Patients’ and health-care professionals’ perspectives on adverse drug reaction burden attributed to the use of biological DMARDs: a qualitative study

Henrike J. Westerink, Leanne J. Kosse, Naomi T. Jessurun, Astrid Tubergen, Harald E. Vonkeman, Mike T. Nurmohamed, Bart J. F. van den Bemt, Marieke de Vries

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Previous studies showed a discrepancy between health-care professionals’ (HCPs’) and patients’ perspective on adverse drug reaction (ADR) burden. However, it is unclear which factors make an ADR burdensome. We aimed to give insight into why ADRs are perceived as burdensome by inflammatory rheumatic disease (IRD) patients, and whether this differs from the HCPs’ perspective. Research design and methods: A qualitative study was conducted using Dutch Biologic Monitor data. Participants received bimonthly questionnaires on experienced ADRs attributed to biological DMARDs and were asked to elaborate on ADR burden using a Likert-type scale and an open-ended question for clarification. Data of 440 IRD patients were analyzed following thematic analysis. A similar analysis was done with semi-structured interviews with 13 HCPs. Results: We identified seven themes associated with ADR burden: ‘effect on medication prescription,’ ‘impact on appearance,’ ‘impact on autonomy,’ ‘impact on daily life,’ ‘psychological consequences,’ ‘distressing aspects of ADR,’ and ‘physical consequences.’ Identical themes were identified by HCPs, although they identified most subthemes in ‘psychological consequences,’ and less subthemes in ‘impact on daily life’ and ‘impact on autonomy.’ Conclusion: Patients describe perceived ADR burden in both physical and psychological themes. The HCPs’ perspective is comparable, but mostly focuses on psychological impact.
Original languageEnglish
JournalExpert opinion on drug safety
Early online date2022
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2022

Keywords

  • Biological DMARDs
  • adverse drug reactions
  • burden
  • inflammatory rheumatic diseases
  • perspectives

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