31 results on '"Brown, T Michelle"'
Search Results
2. Development of an Assessment Tool for Completion by Patients with Overweight or Obesity
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Kim, Nina, Brown, T. Michelle, Burudpakdee, Chakkarin, Kanu, Chisom, Woodard, Krystene, Fehnel, Sheri, Morrison, Carrie, Nadglowski, Joe, Nadolsky, Karl, and Kolotkin, Ronette L.
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- 2023
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3. Exploring life engagement from the perspective of patients with major depressive disorder: a study using patient interviews
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Therrien, François, Meehan, Stine R., Weiss, Catherine, Dine, Jennifer, Brown, T. Michelle, and MacKenzie, Erin M.
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- 2022
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4. Patient-reported burden of hereditary angioedema: findings from a patient survey in the United States
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Banerji, Aleena, Davis, Kimberly H., Brown, T. Michelle, Hollis, Kelly, Hunter, Shannon M., Long, Janet, Jain, Gagan, and Devercelli, Giovanna
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- 2020
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5. Development of a novel PRO instrument for use in familial chylomicronemia syndrome
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Davidson, David, Slota, Christina, Vera-Llonch, Montserrat, Brown, T. Michelle, Hsieh, Andrew, and Fehnel, Sheri
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- 2021
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6. Effects of adjunctive brexpiprazole on calmness and life engagement in major depressive disorder: post hoc analysis of patient-reported outcomes from clinical trial exit interviews
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Weiss, Catherine, Meehan, Stine R., Brown, T. Michelle, Gupta, Catherine, Mørup, Michael F., Thase, Michael E., McIntyre, Roger S., and Ismail, Zahinoor
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- 2021
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7. Evaluating the clinical utility of the Atopic Dermatitis Control Tool: measurement properties and agreement between patients' responses and clinicians' impressions of atopic dermatitis control.
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Simpson, Eric L, Eckert, Laurent, Gadkari, Abhijit, Brown, T Michelle, Lio, Peter A, Lockshin, Benjamin, Nelson, Lauren, Fehnel, Sheri E, Mahajan, Puneet, Chao, Jingdong, Nygårdas, Michaela, and Guillemin, Isabelle
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ATOPIC dermatitis ,MEDICAL personnel ,EMPLOYEE ownership ,QUALITY of life ,ECZEMA - Abstract
This article discusses the evaluation of the Atopic Dermatitis Control Tool (ADCT), a patient-reported outcome instrument used to assess patient-perceived disease control in atopic dermatitis (AD). The study found that the ADCT had strong internal consistency and construct validity in both adult and adolescent populations. It suggests that the ADCT can improve patient-clinician communication and inform disease-management decisions. However, the small sample size limits the generalizability of the findings. The article also mentions that B.L. is involved with several pharmaceutical companies in various capacities, which may be relevant for patrons researching pharmaceutical companies and their collaborations with medical professionals. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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8. Development of the Impact of Juvenile Metachromatic Leukodystrophy on Physical Activities scale
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Brown, T. Michelle, Martin, Susan, Fehnel, Sheri E., and Deal, Linda S.
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- 2018
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9. Patient Experience with Familial Chylomicronemia Syndrome before and after Olezarsen Treatment: Qualitative Interviews with Clinical Trial Participants
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Brown, T. Michelle, Bratlee-Whitaker, Emily, Arca, Marcello, Baass, Alexis, Baum, Seth, Grijalvo, Ovidio Muñiz, Bergeron, Jean, Gaudet, Daniel, Alexander, Veronica, Llonch, Montserrat Vera, Fehnel, Sheri, Tsimikas, Sam, and Kessler, Asia Sikora
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- 2024
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10. Economic Impact of the BP DownShift Program on Blood Pressure Control Among Commercial Driver License Employees
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Greene, Beth L., Miller, Jeffrey D., Brown, T. Michelle, Harshman, Robert S., Richerson, Gerald T., and Doyle, Joseph J.
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- 2009
11. Impact of a Hypertension Management/Health Promotion Program on Commercial Driver's License Employees of a Self-Insured Utility Company
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Harshman, Robert S., Richerson, Gerald T., Hadker, Nandini, Greene, Beth L., Brown, T. Michelle, Foster, Talia S., Turner, Beverly H., Skrepnek, Samantha H., and Doyle, Joseph J.
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- 2008
12. The Rapid Mood Screener (RMS): a novel and pragmatic screener for bipolar I disorder.
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McIntyre, Roger S., Patel, Mehul D., Masand, Prakash S., Harrington, Amanda, Gillard, Patrick, McElroy, Susan L., Sullivan, Kate, Montano, C. Brendan, Brown, T. Michelle, Nelson, Lauren, and Jain, Rakesh
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BIPOLAR disorder ,MENTAL depression ,PRAGMATICS ,PREDICTIVE validity ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,SYMPTOMS ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Objective: Depressive episodes and symptoms of bipolar I disorder are commonly misdiagnosed as major depressive disorder (MDD) in primary care. The novel and pragmatic Rapid Mood Screener (RMS) was developed to screen for manic symptoms and bipolar I disorder features (e.g. age of depression onset) to address this unmet clinical need. Methods: A targeted literature search was conducted to select concepts thought to differentiate bipolar I from MDD and screener tool items were drafted. Items were tested and refined in cognitive debriefing interviews with individuals with self-reported bipolar I or MDD (n = 12). An observational study was conducted to evaluate predictive validity. Participants with clinical interview-confirmed bipolar I or MDD diagnoses (n = 139) completed a draft 10-item screening tool and other questionnaires. Data were analyzed to identify the smallest possible subset of items with optimized sensitivity and specificity. Results: Adults with confirmed bipolar I (n = 67) or MDD (n = 72) participated in the observational study. Ten draft screening tool items were reduced to 6 final RMS items based on the item-level analysis. When 4 or more items of the RMS were endorsed ("yes"), sensitivity was 0.88 and specificity was 0.80; positive and negative predictive values were 0.80 and 0.88, respectively. These properties were an improvement over the Mood Disorder Questionnaire in the same analysis sample while using 60% fewer items. Conclusion: The pragmatic 6-item RMS differentiates bipolar I disorder from MDD in patients with depressive symptoms, providing real-world guidance to primary care practitioners on whether a more comprehensive assessment for bipolar I disorder is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. The atopic dermatitis itch scale: development of a new measure to assess pruritus in patients with atopic dermatitis.
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Martin, Susan A., Brown, T. Michelle, Fehnel, Sheri, Deal, Linda S., Katz, Eva G., and Chiou, Chiun-Fang
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ATOPIC dermatitis , *ITCHING , *SYMPTOMS , *COGNITIVE interviewing , *FOCUS groups - Abstract
Introduction: Pruritus is the primary symptom of atopic dermatitis (AD). The objective of this study was to develop a patient-reported outcome (PRO) instrument for daily administration in clinical trials to measure AD-related itch in adolescents and adults that would meet the standards described in the US Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) PRO Guidance. Materials and methods: Six focus groups were conducted with 49 patients with AD (32 adults; 17 adolescents). Three iterative rounds of cognitive debriefing interviews were conducted in 26 patients with AD (17 adults; 9 adolescents) to pretest and refine the instrument. Results: AD-related itching was considered the most bothersome AD symptom by nearly two-thirds of the focus group participants. The items in the initial version of the instrument, named the Atopic Dermatitis Itch Scale (ADIS), were developed to reflect concepts most relevant to the assessment of itching as described during the focus groups. Based on results of the cognitive debriefing interviews, an 8-item final version of the ADIS was created. Conclusion: The ADIS is a content valid PRO instrument addressing the concepts critical to the measurement of AD-related itching. To our knowledge, it is the first instrument developed to assess AD-related itch in patients as young as 12 years following the recommendations of the PRO Guidance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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14. Treatment Mode Preferences in Psoriatic Arthritis: A Qualitative Multi-Country Study.
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Aletaha, Daniel, Husni, M Elaine, Merola, Joseph F, Ranza, Roberto, Bertheussen, Heidi, Lippe, Ralph, Young, Pamela M, Cappelleri, Joseph C, Brown, T Michelle, Ervin, Claire, Hsu, Ming-Ann, and Fallon, Lara
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PSORIATIC arthritis ,QUALITATIVE research ,THERAPEUTICS - Published
- 2020
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15. Treatment Mode Preferences in Rheumatoid Arthritis: Moving Toward Shared Decision-Making.
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Taylor, Peter C, Betteridge, Neil, Brown, T Michelle, Woolcott, John, Kivitz, Alan J, Zerbini, Cristiano, Whalley, Diane, Olayinka-Amao, Oyebimpe, Chen, Connie, Dahl, Palle, Leon, Dario Ponce de, Gruben, David, and Fallon, Lara
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RHEUMATOID arthritis ,MEDICAL personnel ,SUPPORT groups ,STANDARD deviations ,MEDICAL history taking - Abstract
Purpose: Current knowledge of the reasons for patients' preference for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) treatment modes is limited. This study was designed to identify preferences for four treatment modes, and to obtain in-depth information on the reasons for these preferences. Patients and Methods: In this multi-national, cross-sectional, qualitative study, in-depth interviews were conducted with adult patients with RA in the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and Brazil. Patients' strength of preference was evaluated using a 100-point allocation task (0– 100; 100=strongest) across four treatment modes: oral, self-injection, clinic-injection, and infusion. Qualitative descriptive analysis methods were used to identify, characterize, and summarize patterns found in the interview data relating to reasons for these preferences. Results: 100 patients were interviewed (female, 75.0%; mean age, 53.9 years; mean 11.6 years since diagnosis). Among the four treatment modes, oral administration was allocated the highest mean (standard deviation) preference points (47.3 [33.1]) and was ranked first choice by the greatest percentage of patients (57.0%), followed by self-injection (29.7 [27.7]; 29.0%), infusion (15.4 [24.6]; 16.0%), and clinic-injection (7.5 [14.1]; 2.0%). Overall, 56.0% of patients had a "strong" first-choice preference (ie, point allocation ≥ 70); most of these patients chose oral (62.5%) vs self-injection (23.2%), infusion (10.7%), or clinic-injection (3.6%). Speed and/or ease of administration were the most commonly reported reasons for patients choosing oral (52.6%) or self-injection (55.2%). The most common reasons for patients not choosing oral or self-injection were not wanting to take another pill (37.2%) and avoiding pain due to needles (46.5%), respectively. Conclusion: These data report factors important to patients regarding preferences for RA treatment modes. Patients may benefit from discussions with their healthcare professionals and/or patient support groups, regarding RA treatment modes, to facilitate shared decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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16. Assessing the burden of treatmentemergent adverse events associated with atypical antipsychotic medications.
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Llorca, Pierre-Michel, Lançon, Christophe, Hartry, Ann, Brown, T. Michelle, DiBenedetti, Dana B., Kamat, Siddhesh A., and François, Clément
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SIDE effects of antipsychotic drugs ,SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment ,MENTAL depression ,THERAPEUTICS ,EXTRAPYRAMIDAL disorders ,DROWSINESS - Abstract
Background: Treatment of schizophrenia and major depressive disorder (MDD) with atypical antipsychotics (AAPs) show improved efficacy and reduced side effect burden compared with older antipsychotic medications. However, a risk of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) remains. TEAEs are hard to quantify and perspectives on the importance of TEAEs differ across patients and between patients and physicians. The current study is a qualitative assessment that investigates TEAEs of AAPs from both patient and physician perspectives to provide better understanding of the occurrence and burden of TEAEs associated with these medications. Methods: Focus groups comprised of patients with MDD and interviews with patients with schizophrenia were conducted at two qualitative research facilities, along with a physician focus group at one of the facilities. Information collected from patients included an exhaustive list of TEAEs experienced, and the frequency and level of bother of each TEAE; from psychiatrists, information included an exhaustive list of TEAEs based on personal observations and patient report, frequency of TEAEs, clinically important TEAEs, and levels of patient-perceived bother. Standard qualitative analysis methods were used to identify, quantify, characterize, and summarize patterns found in the data collected. Results: A total of 42 patients (25 with MDD and 17 with schizophrenia) and 4 psychiatrists participated in the study. TEAEs reported as bothersome across both patients groups included cognitive issues, weight gain and/or increased appetite, low energy, extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), and need to sleep/excessive sleep/excessive sleepiness. TEAEs considered more bothersome by patients with schizophrenia were weight gain, low energy, EPS, mental anxiety, and increased positive symptoms; those considered more bothersome by patients with MDD were cognitive issues, somnolence/sedation, and flat/restricted affect. TEAEs considered most clinically important by psychiatrists included metabolic syndrome, weight gain, neutropenia, hyperglycemia, and QT prolongation; those TEAEs considered most bothersome to patients from physicians' perspectives included weight gain, reduced sexual desire or performance, EPS, akathisia, and hormonal issues. Conclusions: The wide range of TEAEs that are both frequent and bothersome and the variation in perceived burden according to diagnosis highlight the need for a tailored TEAE-awareness approach when choosing an AAP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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17. A multicenter, non-interventional study to evaluate patient-reported experiences of living with psoriasis.
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Pariser, David, Schenkel, Brad, Carter, Chureen, Farahi, Kamyar, Brown, T. Michelle, and Ellis, Charles N.
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PSORIASIS treatment ,DISEASE complications ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,QUALITY of life ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Background: Moderate to severe plaque psoriasis (with or without psoriatic arthritis) places significant burden on patients’ lives.Objective: Explore and document patients’ experiences of living with psoriasis, including symptoms, treatments, impact on daily lives and patient-reported functioning.Methods: In a US-based, non-interventional study, narrative interviews were conducted at baseline and again within 16 weeks. In interviews, patients with moderate to severe psoriasis indicated symptoms, ranked symptoms according to level of bother and indicated areas of their lives affected by psoriasis. Transcripts of interviews were coded for themes. Measurements of psoriasis severity including BSA, PGA and PASI were recorded.Results: Symptoms reported most frequently included flaking/scaling (non-scalp areas), itching/scratching and rash, while the most bothersome symptoms were itching/scratching, flaking/scaling (non-scalp areas) and skin pain. Frequently reported impact areas were social and emotional.Conclusion: Broad-reaching interviews with patients with psoriasis show that these patients suffer in many aspects of their lives and in ways not indicated by typical psoriasis severity measures. Patients with psoriatic arthritis reported symptoms and disease-related complications at higher rates than those without arthritis. Physicians’ explorations of the effect of psoriasis on patients’ life events could aid in managing these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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18. Development and Validation of the ADHD Benefits of Coaching Scale (ABCS)
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Deal, Linda S, Sleeper-Triplett, Jodi, DiBenedetti, Dana B, Nelson, Lauren, McLeod, Lori, Haydysch, Emily E, and Brown, T Michelle
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- 2015
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19. The development and initial assessment of the Strategy and Leadership Systems Capability Evaluation.
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Coon, Cheryl D., Bokowy, Kay L., Horblyuk, Ruslan, Zisman, Robert S., McLeod, Lori D., and Brown, T. Michelle
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Hospital management and leadership systems are associated with organizational success and quality care. The Strategy and Leadership Systems Capability Evaluation (CE) survey was developed by GE Healthcare to assess management and leadership systems at health care institutions, serve as a benchmark for improvement, and measure progress. To assess the psychometric properties of the 29-item CE survey, including the factor structure, scoring algorithm, reliability, and discriminant validity, an online survey was completed by 3450 employees at 15 US hospitals. Of these employees, 609 worked at a hospital where a leadership and management intervention occurred after the initial survey administration. Data were also collected on job level, number of hospital beds, hospital ownership, location, community type, and the implementation of hospital interventions. Item response frequencies showed no floor or ceiling effects and limited missing data. Interitem correlations were strong without obvious redundancies, and factor analysis suggested a unidimensional scale. The resulting scale had strong internal consistency and was able to discriminate among known groups. The CE survey was developed to evaluate management and leadership systems at health care institutions. This study provides psychometric evidence in support of the reliability, validity, and scoring structure of this survey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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20. The impact of 'best-practice' patient care in fibromyalgia on practice economics.
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Brown, T. Michelle, Garg, Suchita, Chandran, Arthi B., McNett, Michael, Silverman, Stuart L., and Hadker, Nandini
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FIBROMYALGIA , *TREATMENT of fibromyalgia , *PRIMARY health care , *COST effectiveness , *FOCUS groups , *MATHEMATICAL models , *RESEARCH methodology , *GENERAL practitioners , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *SCALES (Weighing instruments) , *T-test (Statistics) , *TIME , *DISEASE management , *THEORY , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DIAGNOSIS , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Objective The office time required for primary care physicians (PCPs) to diagnose, treat and manage fibromyalgia (FM) patients can be extensive. The study objective was to determine if PCPs can positively impact practice economics by requiring fewer patient visits and less office time, while still achieving an acceptable quality of life, as reported by the physician. Study design Survey of PCPs who diagnose, manage and treat FM patients. Methods Surveys were administered to US private practice PCPs, obtaining information on the number of office visits, and time spent with FM patients. PCPs were allotted into two groups: FM-efficient (FME; n = 40) and FM usual care (FMUC; n = 54), based on their reported ability to achieve an acceptable quality of life for ≥50% of their FM patients in less than four office visits post FM diagnosis. An economic model estimated the monetary value of each PCP cohorts' time spent with a newly diagnosed FM patient over a 2-year timeframe. Results Significant office time cost differences across 2 years exist between FME PCPs and FMUC PCPs ($840 vs. $1117, P < 0.05). FME PCPs had a significantly lower cost of scheduled time to confirm diagnosis ($243 vs. $339, P < 0.05) and time to find right treatment ($264 vs. $365, P < 0.05) than FMUC PCPs. Both groups incurred costs related to excess visit time, but it was less for FME PCPs ($119, 29 minutes) than FMUC PCPs ($182, 44 minutes, P < 0.01), driven by quicker diagnosis confirmation ( P < 0.01) and treatment initiation ( P < 0.01). Conclusions Research suggests that efficient FM care delivery during diagnosis and treatment can be associated with improved practice economics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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21. A review of the current evidence for maintenance therapy in ovarian cancer
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Foster, Talia, Brown, T. Michelle, Chang, Jane, Menssen, Hans D., Blieden, Marissa B., and Herzog, Thomas J.
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OVARIAN cancer , *CANCER treatment , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *QUALITY of life , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *GUIDELINES , *PACLITAXEL - Abstract
Abstract: Objectives: Ovarian cancer (OC) typically is diagnosed at advanced stages, in which the primary goal of therapy is to prolong progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS). In recent years, maintenance therapy has been tested for this purpose in advanced OC (AOC). Literature on maintenance therapy in AOC was systematically reviewed to assess current knowledge regarding the impact of this therapeutic approach. Methods: A MEDLINE search was performed 2/2009 for articles published 1/2001–1/2009 pertaining to OC maintenance therapy guidelines, patterns, and outcomes. A second search used keywords specific to maintenance and included primary studies published in the last 10 years. Of 406 sources identified, 36 primary studies and 16 review articles were included in this systematic review. A third search used the keyword “consolidation” to find maintenance articles not identified through other searches; of 48 additional sources, 13 primary studies and 6 reviews were included. A fourth search of non-MEDLINE-indexed sources yielded 14 additional relevant publications from the same time period. Results: Among practice guidelines identified, only the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) 2008 guidelines provide recommendations regarding maintenance therapy, assigning it a category 2B recommendation. No studies were identified that reported current treatment patterns or economic outcomes in maintenance therapy; quality of life data were reported in one study. A variety of agents have been tested for maintenance, with paclitaxel the most commonly evaluated. The Southwest Oncology Group—Gynecologic Oncology Group 178 trial has found that 12 cycles of paclitaxel extend PFS (by 7 months) compared to 3 months paclitaxel, but could not adequately evaluate OS. Conclusions: Maintenance therapy may improve clinical outcomes in AOC, but additional research is needed to demonstrate an OS advantage. Future studies should investigate the long-term clinical benefit of maintenance treatment and its impact on resource utilization and health-related quality of life. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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22. Joining the club: Factors related to choice of theoretical orientation.
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Murdock, Nancy L., Banta, Joyce, Stromseth, Janet, Viene, Dennis, and Brown, T. Michelle
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COUNSELORS ,COUNSELING ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Investigates variables that relate to counselors' choices of theoretical orientations. Values and philosophical assumptions; Personality factors; Counselor development; Integration; Predictors of theoretical orientation; Predictors at developmental levels.
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- 1998
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23. Exploring the Impact of Fatigue in Progressive Multiple Sclerosis: A Mixed-Methods Analysis.
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Penner, Iris-Katharina, McDougall, Fiona, Brown, T. Michelle, Slota, Christina, Doward, Lynda, Julian, Laura, Belachew, Shibeshih, and Miller, Deborah
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• To date, understanding of how patients with progressive forms of multiple sclerosis (MS) experience fatigue and how it impacts their daily lives has been limited. • Fatigue among individuals with progressive MS is severe, frequent, and one of the most bothersome MS symptoms. • Fatigue has an impact on social, emotional, and cognitive functioning and on activities of daily living. Patient-focused literature on fatigue in progressive forms of multiple sclerosis (MS) is sparse. This study aimed to explore progressive MS patients' experiences of fatigue. Adult patients in the United States with primary progressive MS (n=21) and secondary progressive MS (n=23), recruited from research panels, completed the following PRO measures: Patient Global Impression of Severity (Fatigue) (PGI-F); Fatigue Scale of Motor and Cognitive Functions (FSMC); Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS); Patient Health Questionnaire, two-item version (PHQ-2); and Patient Determined Disease Steps (PDDS). Patients subsequently participated in a 45-minute semistructured telephone interview and were asked to describe their MS symptoms and to comment on how MS affected their day-to-day lives. More detailed questions followed on the nature of their fatigue, including symptoms, impacts, frequency, and bothersomeness. Patients' mean age was 52.5 years, mean time since diagnosis was 14.7 years, and 81.8% were female. 79.5% of patients were unemployed and/or receiving disability benefits. Of all spontaneously reported MS symptoms, fatigue was the most common (n=38, 86.4%), followed by ambulation problems (n=31, 70.5%) and muscle weakness (n=25, 56.8%). Patients used the words "tired," "exhausted," "wiped out," and having "little or no energy" to describe their fatigue. More patients rated fatigue as their "most troubling symptom" (n=17, 38.6%) compared with other MS-related symptoms. Half of patients reported feeling constantly fatigued, and more than 90% reported experiencing fatigue at least daily. The top three most frequently reported negative impacts of fatigue were social functioning, emotional well-being, and cognitive functioning (all >80%). Patients described themselves as "homebodies," as fatigue limited their social interactions with friends and family and impacted the types of activities they could participate in. Patients attributed their inability to think clearly or focus for long periods of time to their fatigue. Patients also reported experiencing depression and anxiety because of their fatigue, which would often have further negative effects on their relationships with friends and family. On the fatigue PRO measures, mean (standard deviation) scores were 75.2 (14.7) on the FSMC and 55.0 (15.2) on the MFIS. Most participants scored in the "high" fatigue category on the FSMC (84.1%) and above the clinically significant fatigue threshold (86.4%). MFIS and FSMC total scores correlated with PGI-F (polyserial correlations r=0.74 and r=0.62, both p<0.01) and PHQ-2 (r=0.56 and r=0.57, both p<0.01), but not with PDDS (r=0.09 and r=0.02, both p>0.05). Fatigue is a common, troublesome, and disabling symptom which has a profound impact on patients' daily lives, as evidenced by qualitative analyses and high scores on established fatigue measures observed in this sample. These findings provide insights into the burden of fatigue and can inform its measurement in both clinical and research settings. Treatments that improve the symptoms of fatigue or prevent exacerbations are needed for patients with progressive MS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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24. Cross-Sectional Quantitative Evaluation of a Novel Patient-Reported Outcome Measure in Familial Chylomicronemia Syndrome.
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Brown TM, Vera-Llonch M, Kanu C, Sikora Kessler A, Yarlas A, and Fehnel SE
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Background: Familial chylomicronemia syndrome (FCS) is a rare metabolic disorder that impacts physical, emotional, social, and cognitive functioning. The FCS-Symptom and Impact Scale (FCS-SIS) patient-reported outcome (PRO) measure assesses common symptoms and impacts of FCS. This study was conducted to evaluate cross-sectional psychometric properties of the FCS-SIS and its scoring method., Methods: This multisite, cross-sectional, observational study of individuals with FCS was conducted in the United States and Canada. Participants completed a survey composed of 7 PRO measures, including the FCS-SIS, and questions about clinical characteristics and demographics. The structure of the FCS-SIS was evaluated using inter-item and item-scale correlations and internal consistency reliability. Construct, known-groups, and criterion validity were evaluated by examining associations between FCS-SIS item and composite scores and other measures included within the survey., Results: Most of the 33 participants were female (63.6%) and White (78.1%). On average, participants reported first noticing FCS symptoms at ~16 years, with abdominal pain the most frequently reported initial symptom (n=20). Participants reported 2.5 acute pancreatitis attacks on average over the past year. Average FCS-SIS symptom item scores ranged from 1.8 to 3.9 (on a 0-to-10 scale [none-to-worst-possible]) within the 24-hour recall period, with an average Symptom composite score of 2.7. The average impact item scores on the FCS-SIS ranged from 1.6 to 3.0 (on a 0-to-4 scale), with an average Impact composite score of 2.1. Inter-item correlations between the FCS-SIS Symptom items ranged from 0.32 to 0.78. Corrected item-total correlations were highly satisfactory for Impact items, ranging from 0.62 to 0.85. All a priori validity hypotheses were supported by observed correlations and score differences between known groups., Conclusion: The results of this study support the structure, reliability, and validity of the FCS-SIS, laying the psychometric groundwork for longitudinal evaluation of its utility in assessing treatment benefit in FCS clinical studies., Competing Interests: TMB and SF are full-time employees of RTI Health Solutions, an independent nonprofit research organization, which was retained by Ionis Pharmaceuticals to conduct the research which is the subject of this manuscript. Their compensation is unconnected to the studies on which they work. CK was an employee of RTI Health Solutions at the time the research was conducted. MVL, ASK, and AY are employees of Ionis Pharmaceuticals and hold shares and/or stock options in the company. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work., (© 2024 Brown et al.)
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- 2024
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25. Conducting Patient Interviews Within a Clinical Trial Setting
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DiBenedetti DB, Brown T, Romano C, Ervin C, Lewis S, and Fehnel SE
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Qualitative data centered on patients’ experiences and perspectives typically go uncollected in clinical trial settings. Yet patients’ treatment experiences offer complementary insights and context on topics such as disease management, treatment gaps, and previous treatments outside of those gathered in traditional patient-reported outcome questionnaires. Qualitative interviews can capture patients’ perceptions of treatment needs, more fully explore meaningful changes experienced as a result of treatment, and reveal outcomes that are most important to patients. Asking patients detailed questions can provide insight into the “why” of a patient’s expressed thought or feeling. The inclusion of patient interviews within clinical trials is a relatively new and evolving field of research. This article delineates the types of data that may be collected during interviews with clinical trial participants and outlines two approaches to conducting qualitative research in the clinical trial setting, with a focus on maximizing the value of the resulting data., (© 2018 Research Triangle Institute. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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26. Use and Value of the 7-Item Binge Eating Disorder Screener in Clinical Practice.
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Herman BK, Deal LS, Kando JC, DiBenedetti DB, Nelson L, Fehnel SE, and Brown TM
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- Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Internet, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Attitude of Health Personnel, Binge-Eating Disorder diagnosis, Physicians, Primary Care psychology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychiatry
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate physician knowledge of and attitudes about binge-eating disorder (BED) and the value and ease-of-use of the 7-item Binge Eating Disorder Screener (BEDS-7) in clinical practice., Methods: Two internet surveys (wave 1: April 15-May 6, 2015; wave 2: August 19-25, 2015) were administered to primary care physicians serving adults (PCPs-adults) and psychiatrists. Wave 1 invitees were US-based physicians spending ≥ 50% of their time in direct patient care and reporting "no" to "some to average" experience with eating-disorder patients. Respondents completing wave 1 qualified for wave 2., Results: Among the 1,047 physicians who responded, 313 did not meet at least 1 of the screening criteria, including 3.15% of respondents who spent < 50% of their time in direct patient care. Overall, 122 PCPs-adults and 123 psychiatrists completed both waves. Physician groups spent similar mean ± SD amounts of time providing direct patient care (PCPs-adults: 94.66% ± 8.4%, psychiatrists: 91.15% ± 12.2%). Based on composite scores, BED knowledge increased from wave 1 to wave 2 in PCPs-adults (P < .001) and psychiatrists (P < .05). Composite scores pertaining to knowledge of and comfort with diagnosing and treating BED were lower for PCPs-adults than psychiatrists in both waves (all P < .001). Based on wave 2 responses, the BEDS-7 was used by 32.0% of PCPs-adults and 26.8% of psychiatrists. All BEDS-7 users (100%) indicated the screener was "very" or "somewhat" valuable, and nearly all users (psychiatrists: 100%, PCPs-adults: 97.4%) reported it was "very" or "reasonably" easy to use. BEDS-7 users reported that important uses of the screener included assisting clinicians in identifying BED patients and encouraging/initiating doctor-patient discussions about BED., Conclusions: These results support the utility of the BEDS-7 in clinical practice, with BEDS-7 users reporting that it is a highly valued and easy-to-use screener. Furthermore, both PCPs-adults and psychiatrists acknowledged the importance of being knowledgeable about BED., (© Copyright 2017 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.)
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- 2017
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27. Assessing the burden of treatment-emergent adverse events associated with atypical antipsychotic medications.
- Author
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Llorca PM, Lançon C, Hartry A, Brown TM, DiBenedetti DB, Kamat SA, and François C
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Attitude of Health Personnel, Depressive Disorder, Major drug therapy, Female, Focus Groups, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychiatry, Qualitative Research, Schizophrenia drug therapy, Self Report, Young Adult, Antipsychotic Agents adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Treatment of schizophrenia and major depressive disorder (MDD) with atypical antipsychotics (AAPs) show improved efficacy and reduced side effect burden compared with older antipsychotic medications. However, a risk of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) remains. TEAEs are hard to quantify and perspectives on the importance of TEAEs differ across patients and between patients and physicians. The current study is a qualitative assessment that investigates TEAEs of AAPs from both patient and physician perspectives to provide better understanding of the occurrence and burden of TEAEs associated with these medications., Methods: Focus groups comprised of patients with MDD and interviews with patients with schizophrenia were conducted at two qualitative research facilities, along with a physician focus group at one of the facilities. Information collected from patients included an exhaustive list of TEAEs experienced, and the frequency and level of bother of each TEAE; from psychiatrists, information included an exhaustive list of TEAEs based on personal observations and patient report, frequency of TEAEs, clinically important TEAEs, and levels of patient-perceived bother. Standard qualitative analysis methods were used to identify, quantify, characterize, and summarize patterns found in the data collected., Results: A total of 42 patients (25 with MDD and 17 with schizophrenia) and 4 psychiatrists participated in the study. TEAEs reported as bothersome across both patients groups included cognitive issues, weight gain and/or increased appetite, low energy, extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), and need to sleep/excessive sleep/excessive sleepiness. TEAEs considered more bothersome by patients with schizophrenia were weight gain, low energy, EPS, mental anxiety, and increased positive symptoms; those considered more bothersome by patients with MDD were cognitive issues, somnolence/sedation, and flat/restricted affect. TEAEs considered most clinically important by psychiatrists included metabolic syndrome, weight gain, neutropenia, hyperglycemia, and QT prolongation; those TEAEs considered most bothersome to patients from physicians' perspectives included weight gain, reduced sexual desire or performance, EPS, akathisia, and hormonal issues., Conclusions: The wide range of TEAEs that are both frequent and bothersome and the variation in perceived burden according to diagnosis highlight the need for a tailored TEAE-awareness approach when choosing an AAP.
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- 2017
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28. Development of the Impact of Juvenile Metachromatic Leukodystrophy on Physical Activities scale.
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Brown TM, Martin S, Fehnel SE, and Deal LS
- Abstract
Background: Metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) is a rare disease with three forms based on the age at onset of signs and symptoms. The objective of this study was to develop a caregiver-reported clinical outcome assessment that measures impairments in physical functioning related to activities of daily living in patients with juvenile MLD., Methods: A targeted literature review and exploration of proprietary research, including a conceptual model, were conducted. Concept elicitation interviews were conducted to elicit additional concepts related to impairments in patients' physical functioning with caregivers of five individuals with juvenile MLD. Based on the research review and concept elicitation interviews, the conceptual model was updated and the Impact of Juvenile Metachromatic Leukodystrophy on Physical Activities (IMPA) scale draft items were created. Cognitive debriefing interviews were conducted with six additional caregivers to finalize the conceptual model and to refine the IMPA scale., Results: Initially, 17 potentially important concepts were identified and addressed in the draft IMPA scale. Following the cognitive debriefing interviews, 15 activities/items remained: brush teeth, comb/brush hair, bathe/shower, dress self, eat, drink, use pencil/crayon, sit upright, use toilet, get on/off toilet, walk, use stairs, get in/out of bed, get in/out of chair/wheelchair, and get in/out of vehicle. Items that did not uniquely contribute to the purpose of the instrument were removed., Conclusion: The IMPA scale, developed according to regulatory standards, provides a means of detecting changes in activities of daily living in individuals with juvenile MLD and can hence be used in future studies to measure benefits of therapeutic interventions., Competing Interests: This study was conducted in accordance with the ethical principles outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki 2008 and reviewed and approved by the RTI International Institutional Review Board. Informed consent was obtained before participation.All authors approved this manuscript and provided consent for publication.The authors declare the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was conducted by RTI Health Solutions under the direction and funding of Shire Development LLC. RTI Health Solutions was contracted by Shire to design and implement this project. T.M.B., S.M., and S.E.F. are employees of RTI Health Solutions. L.S.D. is currently at Pfizer, Inc. but was employed at Shire Development LLC during the conduct of this project and is currently a shareholder of Shire stock. Shire develops and manufactures treatments for rare diseases, including metachromatic leukodystrophy. The authors have no additional financial relationships or otherwise to declare.Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
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- 2017
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29. Development of the 7-Item Binge-Eating Disorder Screener (BEDS-7).
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Herman BK, Deal LS, DiBenedetti DB, Nelson L, Fehnel SE, and Brown TM
- Subjects
- Adult, Algorithms, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Prospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, United States, Young Adult, Binge-Eating Disorder diagnosis, Self Report
- Abstract
Objective: Develop a brief, patient-reported screening tool designed to identify individuals with probable binge-eating disorder (BED) for further evaluation or referral to specialists., Methods: Items were developed on the basis of the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria, existing tools, and input from 3 clinical experts (January 2014). Items were then refined in cognitive debriefing interviews with participants self-reporting BED characteristics (March 2014) and piloted in a multisite, cross-sectional, prospective, noninterventional study consisting of a semistructured diagnostic interview (to diagnose BED) and administration of the pilot Binge-Eating Disorder Screener (BEDS), Binge Eating Scale (BES), and RAND 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (RAND-36) (June 2014-July 2014). The sensitivity and specificity of classification algorithms (formed from the pilot BEDS item-level responses) in predicting BED diagnosis were evaluated. The final algorithm was selected to minimize false negatives and false positives, while utilizing the fewest number of BEDS items., Results: Starting with the initial BEDS item pool (20 items), the 13-item pilot BEDS resulted from the cognitive debriefing interviews (n = 13). Of the 97 participants in the noninterventional study, 16 were diagnosed with BED (10/62 female, 16%; 6/35 male, 17%). Seven BEDS items (BEDS-7) yielded 100% sensitivity and 38.7% specificity. Participants correctly identified (true positives) had poorer BES scores and RAND-36 scores than participants identified as true negatives., Conclusions: Implementation of the brief, patient-reported BEDS-7 in real-world clinical practice is expected to promote better understanding of BED characteristics and help physicians identify patients who may have BED.
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- 2016
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30. Development of a conceptual model of adherence to oral anticoagulants to reduce risk of stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation.
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Brown TM, Siu K, Walker D, Pladevall-Vila M, Sander S, and Mordin M
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Atrial Fibrillation complications, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Female, Focus Groups, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Psychological, Motivation, Self Efficacy, Socioeconomic Factors, Stroke etiology, Warfarin therapeutic use, Anticoagulants administration & dosage, Atrial Fibrillation drug therapy, Medication Adherence psychology, Stroke prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Oral anticoagulant (OA) medication is the recommended therapy for reducing the risk of thromboembolic complications in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF), and warfarin is the medication most frequently used. However, nonadherence associated with OA medications may lead to considerable health risks. A conceptual model of OA medication adherence in patients with AF could clarify factors affecting adherence, thereby assisting in the development and structuring of adherence-promotion programs. To our knowledge, such a model, driven by information obtained directly from patients, has never been developed., Objective: To develop a conceptual model of adherence to OA medication based on a literature review and patient feedback via qualitative research among patients with AF., Methods: A literature search was conducted of English-language articles published between the years 2005 and 2010 that related to factors affecting OA medication adherence, excluding articles pertaining to AF associated with mechanical heart valve replacement. To expand on the literature review findings, 4 focus groups totaling 38 participants aged 60 years or older, diagnosed with nonvalvular AF, and currently taking any OA medication were conducted in 2011. Participants completed the Modified Morisky Scale (MMS), with subscales measuring motivation and knowledge, and were asked about daily processes and behaviors related to taking OA medication. The identification of focus group themes was based on the frequency of participant report and endorsement; themes were spontaneously mentioned or supported by at least 2 people in each of at least 3 focus groups. Model concepts, based on focus group themes and factors identified in the literature review, were determined by the consensus of 3 authors., Results: 181 publications were identified; 30 were selected for full-text review. The focus group participants had a mean age of 69.9 years. Most participants reported a diagnosis of hypertension (86.8%, n=33), high cholesterol (50.0%, n=19), heart disease or chronic heart failure (31.6%, n=12), or diabetes (28.9%, n=11). Most (89.5%, n=34) were taking warfarin. About one-half (52.6%, n=20) had been taking an OA medication for less than 5 years. On the MMS, 78.9% of participants reported high levels of motivation, and 100% reported high levels of knowledge. Four concepts emerged from the focus groups and were supported by the literature for inclusion in the model: (a) knowledge base of the disease and continued reinforcement (i.e., health care professional reinforcement); (b) short-term and long-term motivation (e.g., avoidance of negative health consequences); (c) personalized system, habit formation, and system adaptation (e.g., developing a routine or external reminders); and (d) self-efficacy loop (i.e., the personalized system and its adaptability are reinforced as patients become more consistent, confident, and adherent). The literature review also suggested other factors that may also affect patient adherence (e.g., demographic, psychosocial, cognitive)., Conclusion: Adherence in patients with AF is complex and involves multiple factors, some specific to each individual and others more general. This model identifies an adherence process that can guide opportunities for effective interventions, such as educational and behavioral programs targeted at these processes, to improve patient adherence to OA medication.
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- 2012
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31. Patient-reported treatment burden of chronic immune thrombocytopenia therapies.
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Brown TM, Horblyuk RV, Grotzinger KM, Matzdorff AC, and Pashos CL
- Abstract
Background: Chronic immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is a debilitating autoimmune disorder that causes a reduction in blood platelets and increased risk of bleeding. ITP is currently managed with various pharmacologic therapies and splenectomy.This study was conducted to assess patient perceived and reported treatment side effects, as well as the perceived burden or bother, and need to reduce or stop treatment, associated with these side effects among adult patients with chronic ITP., Methods: A Web-enabled survey was administered to members of a US-based ITP patient support group. Patients reported demographic and clinical characteristics, ITP treatments' side effects for treatments received since diagnosed, level of bother (or distress), and need to reduce or stop treatment, associated with side effects. Current and past exposure was assessed for five specific treatment types: corticosteroids (CS), intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg), anti-D immunoglobulin (anti-D), rituximab (RT), and splenectomy (SPL), as well as for other patient-referenced therapies (captured as "other")., Results: The survey was completed by 589 patients; 78% female, 89% white, mean age 48 years (SD = 14.71), and 68% reported a typical low platelet count of < 50,000/μL. Current or past treatment with CS was reported by 92% (n = 542) of patients, 56% (n = 322) for IVIg, 36% (n = 209) for anti-D, 36% (n = 213) for RT, and 39% (n = 227) for SPL. A substantial proportion of CS-treated patients reported side effects (98%, P < 0.05), were highly bothered by their side effects (53.1%, P < 0.05), and reported the need to stop or reduce treatment due to side effects (37.8%, P < 0.05). Among patients reporting side effects of treatment, significant associations were noted for the number of side effects, aggregate bother of reported side effects, and the need to stop or reduce treatment (all P < 0.05)., Conclusions: Current ITP treatments, particularly corticosteroids, are associated with multiple bothersome side effects that may lead to patients stopping or reducing therapy. Open, informed and complete communication between clinician and patient regarding both the benefits and the side effects of ITP treatment may better prepare patients for their prescribed regimens.
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- 2012
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