Patients' perceptions and patient-reported outcomes in progressive-fibrosing interstitial lung diseases.
Jeffrey J SwigrisKevin K BrownRayid AbdulqawiKetan BuchDaniel F DillingDirk KoschelKrishna ThavarajahRade TomicYoshikazu InouePublished in: European respiratory review : an official journal of the European Respiratory Society (2018)
The effects of interstitial lung disease (ILD) create a significant burden on patients, unsettling almost every domain of their lives, disrupting their physical and emotional well-being and impairing their quality of life (QoL). Because many ILDs are incurable, and there are limited reliably-effective, life-prolonging treatment options available, the focus of many therapeutic interventions has been on improving or maintaining how patients with ILD feel and function, and by extension, their QoL. Such patient-centred outcomes are best assessed by patients themselves through tools that capture their perceptions, which inherently incorporate their values and judgements. These patient-reported outcome measures (PROs) can be used to assess an array of constructs affected by a disease or the interventions implemented to treat it. Here, we review the impact of ILD that may present with a progressive-fibrosing phenotype on patients' lives and examine how PROs have been used to measure that impact and the effectiveness of therapeutic interventions.
Keyphrases
- interstitial lung disease
- patient reported outcomes
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- end stage renal disease
- systemic sclerosis
- randomized controlled trial
- primary care
- physical activity
- multiple sclerosis
- high resolution
- systematic review
- rheumatoid arthritis
- mental health
- idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
- risk factors
- single cell