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Predicting quality of life in multiple sclerosis: accounting for physical disability, fatigue, cognition, mood disorder, personality, and behavior change. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Health-related quality of life (HQOL) in multiple sclerosis (MS) is significantly lower compared to healthy individuals, with a notable percentage of MS patients being disabled.
  • The study analyzed 120 MS patients to identify predictors of HQOL and employability, revealing that factors like depression, fatigue, and physical disability negatively impact physical and mental HQOL.
  • Vocational status in MS patients was primarily influenced by cognitive function, conscientiousness, and disease duration, suggesting the need for early identification of these issues for better outcomes and targeted research.

Article Abstract

Health-related quality of life (HQOL) is poor in multiple sclerosis (MS) but the clinical precipitants of the problem are not well understood. Previous correlative studies demonstrated relationships between various clinical parameters and diminished HQOL in MS. Unfortunately, these studies failed to account for multiple predictors in the same analysis. We endeavored to determine what clinical parameters account for most variance in predicting HQOL, and employability, while accounting for disease course, physical disability, fatigue, cognition, mood disorder, personality, and behavior disorder. In 120 MS patients, we measured HQOL (MS Quality of Life-54) and vocational status (employed vs. disabled) and then conducted detailed clinical testing. Data were analyzed by linear and logistic regression methods. MS patients reported lower HQOL (p<0.001) and were more likely to be disabled (45% of patients vs. 0 controls). Physical HQOL was predicted by fatigue, depression, and physical disability. Mental HQOL was associated with only depression and fatigue. In contrast, vocational status was predicted by three cognitive tests, conscientiousness, and disease duration (p<0.05). Thus, for the first time, we predicted HQOL in MS while accounting for measures from these many clinical domains. We conclude that self-report HQOL indices are most strongly predicted by measures of depression, whereas vocational status is predicted primarily by objective measures of cognitive function. The findings highlight core clinical problems that merit early identification and further research regarding the development of effective treatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2004.12.009DOI Listing

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