Burden of Ulcerative Colitis on Functioning and Well-being: A Systematic Literature Review of the SF-36® Health Survey

Abstract Background and Aims This review is the first to evaluate the burden of ulcerative colitis [UC] on patients’ quality of life by synthesizing data from studies comparing scores from the SF-36® Health Survey, a generic measure assessing eight quality-of-life domains, between UC patients and ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Crohn's and colitis 2018-04, Vol.12 (5), p.600-609
Hauptverfasser: Yarlas, Aaron, Rubin, David T, Panés, Julian, Lindsay, James O, Vermeire, Séverine, Bayliss, Martha, Cappelleri, Joseph C, Maher, Stephen, Bushmakin, Andrew G, Chen, Lea Ann, DiBonaventura, Marco
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background and Aims This review is the first to evaluate the burden of ulcerative colitis [UC] on patients’ quality of life by synthesizing data from studies comparing scores from the SF-36® Health Survey, a generic measure assessing eight quality-of-life domains, between UC patients and matched reference samples. Methods A systematic review of the published literature identified articles reporting SF-36 domains or physical and mental component summary scores [PCS, MCS] from UC and reference samples. Burden of disease for each SF-36 domain was then summarized across studies by comparing weighted mean differences in scores between patient and reference samples with minimally important difference thresholds. Results Thirty articles met pre-specified inclusion criteria. SF-36 scores were extracted from five samples of patients with active disease, 11 samples with a mixture of disease activity, five samples of patients in clinical remission, and 13 samples of patients following proctocolectomy with ileostomy or ileal pouch-anal anastomosis, along with respective reference samples. Clinically meaningful burden was observed in samples with active or mixed disease activity [deficits: PCS = 5.6, MCS = 5.5] on all SF-36 domains except Physical Functioning. No burden was observed in samples in remission or post-surgical patients [deficits: PCS = 0.8, MCS = 0.4] except for the General Health perception domain. Conclusions Patients with active UC experience a clinically meaningful burden of disease across most aspects of quality of life. Patients with inactive UC exhibit negligible disease burden and are comparable to the general population on most quality-of-life outcomes. Thus, treatments which effectively induce and maintain remission may restore physical and mental health status.
ISSN:1873-9946
1876-4479
DOI:10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjy024