Monitoring patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis using health-related quality of life

Publication date

2021-03-22

Authors

Doeleman, Martijn Johannes Hendrikus
de Roock, SytzeISNI 0000000391194594
Buijsse, Nathan
Klein, MarkISNI 0000000397069946
Bonsel, G. J.ISNI 0000000390450306
Seyfert-Margolis, Vicki
Swart, Joost FORCID 0000-0002-2759-2822ISNI 0000000390270524
Wulffraat, NicoISNI 0000000388154444

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Document Type

Article

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Abstract

Background: Pediatric patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) are at risk for a lower health-related quality of life compared to their healthy peers. Remote monitoring of health-related quality of life using electronic patient-reported outcomes could provide important information to treating physicians. The aim of this study was to investigate if self-assessment with the EuroQol five-dimensional ‘youth’ questionnaire with five levels (EQ-5D-Y-5 L) inside a mobile E-health application could identify JIA patients in need of possible treatment adjustments. Methods: The EQ-5D-Y-5 L was completed via a mobile application (Reuma2Go) between October 2017 and January 2019. The clinical juvenile arthritis disease activity score with 71 joint count (cJADAS-71) was reported at every corresponding visit as reference for disease activity. Previously described cJADAS-71 thresholds were used to identify patients in possible need of treatment adjustments. Discriminatory power of the EQ-5D-Y-5 L was assessed by ROC-curves and diagnostic characteristics. Results: Sixty-eight JIA patients completed the EQ-5D-Y-5 L questionnaire. Median cJADAS-71 indicated low disease activity overall in the studied population. ROC curves and diagnostic characteristics demonstrated that self-assessment with the EQ-5D-Y-5 L could distinguish between patients with inactive disease (or minimal disease activity) and moderate to high disease activity with good accuracy (87%), sensitivity (85%), specificity (89%) and negative predictive value (86%). Conclusions: Results demonstrate that the EQ-5D-Y-5 L was able to identify JIA patients in need of possible treatment adjustments in our studied population. Remote monitoring of health-related quality of life and patient-reported outcomes via E-health applications could provide important additional information to determine the frequency of clinical visits, assess therapeutic efficacy and guide treat-to-target strategies in pediatric patients with JIA.

Keywords

Adolescent, Arthritis, Juvenile/diagnosis, Child, Diagnostic Self Evaluation, Female, Humans, Male, Mobile Applications, Monitoring, Ambulatory/methods, Quality of Life, Retrospective Studies, Journal Article

Citation

Doeleman, M J H, de Roock, S, Buijsse, N, Klein, M, Bonsel, G J, Seyfert-Margolis, V, Swart, J F & Wulffraat, N M 2021, 'Monitoring patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis using health-related quality of life', Pediatric Rheumatology, vol. 19, no. 1, 40, pp. 40. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12969-021-00527-z