4.5 Article

Development of a conceptual model of patient-reported outcomes in light chain amyloidosis: a qualitative study

Journal

QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 1083-1092

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-021-02943-w

Keywords

Conceptual model; AL amyloidosis; Quality of life qualitative; Patient-reported

Funding

  1. Mentored Career Development Award [K23 HL141445]

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Interviews with both AL amyloidosis patients and healthcare professionals highlighted the multidimensional impact of the disease on patients' lives, including aspects such as diagnosis, living with the disease, symptom burden, and social roles. Professionals also discussed barriers to collecting patient-reported outcomes data. These themes provide a comprehensive understanding of the experiences of symptom burden in AL amyloidosis patients and offer insight for the development of a clinical outcome assessments tool.
Background Light chain (AL) amyloidosis is a plasma cell neoplasm associated with high early mortality and severe morbidity that can cause severe disability. We explored the impact of AL amyloidosis on symptoms and well-being from the perspectives of patients and health care providers who regularly care for AL patients. We intended to develop a conceptual understanding of patient-reported outcomes in AL amyloidosis to identify the context of use and concept of interest for a clinical outcome assessments tool in this disease. Method Twenty patients and ten professionals were interviewed. Patient interviews captured the spectrum of amyloidosis experience including time from diagnosis, type of organ involvement, and presence and type of treatment received. Interviews with professionals included physicians, advanced practice providers, registered nurse, and a patient advocate; these interviews covered similar topics. Results The impact of AL amyloidosis on patients' life was multidimensional, with highly subjective perceptions of normality and meaning. Four major themes from patients and experts included diagnosis of AL amyloidosis, living with AL amyloidosis, symptom burden, and social roles. Barriers to patient-reported outcomes data collection in patients were additionally explored from experts. The themes provide a comprehensive understanding of the important experiences of symptom burden and its impact on daily life from AL amyloidosis patients' and from the perspectives of professionals who care for patients with AL amyloidosis. Conclusion These findings further the conceptual understanding and identification of a preliminary model of concept of interest for development of a clinical outcome assessments tool for AL amyloidosis.

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