4.2 Article

Health-Related Quality of Life for Parkinson's Disease Patients and Their Caregivers

期刊

JOURNAL OF MOVEMENT DISORDERS
卷 14, 期 1, 页码 42-52

出版社

KOREAN MOVEMENT DISORDERS SOC
DOI: 10.14802/jmd.20079

关键词

Caregiver; Health care; Health related quality of life; Parkinson's disease; Quality of life

资金

  1. Parkinson's New South Wales

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that Parkinson's disease patients reported significantly decreased health-related quality of life (HRQoL), with factors such as unemployment, the need for social support services, REM sleep behavior disorder, impulse control disorders, and features suggestive of increasing disease severity contributing to lower HRQoL. Additionally, decreased physical activity, chronic pain, depression, constipation, and upper gastrointestinal dysfunction were associated with reduced HRQoL in PD patients.
Objective Motor and non-motor symptoms (NMS) negatively impact the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) for individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD), as well as their caregivers. NMS can emerge decades prior to the manifestation of motor symptoms but often go unrecognized and therefore untreated. To guide clinical management, we surveyed differences and identified factors that influence HRQoL in a cohort of PD patients and family caregivers. Methods A total of 103 PD patients were compared with 81 caregivers. Outcome measures collected from validated questionnaires included generic and disease-specific HRQoL assessments, depression frequency and severity, constipation severity, upper and lower gastrointestinal symptoms, physical activity and motor symptom severity. Results PD patients reported significantly decreased physical and mental HRQoL compared to their caregivers (both p < 0.001). Unemployment, the need for social support services, rehabilitation use, REM sleep behavior disorder, impulse control disorders and features suggestive of increasing disease severity hallmarked by increasing PD duration, higher MDS UPDRS-III (Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale-Part III) scores, higher daily levodopa equivalence dose and motor fluctuations were consistent with a lower HRQoL in our PD cohort. Furthermore, decreased physical activity, chronic pain, depression, constipation and upper gastrointestinal dysfunction (particularly indigestion, excess fullness and bloating) suggested vulnerability to reduced HRQoL. Overall, PD patients perceived their health to decline by 12% more than their caregivers did over a 1-year period. Conclusion PD patients reported decreased HRQoL, with both motor symptoms and NMS negatively impacting HRQoL. Our findings support the routine clinical screening of HRQoL, in PD patients to identify and address modifiable factors.

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