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Browsing by Subject "HRQoL"

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  • Mäntylä, Juhani (2012)
    Inflammatory bowel diseases are among the fastest growing chronic disease of young people in Europe and they are increasing in Western countries for unknown reasons. Illness often occurs at a young age and the symptoms persist generally throughout life, Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are the most common diseases in this category. Inflammatory bowel diseases often cause persistent symptoms and require treatment usually for life, affect the quality of life and the ability to go to work. Conventional treatment usually consists of anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive drug therapy or surgical intervention. In difficult cases, the biologic drug treatment is used. New biological drug products (TNF-blockers) have improved, in particular in Crohn's disease, a response to treatment. The aim of this study is to provide information about the effectiveness and the costs of the biological treatment in inflammatory bowel diseases. The main results presented are the changes of the quality of life during the observation period measured with the generic and disease-specific HRQoL instruments. The results are also reported on the matter of costs for quality-adjusted life-years gained during the follow-up period. The study consists of FinnIBDQ (inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire) survey (n=2831) and the follow-up survey of the patients who used biologic drug products (n=189). Patients were selected into the follow-up if they reported using the biologic drugs to treat the illness. FinnIBDQ-survey was conducted in 2006/2008 and follow-up questionnaire in 2011. As a generic HRQoL instrument was the 15D-instrument used which is a standardized measure of the health related quality of life. 15D-instrument produces a single index number between 0-1. IBDQ is a disease-specific HRQoL instrument, which consists of 32 questions. The total number of points varies between 32 and 224 from the worst to the best. Patients' medical history, symptoms, medication and health care use were studied in their own partition on the questionnaire. Biological drug therapy group belonged at the baseline (n=148) improved the quality of life (p=0.004) during the follow-up. A disease-specific HRQoL instrument (IBDQ) shows the quality of life has changed in parallel (p=0.003)with the 15D-instrument. Dimensions, where progress was achieved (p<0.05) were the elimination, the usual activities, discomfort and symptoms, as well as vitality and sexual activity. In the research group (n=51), the average cost per patient per QALYs gained during the follow-up period proved to be very high, at over 5 million euro's. During this time, the patient gained an average of 0,01 quality adjusted additional years of life. The evidence of the long-term impact of the biologic drug treatment on the patient's quality of life is still scarce. In most of the research concerned with the benefits of biological treatment, the effectiveness data is derived from the pharmaceutical manufacturers' short-term clinical efficacy studies, or taken from any other quality of life studies.