TY - JOUR
T1 - Relative Meaningfulness and Impacts of Symptoms in People with Early-Stage Parkinson's Disease
AU - Mammen, Jennifer R.
AU - Speck, Rebecca M.
AU - Stebbins, Glenn T.
AU - Müller, Martijn L.T.M.
AU - Yang, Phillip T.
AU - Campbell, Michelle
AU - Cosman, Josh
AU - Crawford, John E.
AU - Dam, Tien
AU - Hellsten, Johan
AU - Jensen-Roberts, Stella
AU - Kostrzebski, Melissa
AU - Simuni, Tanya
AU - Barowicz, Kimberly Ward
AU - Cedarbaum, Jesse M.
AU - Dorsey, E. Ray
AU - Stephenson, Diane
AU - Adams, Jamie L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023-The authors. Published by IOS Press.
PY - 2023/6/13
Y1 - 2023/6/13
N2 - Background: Patient perspectives on meaningful symptoms and impacts in early Parkinson's disease (PD) are lacking and are urgently needed to clarify priority areas for monitoring, management, and new therapies. Objective: To examine experiences of people with early-stage PD, systematically describe meaningful symptoms and impacts, and determine which are most bothersome or important. Methods: Forty adults with early PD who participated in a study evaluating smartwatch and smartphone digital measures (WATCH-PD study) completed online interviews with symptom mapping to hierarchically delineate symptoms and impacts of disease from 'Most bothersome' to 'Not present,' and to identify which of these were viewed as most important and why. Individual symptom maps were coded for types, frequencies, and bothersomeness of symptoms and their impacts, with thematic analysis of narratives to explore perceptions. Results: The three most bothersome and important symptoms were tremor, fine motor difficulties, and slow movements. Symptoms had the greatest impact on sleep, job functioning, exercise, communication, relationships, and self-concept-commonly expressed as a sense of being limited by PD. Thematically, most bothersome symptoms were those that were personally limiting with broadest negative impact on well-being and activities. However, symptoms could be important to patients even when not present or limiting (e.g., speech, cognition). Conclusion: Meaningful symptoms of early PD can include symptoms that are present or anticipated future symptoms that are important to the individual.
AB - Background: Patient perspectives on meaningful symptoms and impacts in early Parkinson's disease (PD) are lacking and are urgently needed to clarify priority areas for monitoring, management, and new therapies. Objective: To examine experiences of people with early-stage PD, systematically describe meaningful symptoms and impacts, and determine which are most bothersome or important. Methods: Forty adults with early PD who participated in a study evaluating smartwatch and smartphone digital measures (WATCH-PD study) completed online interviews with symptom mapping to hierarchically delineate symptoms and impacts of disease from 'Most bothersome' to 'Not present,' and to identify which of these were viewed as most important and why. Individual symptom maps were coded for types, frequencies, and bothersomeness of symptoms and their impacts, with thematic analysis of narratives to explore perceptions. Results: The three most bothersome and important symptoms were tremor, fine motor difficulties, and slow movements. Symptoms had the greatest impact on sleep, job functioning, exercise, communication, relationships, and self-concept-commonly expressed as a sense of being limited by PD. Thematically, most bothersome symptoms were those that were personally limiting with broadest negative impact on well-being and activities. However, symptoms could be important to patients even when not present or limiting (e.g., speech, cognition). Conclusion: Meaningful symptoms of early PD can include symptoms that are present or anticipated future symptoms that are important to the individual.
KW - Parkinson's disease
KW - digital health technology
KW - meaningfulness
KW - qualitative
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85163921689&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3233/JPD-225068
DO - 10.3233/JPD-225068
M3 - Article
C2 - 37212071
AN - SCOPUS:85163921689
SN - 1877-7171
VL - 13
SP - 619
EP - 632
JO - Journal of Parkinson's Disease
JF - Journal of Parkinson's Disease
IS - 4
ER -