| Literature DB >> 35055498 |
Eduardo Candel-Parra1, María Pilar Córcoles-Jiménez1, Victoria Delicado-Useros1, Marta Carolina Ruiz-Grao1,2, Antonio Hernández-Martínez2,3, Milagros Molina-Alarcón1,2.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease is a chronic, progressive, and disabling neurodegenerative disease which evolves until the end of life and triggers different mood and organic alterations that influence health-related quality of life. The objective of our study was to identify the factors that negatively impact the quality of life of patients with Parkinson's disease and construct a predictive model of health-related quality of life in these patients.Entities:
Keywords: PDQ-39; Parkinson’s disease; model predictive; quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35055498 PMCID: PMC8775752 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19020672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1PDQ-39 scores at baseline (T0), 12 months (T1), and 24 months (T3).
Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of the study sample.
| Variable | T0 % ( |
|---|---|
| Mean age (SD) | 69.51 (8.63) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 59.4 (92) |
| Female | 40.6 (63) |
| Living situation | |
| With family | 85.8 (133) |
| Lives alone | 9.7 (15) |
| Nursing home | 4.5 (7) |
| Civil status | |
| Married | 75.5 (117) |
| Widowed | 16.1 (25) |
| Divorced | 1.9 (3) |
| Employment situation | |
| Retired | 73.5 (114) |
| Homemaker | 19.4 (30) |
| Actively employed | 5.2 (8) |
| Education | |
| No education | 0.6 (1) |
| Primary level | 82.6 (128) |
| Secondary level | 12.3 (19) |
| University level | 4.5 (7) |
| Disease duration | |
| ≤ 5 years | 29% (45) |
| 6 to 10 years | 36.1% (56) |
| 11 to 15 years | 18.8% (29) |
| 16 years and older | 15.8% (25) |
SD, standard deviation, CI, confidence interval.
Factors associated with quality of life in persons with Parkinson’s disease. Bivariate and multivariate analysis by linear regression.
| Variable | Quality of Life Scores | MD 95% CI * | aMD 95% CI ** |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (per one year) |
| ||
| Education level | |||
| No education | 50.26 (NC) | Ref. | |
| Primary level | 28.89 (16.23) | −21.37 (−53.62, −10.88,) | |
| Secondary level | 21.68 (13.58) | −28.58 (−57.85, 0.70,) | |
| University level | 14.07 (10.74) |
| |
| Sex | |||
| Female | 28.27 (14.82) | Ref. | Ref. |
| Male | 26.93 (17.06) | −1.35 (−6.57, 3.88) |
|
| Lives in nursing home | |||
| No | 26.60 (15.81) | Ref. | Ref. |
| Yes | 45.91 (12.56) |
|
|
| Uses walking stick | |||
| No | 24.74 (15.52) | Ref. | Ref. |
| Yes | 34.39 (15.79) |
|
|
| Uses crutches | |||
| No | 26.47 (16.02) | Ref. | |
| Yes | 39.50 (12.91) |
| |
| Uses a walker | |||
| No | 26.26 (16.12) | Ref. | |
| Yes | 38.83 (11.65) |
| |
| Uses a wheelchair | |||
| No | 26.17 (15.77) | Ref. | Ref. |
| Yes | 44.54 (10.81) |
|
|
| Has a caregiver | |||
| No | 22.00 (13.22) | Ref. | |
| Yes | 35.69 (16.73) |
| |
| Years of Parkinson disease progress | 0.91 (0.54, 1.28) | ||
| HY Stage | |||
| 1–2 | 20.17 (11.97) | Ref. | Ref. |
| 3–5 | 42.37 (13.06) |
|
|
| Surgery for neurostimulation | |||
| No | 26.31 (16.34) | Ref. | |
| Yes | 31.99 (14.78) | 5.68 (−0.61, 11.97) | |
| Has Alzheimer’s disease or major neurocognitive disorder | |||
| No | 26.21 (15.31) | Ref. | Ref. |
| Yes | 51.53 (13.85) |
|
|
| More than two motor symptoms | |||
| No | 23.41 (16.00) | Ref. | |
| Yes | 36.02 (12.89) |
| |
| More than five non-motor symptoms | |||
| No | 19.61 (13.92) | Ref. | Ref. |
| Yes | 35.45 (14.29) |
|
|
| Polypharmacy (>=4 medicines) | |||
| No | 23.11 (14.13) | Ref. | Ref. |
| Yes | 33.69 (16.91) |
|
|
| Disability >66% | |||
| No | 23.35 (14.62) | Ref. | Ref. |
| Yes | 39.75 (14.28) |
|
|
MD: Mean difference; aMD: Adjusted mean difference by multivariate analysis; * Linear regression; ** Multiple linear regression. Statistically significant associations are indicated in bold.
Figure 2Predictive capacity for the cut-off point >40 points for the PDQ-39 questionnaire (area under the ROC curve (AUROC)). Figure legend. AUROC to determine the predictive ability of the model in the validation cohort, representing the sensitivity on the y-axis and specificity on the x-axis.
Figure 3Predictive capacity for the cut-off point >40 points for the PDQ-39 questionnaire at one year. Figure legend. AUROC to determine the predictive ability of the model in the validation cohort, representing the sensitivity on the y-axis and specificity on the x-axis.
Figure 4Predictive capacity for the cut-off point >40 points for the PDQ-39 questionnaire at two years. Figure legend. AUROC to determine the predictive ability of the model in the validation cohort, representing the sensitivity on the y-axis and specificity on the x-axis.
Figure 5Quality of life scores PDQ-39. Automatic calculator.