| Literature DB >> 34930136 |
Kate L Lapane1, Catherine Dubé2, Katarina Ferrucci2,3, Sara Khan2, Kristine A Kuhn4, Esther Yi5, Jonathan Kay2,6,7, Shao-Hsien Liu2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The average time to a diagnosis for people with axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) is 7-10 years. Delayed diagnosis may result in increased structural damage, worse physical function, and worse quality of life relative to patients with a timely axSpA diagnosis. Understanding patient experiences may provide insights for how to reduce diagnostic delays.Entities:
Keywords: Back pain; Delayed diagnosis; Focus groups; Mass screening; Patient preference; Qualitative research; Quality of life; Spondyloarthritis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34930136 PMCID: PMC8691008 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-021-01599-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Fig. 1Patient Recruitment Flow Chart
Focus group questions
| Focus Group Questions | |
|---|---|
| 1. What do you call your arthritis and why? | |
| 2. How did spondylitis start for you? What were your earliest symptoms? | |
| 3. Before you were diagnosed, what kinds of things did you say to your doctor about it? | |
| 4. Sometimes people with spondylitis wait a long time before finally being diagnosed. Sometimes 7 or 10 years. What was your experience? What was the diagnostic journey like? | |
| 5. Written exercise: What do these terms mean to you? (chronic, stiffness, flare-up, acute) -- Discussion: How about these other terms: Psoriasis; Iritis; NSAID, uveitis, etc. | |
| 6. Who has experienced “stiffness”? How would you describe it to someone who has never had it? | |
| 7. How do you talk about pain to your doctor? When a doctor asks you how long you have had pain – what does that mean to you? | |
8. Written Exercise: Look at the handout called “Your Arthritis – Side A.” Use the figure her and mark the spot of the Now side B. Mark your pain, aching or stiffness that | |
| 9. What advice do you have for primary care doctors, family doctors etc.? Rheumatologists? | |
| 10. If you could go back in time, how would you discuss your symptoms to help reach a diagnosis more quickly? Would you have done anything differently? |
Characteristics of patients with axial spondyloarthritis participating in focus groups
| Overall ( | |
|---|---|
| Age in years | 53.5 (15.1) |
| Age at first symptom | 22.8 (10.1) |
| Age first told doctor | 24.4 (10.7) |
| Age at diagnosis | 34.8 (12.7) |
| Time from first symptom to first tell doctor | 1.7 (2.7) |
| Time from first told doctor to diagnosis | 10.4 (9.1) |
| Time from first symptom to diagnosis | 12.0 (9.5) |
| Women | 38.5 |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| White | 76.9 |
| Black | 7.7 |
| Hispanic | 3.9 |
| Other | 11.5 |
| Education | |
| High School or less | 0 |
| Some college | 38.5 |
| College graduate | 30.8 |
| Graduate degree | 30.8 |
| Medications | |
| NSAIDS | 46.2 |
| Corticosteroids | 0 |
| TNF-alpha inhibitors | 42.3 |
| IL-17 inhibitors | 3.9 |
| IL 12/23 Inhibitors | 19.2 |
| Opioids | 7.7 |
| DMARDS | 0 |
Percentages may exceed 100% due to rounding
Shortcomings of existing screening procedures
| Theme | Representative quotes |
|---|---|
| Lengthy trial & error approaches | |
| Intermittent symptoms need to be taken into consideration | |
| Symptoms minimized or disregarded | |
| Early symptoms can be due to many other things | |
| Doctors give up when they can’t figure it out | |
| Patients are having to do the legwork |
Patient perspectives on improving the screening process for axial spondyloarthritis
| Theme | Representative quotes |
|---|---|
| Listen and believe the patient | |
| Do not come to premature closure when the patient does not fit the typical profile | |
| Find a more definitive test /use HLA-B27 |
Barriers that need to be addressed to implement improved screening and early detection
| Theme | Representative quotes |
|---|---|
| Additional education for primary care doctors | |
| Improve physician empathy, persistence, relationship with patient | |
| Physician assumptions: drug seeking, hypochondriasis | |
| Improve access to specialists and care coordination | |
| Not enough rheumatologists | |
| Make time and information available |
Extract from focus group codebook
| Name | Description |
|---|---|
| Early symptoms | First symptoms, symptoms prior to dx, symptoms leading to doctor visit, childhood symptoms |
| Told physician | Things patients told their doctor about their symptoms, before diagnosis, for diagnosis, after diagnosis |
| Failed therapy | Therapies tried and failed prior to diagnosis -- may include pharmacotherapies, physical therapy, chiropractic, acupuncture, different mattress, psych therapies, etc. etc. |
| Wrong diagnosis | Misdiagnoses prior to eventual diagnosis of SpA (example - “they thought it was a back sprain” -- “they even thought I had cancer as a child” “they told me it was because one leg was shorter than the other” etc. |
| Diagnosis | Experience with diagnosis and delay, Getting the SpA diagnosis, hearing the SpA diagnosis for the first time |
| Helped diagnosis | Things they helped get a diagnosis – Firing docs and getting new ones, self-advocacy, having an advocate doc, friends/family who advocated, persistence, HLA-B27, etc. |
| HLA-B27 | Discussion of genetic predisposition, family history, results of the HLA-B27 test. |
| Impede diagnosis | Things that interfered with dx – Gender, MD or family disbelief, “drug-seeking”, No HLA-B27 |
| Health system | Comments about insurance coverage, co-pays, access to services, pharmaceutical industry, etc. |
| Done differently | Things the patient might have done differently in retrospect - things they wish they would have done to get their diagnosis sooner. |
| Advice for physicians | Advice for primary care docs, rheumatologists, other docs |