[Title/Abstract] OR patient report*[Title/Abstract] OR proxy report*[Title/Abstract] OR patient perspective*[Title/Abstract] OR patient’s perspective*[Title/Abstract] OR patients’ perspective*[Title/Abstract] OR questionnaire*[Title/Abstract] OR survey*[Title/Abstract] OR diary[Title/Abstract] OR assessment*[Title/Abstract] OR scale[Title/Abstract] OR inventory[Title/Abstract] OR index[Title/Abstract] OR “Interview”[Publication Type]) | 113 |
| Exclusions | ||
| #4 | “Animals”[Mesh] NOT “Humans”[Mesh] 1,042,774 | 1,042,774 |
| #5 | “Comment”[Publication Type] OR “Letter”[Publication Type] OR “Editorial”[Publication Type] | 646,283 |
| Total | ||
| #6 | (#3 NOT (#4 OR #5)) | 108 |
Participant Characteristics
| Characteristic | Concept elicitation | Cognitive debriefing | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults ( | Adults ( | Adolescents ( | ||
| Age, years | ||||
| Mean, rangea | 52.3, 29–70 | 31.5, 20–56 | 15.0, 12–17 | 38.6, 12–70 |
| Sex, | ||||
| Female | 16 (80) | 7 (78) | 3 (43) | 26 (72) |
| Race/ethnicity | ||||
| White | 7 (35) | 9 (100) | 6 (86) | 22 (61) |
| Black | 12 (60) | 0 (0) | 1 (14) | 13 (36) |
| Hispanic | 1 (5) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (3) |
| Time since diagnosis, years | ||||
| Mean, rangeb | 19.9, 2–52 | 14.6, 7–23 | 7.9, 1–16 | 15.8, 1–52 |
| Severity, | ||||
| < 50% hair lossc | 1 (5) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (3) |
| 50–99% hair loss | 11 (55) | 5 (56) | 4 (57) | 20 (56) |
| Totalis (complete loss of hair on the scalp) | 3 (15) | 0 (0) | 2 (29) | 5 (14) |
| Universalis (complete loss of hair on the scalp, face, and body) | 5 (25) | 4 (44) | 1 (14) | 10 (28) |
All data were self-reported
aMean age across the 29 adult participants was 46 years (range 20–70 years)
bMean time since diagnosis across the 29 adult participants was 18 years (range 2–52 years)
cParticipant had previous diagnosis of alopecia universalis
Alopecia areata symptoms and signs reported by participants
| Symptom or sign | Adults ( | Adolescents ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous | Probed | Spontaneous | Probed | |
| Loss of scalp haira | 20 | – | 7 | – |
| Loss of eyelashes | 6 | 4 | – | 1 |
| Loss of eyebrows | 6 | 6 | – | 2 |
| White hair regrowth | 2 | 11 | – | – |
| Itching | 1 | 10 | – | 4 |
| Tingling | 1 | 7b,c | – | 1 |
| Loss of body hair | 1 | 8 | 1 | 2 |
| Fingernail/toenail issues | 1 | 4 | – | 1 |
| Hair growing back patchy | 1 | 5 | – | 6 |
| Pain | – | 3 | – | – |
| Numbness | – | 3 | – | – |
| Burning | – | 2a | – | – |
| Loss of nose hair | – | 2 | – | 1 |
| Stinging | – | 1 | – | 1 |
Signs/symptoms reported spontaneously by one participant each (and not probed upon) included tiredness, lightheadedness, hunger, and headache (due to the scalp being exposed)
Bleeding was probed of all participants, but none endorsed this symptom
aScalp hair loss, as an eligibility criterion, was required of all participants
bOne participant considered symptom to be a result of scratching
cOne participant also reported a cold feeling on their scalp that would precede additional hair loss
Impacts of Alopecia Areata Reported by Participants
| Impacts | Adults ( | Adolescents ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous | Probed | Spontaneous | Probed | |
| Hard to participate in daily or outdoor activities (sports, swimming) | 8 | 4 | 5 | 1 |
| Sadness | 3 | 8 | – | 6 |
| Self-image/self-consciousness | 12 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
| Frustrated | – | 14 | – | 5 |
| Social interactions | 12 | 3 | 1 | 4 |
| Embarrasseda | 4 | – | – | 5 |
| Worry | 2 | 4 | 3 | 2 |
| Anxiety | – | 8 | – | 3 |
| Anger | 2 | 5 | – | 3 |
| Bullied | – | – | – | 2 |
| Depressed | 2 | 4 | – | 2 |
| Work or school productivity | 4 | 2 | – | 1 |
| Sexual function/intimacyb | 4 | 7 | – | – |
| Concerned about passing condition on to childrenb | 1 | 7 | – | – |
| Thoughts of self-harmc | – | 1 | – | – |
Table summarizes all probed impacts across both adults and adolescents
aNot probed for adult patients
bNot probed for adolescent patients
cSelf-harm was probed upon but not endorsed by any of the adolescent participants
Patient Quotes Regarding the Impact of Alopecia Areata
| Adults |
|---|
| I’m real self-conscious over it. Even with me brushing back with a ponytail, I’m looking in the mirror to make sure that that spot is not seen. [Female, aged 61 years] |
| [I feel] extremely sad. Like, I broke down a couple times in front of my husband. [Female, aged 49 years] |
| I can’t really go anywhere without someone staring or someone laughing at me, and depending on the day, it does upset me…it still never feels good when someone laughs about you being bald. [Female, aged 20 years] |
| A big thing for me is sometimes I don’t feel comfortable exercising and like going to the gym because I don’t want to have to deal with my hair if I get sweaty or something. [Female, aged 21 years] |
| When I was first diagnosed, I still liked going out. I would still go out and I wanted to. But now I don’t want to. [Female, aged 29 years] |
| I didn’t want to go out anywhere. Yeah. Blasted my ego and it, you know, here I was a model and a ladies’ man and now I’m this guy with this bald head. I looked like a cue ball because of the loss of the eyebrows. [Male, aged 61 years] |
| It’s sad when you see…I mean, I see people, the way people treated me with hair, without, with hair, without, and it was, it just sucked. I mean, it’s a huge difference. [Male, aged 38 years] |
| I feel embarrassed because I look different than other people. [Male, aged 15 years] |
| I can’t put my hair up in a ponytail and I have to have it in a certain style and I’m worried that people notice and I can’t swim. And now that it’s summer, that’s kind of rough for me. [Female, aged 15 years] |
| [I] just like wanted to not be involved as much. Wanted to, like, hide myself and, like, not have attention on me. Because I felt like…people would, like, judge more because I look different. [Male, aged 17 years] |
Concepts elicited across sources during content exploration
| Symptom or impact | Qualitative | Qualitative literature ( | Existing measures ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interviews ( | AA PFDD public meeting | |||
| Loss of scalp hair | 27 | ✓ | 4 | 2 |
| Loss of eyebrows | 14 | ✓ | – | 1 |
| White hair regrowth | 13 | ✓ | – | |
| Loss of body hair | 12 | ✓ | – | 1 |
| Hair growing back patchy | 12 | ✓ | – | 1 |
| Loss of eyelashes | 11 | ✓ | – | 1 |
| Itching | 15 | ✓a | – | 4 |
| Tingling | 9 | – | 1 | |
| Fingernail/toenail issues | 6 | ✓ | – | |
| ✓ | ||||
| Social interactions | 20 | ✓ | 4 | 4 |
| Hard to participate in daily or outdoor activities | 18 | ✓ | 3 | 3 |
| Sexual function/intimacy | 11 | ✓ | - | 4 |
| Work or school productivity | 7 | ✓ | 1 | 5 |
| Self–image/self-consciousness | 21 | ✓ | 4 | |
| Frustrated | 19 | ✓ | – | 1 |
| Sadness | 17 | ✓ | 1 | 3 |
| Worry | 11 | ✓ | 1 | 3 |
| Anxiety | 11 | ✓ | 3 | 2 |
| Anger | 10 | ✓ | 1 | 1 |
| Embarrassed | 9 | ✓ | 1 | 3 |
| Depressed | 8 | ✓ | 3 | 2 |
| Concerned about passing condition on to children | 8 | ✓ | – | 1 |
PFDD patient-focused drug development
Reported by at least one participant during the PFDD meeting on September 11, 2017
aParticipant quotes from the PFDD meeting described itch as a side effect of treatment for alopecia areata and not as a symptom of the disease itself
Fig.1Alopecia Areata Consequence Model. The alopecia areata consequence model was developed iteratively. A literature and instrument review informed the initial list of concepts for the model, which was updated based on results from qualitative interviews with adults and adolescents with alopecia areata. Concepts with a green box correspond to items that were ultimately included in the Alopecia Areata Patient Priority Outcomes instrument
Alopecia areata patient priority outcomes instrument concepts
| Draft concepts evaluated in cognitive debriefing interviews | Final concepts in pilot questionnaire |
|---|---|
Item 1. Hair loss, scalp Item 2. Hair loss, eyebrows Item 3. Hair loss, eyelashes Item 4. Hair loss, body hair Item 5. Problems with fingernails or toenails Item 6. Itching on scalp | Item 1. Hair loss, scalp Item 2. Hair loss, eyebrows Item 3. Hair loss, eyelashes Item 4. Hair loss, body hair |
Item 7. Self-consciousness about hair loss Item 8. Embarrassed about hair loss Item 9. Sad about hair loss Item 10. Frustrated about hair loss Item 11. Limited outdoor activity because of hair loss Item 12. Limited physical activity because of hair loss Item 13. Limited interactions with others because of hair loss | Item 5. Self-consciousness about hair loss Item 6. Embarrassed about hair loss Item 7. Sad about hair loss Item 8. Frustrated about hair loss Item 9. Limited outdoor activity because of hair loss Item 10. Limited physical activity because of hair loss Item 11. Limited interactions with others because of hair loss |
| Patients with alopecia areata (AA) experience profound impacts on their physical appearance, emotional state, and daily activities and face unmet treatment needs. None of the available patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures currently used to evaluate patients’ experiences with AA were developed in line with regulatory requirements. |
| Based on qualitative research with adults and adolescents with AA and a review of the published evidence, a novel AA-specific PRO measure was developed to capture the consequences and priority treatment outcomes of individuals with AA. |
| Cognitive debriefing interviews with patients confirmed the content validity of the measure, which was developed in a manner consistent with regulatory guidance. |