4.5 Article

An evaluation of patient-reported outcomes in sickle cell disease within a conceptual model

Journal

QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages 2681-2694

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-022-03132-z

Keywords

Patient-reported outcome measures; Sickle cell disease; Implementation science; Models-biopsychosocial

Funding

  1. US Federal Government cooperative agreements from the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute [HL133948, HL133964, HL133990, HL133996, HL133994, HL133997, HL134004, HL134007, HL134042]
  2. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (Bethesda, MD) [HL133948, HL133964, HL133990, HL133996, HL133994, HL133997, HL134004, HL134007, HL134042]

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This study examines the relations between patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and various factors in adults with sickle cell disease (SCD). The results highlight the importance biopsychosocial model in understanding the needs of this complex population and improving outcomes.
Purpose To examine the relations between patient-reported outcomes (PROs) within a conceptual model for adults with sickle cell disease (SCD) ages 18 - 45 years enrolled in the multi-site Sickle Cell Disease Implementation Consortium (SCDIC) registry. We hypothesized that patient and SCD-related factors, particularly pain, and barriers to care would independently contribute to functioning as measured using PRO domains. Methods Participants (N = 2054) completed a 48-item survey including socio-demographics and PRO measures, e.g., social functioning, pain impact, emotional distress, and cognitive functioning. Participants reported on lifetime SCD complications, pain episode frequency and severity, and barriers to healthcare. Results Higher pain frequency was associated with higher odds of worse outcomes in all PRO domains, controlling for age, gender and site (OR range 1.02-1.10, 95% CI range [1.004-1.12]). Reported history of treatment for depression was associated with 5 of 7 PRO measures (OR range 1.58-3.28 95% CI range [1.18-4.32]). Fewer individual barriers to care and fewer SCD complications were associated with better outcomes in the emotion domain (OR range 0.46-0.64, 95% CI range [0.34-0.86]). Conclusions Study results highlight the importance of the biopsychosocial model to enhance understanding of the needs of this complex population, and to design multi-dimensional approaches for providing more effective interventions to improve outcomes.

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