| Literature DB >> 34800167 |
Sophie Lehnerer1,2,3, Jonas Jacobi4, Ralph Schilling5,6, Ulrike Grittner5,7, Derin Marbin4,8, Lea Gerischer9,4, Frauke Stascheit9,4, Maike Krause9,4, Sarah Hoffmann9,4, Andreas Meisel9,4,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Myasthenia gravis (MG) leads to exertion-dependent muscle weakness, but also psychological and social well-being are limited. We aim to describe the burden of disease in MG including sociodemographic, economical, psychosocial as well as clinical aspects, to compare health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients with MG to the general population (genP) and to explore risk factors for a lower HRQoL.Entities:
Keywords: Burden of disease; Myasthenia gravis; Quality of life; Real-world setting
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34800167 PMCID: PMC9120127 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10891-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 6.682
Clinical characteristics of study participants
Fig. 1Symptoms of MG Patients according to single-item responses in the MG-ADL score (Activities of daily living). Symptoms were counted as presented if responses other than “normal” were selected by the study participants
Sociodemographic characteristics of study participants
Fig. 2SF-36 domains: Mean values (and standard deviation, SD) of SP (=MG patients in blue) and control group (grey). A Cohen’s d > 0.5 indicates a high effect, 0.3–0.5 medium effect, 0.1–0.3 low effect and < 0.1 no effect
Multivariable analysis on physical functioning (SF-36) (combined results after multiple imputation, n = 4205)
(marginal means and 95% CI, model included interaction effect for group*sex and group*age group)
Overview MG-ADL, MG-QoL15, HADS, CFQ, ESSI-D and subgroups
| Parameter | All | Men | Women | gMG | oMG | Refractory MG | Ach-R-Abs pos MG | Musk-Abs pos MG | Thym-ectomy | EOMG | LOMG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
% | 1660 (0) 100 | 725 (4) 43.8 | 931 (4) 56.2 | 1127 (41) 69.6 | 345 (41) 21.3 | 228 (200) 15.6 | 837 (41) 51.7 | 82 (41) 5.1 | 743 (43) 45.9 | 176 (11) 10.7 | 1473 (11) 89.3 |
MG-ADL Median (IQR) | 4 (1/6) | 3 (1/5) | 4 (7/12) | 4 (2/7) | 2 (1/4) | 7 (4/10) | 3 (1/6) | 5 (2.25/7) | 3 (1/6) | 3 (1/6) | 4 (2/6) |
| – | 0.292 | ||||||||||
MG-QoL15 Median (IQR) | 12 (4/25) | 9 (3/21) | 15 (5/28) | 16 (5/28) | 6 (2/14) | 29 (19/38) | 11 (3/23) | 16 (8/25) | 11 (3/24) | 12 (3/28) | 12 (4/24) |
| – | 0.072 | 0.523 | |||||||||
HADS Median (IQR) | 10 (5/17) | 9 (4/15) | 11 (6/18) | 11 (6/18) | 8 (4/13) | 12 (8/19) | 9 (5/15) | 10 (5/18) | 9 (5/17) | 10 (5/17) | 10 (5/17) |
| – | 0.313 | 0.119 | 0.995 | ||||||||
HADS-A ≥ 8 p | 520 (32.5) | 179 (25.5) | 339 (37.9) | 393 (36.1) | 78 (23.2) | 86 (38.4) | 234 (28.4) | 26 (33.8) | 229 (31.6) | 64 (37.2) | 452 (31.9) |
HADS-D ≥ 8 p | 446 (27.9) | 184 (26.1) | 260 (29.2) | 347 (31.9) | 57 (16.8) | 84 (36.8) | 191 (23.4) | 24 (30.8) | 177 (24.5) | 40 (23.1) | 402 (28.4) |
| CFQ sum (Likert) Median (IQR) | 17 (12/21) | 16 (12/21) | 17 (12/22) | 18 (13/22) | 14 (11/18) | 21 (17/25) | 16 (12/21) | 19 (13/23) | 16 (12/21) | 16 (12/21) | 17 (12/22) |
| – | 0.187 | ||||||||||
CFQ ≥ 4 (Binary) | 989 (66.7) | 426 (63.3) | 560 (69.4) | 728 (72.5) | 161 (50.8) | 183 (80.3) | 483 (63.9) | 55 (71.4) | 424 (63.6) | 103 (63.2) | 880 (67.1) |
ESSI-D ≤ 18 p | 343 (22.7) | 102 (15.9) | 241 (27.9) | 253 (24.4) | 55 (17.6) | 60 (26.3) | 156 (20.2) | 9 (11.8) | 151 (21.8) | 42 (24.0) | 300 (22.6) |
| – | 0.122 | 0.503 | 0.687 | ||||||||
gMG generalized myasthenia gravis, oMG Ocular MG, EOMG Early Onset Myasthenia Gravis (≤ 45 years old), LOMG Late onset myasthenia gravis (> 45 years old), MG-Qol15 Myasthenia gravis quality of life, MG-ADL Myasthenia gravis activities of daily living profile, CFQ-11 Chalder Fatigue scale, ESSI-D ENRICHED Social Support Inventory, HADS-D Hospital anxiety and depression scale; p values indicate significance level or between men and women, or EOMG and LOMG or otherwise in the specific domain (e.g. gMG or Thymectomy) yes/no
significant p values (<0.05) are printed in bold
Fig. 3Net diagrams integrating the Myasthenia gravis Activities of Daily Living Score (MG-ADL), the Myasthenia gravis Quality of life Score (MG-QoL15), the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), the ENRICHD Social Support Inventory (ESSI-D), the Myasthenia gravis Quality of life Score (MG-QoL15), the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), the ENRICHD Social Support Inventory (ESSI-D), the Chalder Fatigue Scale (CFQ11) and the Physical Functioning (SF-36 Phys) and Emotional wellbeing (SF-36 Emot) domain of the Short Form 36 (SF-36) in different subgroups: a Gender, b age groups, c groups of different disease severity and d. net household income groups. The further out the lines are in the net, the higher and worse the single score value: Women (a), old patients (b), patients with high disease severity (c) and low income (d) do have the highest burden of disease, composed of high single score value