1 / 34

Associations of Fatigue and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Associations of Fatigue and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension. Lea Ann Matura, PhD, RN Assistant Professor University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. Thank You.

Download Presentation

Associations of Fatigue and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Associations of Fatigue and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Lea Ann Matura, PhD, RN Assistant Professor University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

  2. Thank You • Funding- Bouve College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University intramural grant and Sigma Theta Tau International Gamma Epsilon grant • Co-Investigators • Diane L. Carroll, PhD, RN • Annette McDonough, PhD, RN • Collaborators • Greg Ball, PhD • Students • Participants No conflicts of interest for the investigators

  3. World Health Organization (WHO) Pulmonary Hypertension Groups • WHO Group I – Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) • WHO Group II - Pulmonary hypertension due to left heart disease • Atrial or ventricular disease • Valvular disease • WHO Group III - Pulmonary hypertension due to lung diseases or hypoxemia • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), Interstitial Lung Disease • Sleep-disordered breathing, alveolar hypoventilation • Chronic exposure to high altitude

  4. WHO Group IV - Pulmonary hypertension due to chronic thrombotic and/or embolic disease • Pulmonary embolism in the proximal or distal pulmonary arteries • Embolization of other matter • WHO Group V – Miscellaneous • Sarcoidosis (Galiè et al., 2009)

  5. Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) • Elevated mean pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) > 25 mmHg (normal mean PAP ~ 9-12 mmHg) and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure < 15 mmHg • Etiology • Idiopathic • Familial • Connective tissue disease, congenital shunts between systemic and pulmonary circulation, sickle cell, portal hypertension, HIV infection, drugs/toxins

  6. Pathobiology • Vasoconstriction • Remodeling of the pulmonary vessel and • Thrombosis (Galiè, 2009)

  7. Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) • Primary symptoms-dyspnea on exertion and fatigue • Affects women (~78%), mean age diagnosis ~50 years • Approximately 20,000-30,000 cases in US • Mean 2 years from symptom onset to diagnosis • Mortality- 61% at 5 years (Galiè, et al., 2009; Badesch, et al., 2010)

  8. Fatigue • Definition- a multidimensional concept defined as an overwhelming, debilitating, and sustained sense of exhaustion that decreases one’s ability to carry out daily activities, to work effectively, and to function (Cellaet al., 2007)

  9. Purpose • To determine those socio-demographic/clinical variables and patient-reported outcomes (symptoms, health-related quality of life) associated with fatigue in people with PAH.

  10. Methods • Design-Cross sectional, descriptive • Sample- A convenience sample of adults with World Health Organization Group I etiology (PAH) were recruited from an outpatient clinic, support groups • Univariate- descriptive statistics • Bivariate analysis determined variables associated with fatigue to include in multivariate analysis (multiple regression) (p<.20) • Data analysis-SPSS 19

  11. Measures • Socio-demographic/clinical data form • PAH Symptom Scale- rating symptom intensity on 17 PAH symptoms • Fatigue measured on this scale for current study • Score range: 0-10; higher score indicates worse symptom intensity (cronbach alpha= .90) • Medical Outcomes Study Short Form-36 v. 2-generic measure of health status/HRQOL • Score range 0-100; higher scores indicate better health status/HRQOL (cronbach alpha=.84) (Brazier et al., 1992) .

  12. US Cambridge Pulmonary Hypertension Outcome Review (US CAMPHOR) to measure HRQOL (higher scores indicate worse symptoms, functioning and quality of life) • Score range: Energy 0-10; Breathlessness 0-8; Mood 0-7; Symptom total 0-25; Activity total 0-30) (cronbach alpha= .89) (McKenna et al., 2008) • Profile of Mood States-Short Form (POMS) to measure psychological states • Score range- Higher scores indicate increased distress, except for vigor; Sub scores range from 0-20; Total scores range from -20-100 (cronbach alpha=.65) (McNair et al., 2009)

  13. PAH Symptom Scale

  14. Results

  15. Socio-Demographics & Clinical Characteristics

  16. Symptom Prevalence

  17. Symptom Prevalence

  18. Symptom Intensity Scores

  19. SF-36

  20. USCAMPHOR

  21. POMS

  22. Regression Results

  23. Fatigue

  24. Limitations • Convenience sample • Self-identified PAH • Recruitment sites • Self-report measures • Low cronbach alpha for POMS

  25. Implications • Assessment of symptoms are imperative • Fatigue is a moderate-severe symptom in PAH • Fatigue is associated with HRQOL • Improving symptoms such as fatigue may improve HRQOL • Although medications may improve mortality, but may worsen symptoms or induce side effects that affect HRQOL/function

  26. Conclusions • Fatigue associated with: • Shortness of breath with exertion • Swelling of ankles/feet • Loss of appetite • Physical composite • Mental composite • ERA use

  27. Future • Design, test, implement interventions • Exercise? • Target symptom clusters?

  28. Thank You! Questions?

More Related