Impact of Enthesitis on Psoriatic Arthritis Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physician Satisfaction with Treatment: Data from a Multinational Patient and Physician Survey
Abstract Introduction Enthesitis is a core outcome domain assessed in psoriatic arthritis (PsA) clinical trials. Limited evidence describes the impact of enthesitis on patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and physician satisfaction with current treatment options. The objective of this analysis is to cha...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Adis, Springer Healthcare
2020-10-01
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Series: | Rheumatology and Therapy |
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1007/s40744-020-00242-3 |
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author | Ana-Maria Orbai Julie A. Birt Elizabeth A. Holdsworth Nicola Booth William N. Malatestinic Aubrey T. Sprabery Anthony M. Reginato |
author_facet | Ana-Maria Orbai Julie A. Birt Elizabeth A. Holdsworth Nicola Booth William N. Malatestinic Aubrey T. Sprabery Anthony M. Reginato |
author_sort | Ana-Maria Orbai |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Abstract Introduction Enthesitis is a core outcome domain assessed in psoriatic arthritis (PsA) clinical trials. Limited evidence describes the impact of enthesitis on patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and physician satisfaction with current treatment options. The objective of this analysis is to characterize the impact of enthesitis on PROs and physician satisfaction with currently available treatment in clinical practice settings. Methods Cross-sectional survey of rheumatologists, dermatologists, and their consulting patients with PsA in Australia, Canada, European Union (EU5), and the USA conducted in 2018. Physicians assessed current presence and severity of enthesitis, overall disease severity, other symptoms experienced, and their satisfaction with the current treatment. PsA participant self-reported data included current pain level, EQ5D, Psoriatic Arthritis Impact of Disease (PsAID12), Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (HAQ-DI), and Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Index (WPAI-SHP). Bivariate descriptive analyses were conducted to describe features and outcomes in participants with and without enthesitis. Results Rheumatologists (454) and dermatologists (238) provided information for 3157 participants with PsA. Mean participant age was 49.2 years, and 45.9% were female. Enthesitis was present currently in 6.5% (205) of participants with PsA. Those with enthesitis had worse overall disease severity compared to those without enthesitis (12.2% vs 2.2% severe) and had more extraarticular manifestations, including nail psoriasis, dactylitis, and sacroiliitis. Enthesitis was associated with more pain, worse quality of life (QoL), increased disability, and a negative impact on work. Participants with enthesitis had higher NSAIDs and opioid pain medication use but similar biologic use. Physicians were significantly less satisfied with current PsA treatment in participants with enthesitis versus without enthesitis. Conclusions Participants with psoriatic arthritis with enthesitis experienced significantly higher disease burden than those without enthesitis but were not more likely to receive advanced therapies. Physicians were significantly more dissatisfied with treatment in patients with enthesitis than in those without it. |
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issn | 2198-6576 2198-6584 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-12-17T21:30:54Z |
publishDate | 2020-10-01 |
publisher | Adis, Springer Healthcare |
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series | Rheumatology and Therapy |
spelling | doaj.art-c167ec2cfc9247df933f486e289aa2212022-12-21T21:31:52ZengAdis, Springer HealthcareRheumatology and Therapy2198-65762198-65842020-10-017493794810.1007/s40744-020-00242-3Impact of Enthesitis on Psoriatic Arthritis Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physician Satisfaction with Treatment: Data from a Multinational Patient and Physician SurveyAna-Maria Orbai0Julie A. Birt1Elizabeth A. Holdsworth2Nicola Booth3William N. Malatestinic4Aubrey T. Sprabery5Anthony M. Reginato6Division of Rheumatology, Johns Hopkins University School of MedicineLilly Research Labs, Eli Lilly and CompanyAdelphi Real WorldAdelphi Real WorldLilly Research Labs, Eli Lilly and CompanyLilly Research Labs, Eli Lilly and CompanyDivision of Rheumatology and Department of Dermatology, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown UniversityAbstract Introduction Enthesitis is a core outcome domain assessed in psoriatic arthritis (PsA) clinical trials. Limited evidence describes the impact of enthesitis on patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and physician satisfaction with current treatment options. The objective of this analysis is to characterize the impact of enthesitis on PROs and physician satisfaction with currently available treatment in clinical practice settings. Methods Cross-sectional survey of rheumatologists, dermatologists, and their consulting patients with PsA in Australia, Canada, European Union (EU5), and the USA conducted in 2018. Physicians assessed current presence and severity of enthesitis, overall disease severity, other symptoms experienced, and their satisfaction with the current treatment. PsA participant self-reported data included current pain level, EQ5D, Psoriatic Arthritis Impact of Disease (PsAID12), Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (HAQ-DI), and Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Index (WPAI-SHP). Bivariate descriptive analyses were conducted to describe features and outcomes in participants with and without enthesitis. Results Rheumatologists (454) and dermatologists (238) provided information for 3157 participants with PsA. Mean participant age was 49.2 years, and 45.9% were female. Enthesitis was present currently in 6.5% (205) of participants with PsA. Those with enthesitis had worse overall disease severity compared to those without enthesitis (12.2% vs 2.2% severe) and had more extraarticular manifestations, including nail psoriasis, dactylitis, and sacroiliitis. Enthesitis was associated with more pain, worse quality of life (QoL), increased disability, and a negative impact on work. Participants with enthesitis had higher NSAIDs and opioid pain medication use but similar biologic use. Physicians were significantly less satisfied with current PsA treatment in participants with enthesitis versus without enthesitis. Conclusions Participants with psoriatic arthritis with enthesitis experienced significantly higher disease burden than those without enthesitis but were not more likely to receive advanced therapies. Physicians were significantly more dissatisfied with treatment in patients with enthesitis than in those without it.https://doi.org/10.1007/s40744-020-00242-3Patient-reported outcomePROsPsoriatic arthritisReal-world evidenceSatisfaction |
spellingShingle | Ana-Maria Orbai Julie A. Birt Elizabeth A. Holdsworth Nicola Booth William N. Malatestinic Aubrey T. Sprabery Anthony M. Reginato Impact of Enthesitis on Psoriatic Arthritis Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physician Satisfaction with Treatment: Data from a Multinational Patient and Physician Survey Rheumatology and Therapy Patient-reported outcome PROs Psoriatic arthritis Real-world evidence Satisfaction |
title | Impact of Enthesitis on Psoriatic Arthritis Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physician Satisfaction with Treatment: Data from a Multinational Patient and Physician Survey |
title_full | Impact of Enthesitis on Psoriatic Arthritis Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physician Satisfaction with Treatment: Data from a Multinational Patient and Physician Survey |
title_fullStr | Impact of Enthesitis on Psoriatic Arthritis Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physician Satisfaction with Treatment: Data from a Multinational Patient and Physician Survey |
title_full_unstemmed | Impact of Enthesitis on Psoriatic Arthritis Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physician Satisfaction with Treatment: Data from a Multinational Patient and Physician Survey |
title_short | Impact of Enthesitis on Psoriatic Arthritis Patient-Reported Outcomes and Physician Satisfaction with Treatment: Data from a Multinational Patient and Physician Survey |
title_sort | impact of enthesitis on psoriatic arthritis patient reported outcomes and physician satisfaction with treatment data from a multinational patient and physician survey |
topic | Patient-reported outcome PROs Psoriatic arthritis Real-world evidence Satisfaction |
url | https://doi.org/10.1007/s40744-020-00242-3 |
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