# A Cross-Sectional Study of Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients with Predominantly Antibody Deficiency

**Authors:** Ahmed Elmoursi, Baijun Zhou, Mei-Sing Ong, Joseph S. Hong, Andrew Pak, Megha Tandon, Natalia Sutherland, Daniel V. DiGiacomo, Jocelyn R. Farmer, Sara Barmettler

PMC · DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4612913/v1 · 2024-07-18

## TL;DR

This study finds that patients with antibody deficiency report significantly worse health-related quality of life compared to the general population, regardless of disease severity.

## Contribution

The study provides the first detailed comparison of HRQoL in PAD patients versus general population data using CDC standardized measures.

## Key findings

- 52.6% of PAD patients reported 'fair or poor' health status.
- PAD patients had significantly worse mental and physical health outcomes compared to CDC-BRFSS data.
- Autoinflammatory comorbidities correlated with increased mental health challenges in PAD patients.

## Abstract

Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) measures individual well-being across physical, psychological, and social domains. Patients with predominantly antibody deficiency (PAD) are at risk for morbidity and mortality, however, the effect of these complications on HRQoL requires additional study. Patients with PAD were asked to voluntarily complete the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) HRQoL-14 Healthy Days Measure questionnaire. These results were compared to data from the CDC-initiated Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), a cross-sectional questionnaire including questions from CDC-HRQOL-14. Statistical analyses included two-proportion Z-test, t-tests, and analysis of variance. 83 patients with PAD completed the survey. Patients were sub-stratified into mild (23.7%), moderate (35.5%), severe (40.8%), and secondary (8.4%) PAD. “Fair or poor” health status was reported in 52.6% of PAD patients. Mental health challenges ≥ 14 days/month occurred in 25% of patients. Physical health issues ≥ 14 days/month was reported in 44.7% of patients. Activity limitations were noted by 80.3% of patients. There were no statistically significant differences by PAD severity. Patients with autoinflammatory disease co-morbidities reported more mental health challenges compared to those without (78% vs. 54.3%, p = 0.02). Compared to the CDC-BRFSS data, significantly more patients with PAD reported “fair or poor” health status (53% vs 12.0%; p < 0.0001), mental health challenges (24.1% vs 14.7%; p = 0.02), and poor physical health (44.6% vs 8.0%; p < 0.0001). Patients with PAD had significantly reduced HRQoL compared to CDC-BRFSS respondents from a similar geographical region. Decreased HRQoL was prevalent across all PAD severity levels. Additional research is needed to improve HRQoL for patients with PAD.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Antibody Deficiency (MESH:D007153), Predominantly (MESH:C563709), Mental health (OMIM:603663), autoinflammatory disease (MESH:D056660), Activity limitations (MESH:D045745)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11276022/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11276022