Webinar 4
Transcription
Webinar 4
Webinar 4 Vasculitis - Managing Stress & Fatigue With: Dr Linda Papadopoulos Dr Neil Basu & patient case study from Jackie Sullivan Presented by: Paul Murricane Webinar 4 Vasculitis - Managing Stress & Fatigue Take Our Poll on Anxiety & Stress Webinar Panel Webcast Presenter: Paul Murricane Patient Case Study: Jackie Sullivan diagnosed with MPA in 2009 Dr Linda Papadopoulos, High Profile Media Psychologist Dr Neil Basu, Senior Clinical Lecturer & Honorary Consultant Rheumatologist at the University of Aberdeen. Patient Case Study Interview: Jackie Sullivan Former Counsellor and diagnosed with Microscopic Polyangiitis (MPA Vasculitis) in 2009 Patient Case Study Interview: Jackie Sullivan •Overview of MPA Vasculitis. •The thoughts & fears at diagnosis. •The daily challenges with Vasculitis. •Impact on carers or close family. Interview with: Dr Linda Papadopoulos High profile media psychologist with published research in the field of counseling and medical psychology Interview with: Dr Linda Papadopoulos Topics Covered: •The patient’s psychological journey at diagnosis. •The impact on close family & friends. •Coping strategies post diagnosis for Vasculitis patients. •Reducing stress & developing positive mental wellbeing. Webinar 4 Vasculitis - Managing Stress & Fatigue Take Our Poll on Fatigue Presentation: Dr Neil Basu Senior Clinical Lecturer & Honorary Consultant Rheumatologist at the University of Aberdeen. Presentation will discuss the patient centered research in Vasculitis that focuses on fatigue. Patient centred research in vasculitis Dr. Neil Basu Senior Clinical Lecturer & Honorary Consultant Aberdeen, UK Research across patient’s journey • Development of disease • Diagnosis • Treatment • Monitoring • Management of consequences Vasculitis Previous work • Greatest burden of disease – Fatigue – General Pain – Renal Failure – Oxygen dependency Patient-reported outcome assessment in vasculitis provides important data and a unique perspective P-XIV-152 (SA) Clin Exp Rheumatology Vol. 25 no.1, 2007(suppl.44) Quality Of Life • What is it ? • Why measure it ? • How to measure ? Aims • To characterise QOL in AAV • To contextualise QOL in AAV • To identify and quantify the determinants of QOL in AAV Patients • Multi-centre – Granulomatosis Polyangiitis (Wegener’s) – Microscopic Polyangiitis – Churg-Strauss Syndrome Comparison groups • General population • Disease – Inflammatory arthritis – Non-inflammatory CKD Questionnaire • Quality of life measure : SF36 • Psychosocial factors – – – – – – – Fatigue Pain Anxiety Depression Sleep Disturbance Coping Employment Clinical variables • • • • • • • Disease activity Disease damage Disease duration Other medical problems Medications Patients symptoms Blood tests Case Recruitment Non Response Site Responders Responders rate (%) Birmingham 114 8 93 Grampian 77 7 92 Edinburgh 54 9 83 Oxford 41 11 79 Cambridge 32 6 84 Reading 30 10 75 London 27 18 60 Fife 19 4 83 Dundee 16 3 84 Total 410 76 84 SF36: AAV versus General Population PF 100 MH 80 RP 60 40 AAV 20 RE BP 0 SF GH VT Population controls SF36: AAV versus Disease controls PF 100 MH 80 RP 60 40 20 RE BP 0 SF GH VT Disease controls AAV Independent associations of poor QOL Possible model for AAV fatigue Conclusions • QOL of vasculitis is significantly impaired compared with the general population • QOL of vasculitis is similar to other chronic conditions whose significant needs are already recognised • Poor QOL is principally associated with fatigue. • High fatigue is principally associated with sleep disturbance and pain Fatigue Management Programme • Interventions – Exercise – Behavioural • Specialists – – – – Physiotherapy Psychology Nursing Occupational Therapy • Delivery – Group – One on one Fatigue outcomes Exercise outcomes Qualitative outcomes • ‘I can’t believe what I am able to do now’ • ‘My colleagues at work assume my steroids have been increased!’ • ‘I feel more optimistic about the future now’ • ‘I feel exhilarated’ • ‘A major turn around I never thought would be possible’ Where does fatigue come from? Brain activation in response to fatiguing cognitive task (PASAT) Functional differences: fatigued cases versus non-fatigued cases Conclusions • • • • QOL is a large issue amongst patients with AAV Optimal disease management Bio-psychosocial approach No suggestion of sub-clinical CNS vasculitis to account for fatigue • In the future MRI techniques may provide insight to the mechanisms of fatigue Acknowledgements • Supervisors: Gary Macfarlane, Gareth Jones, David Reid • Collaborators: Alison Murray, Gordon Waiter, Lars Erwig, Raashid Luqmani, David Jayne, Oliver Flossmann; Mark Little, Lorraine Harper, Andrew MacLean, Nicole Amft, Bean Dhaun, John McLaren, Vinod Kumar • Funder: CSO YOU !! Webinar 4 Vasculitis - Managing Stress & Fatigue Poll Results & Q&A