Educational attainment of individuals with lymphangioleiomyomatosis is a determinant of timely diagnosis and treatment uptake
Marina K. Holz

TL;DR
Higher education levels in LAM patients are linked to earlier diagnosis and more frequent use of available treatments.
Contribution
This study identifies educational attainment as a novel determinant of timely diagnosis and treatment uptake in LAM.
Findings
Patients with bachelor’s degrees were diagnosed 4.7 years earlier than those without.
Educational attainment increased the odds of using mTOR inhibitors by 1.75 to 2.21 times.
Only 53% of patients reported using FDA-approved mTOR inhibitors.
Abstract
Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a rare, progressive lung disease predominantly affecting women. Despite the availability of FDA-approved treatments, mTOR inhibitors like sirolimus or everolimus, significant disparities persist in early diagnosis, treatment utilization, and patient outcomes. The goal of this study is to examine how key socioeconomic factors affect diagnostic delay and treatment uptake in LAM. It was hypothesized that higher educational attainment is associated with earlier diagnosis and greater likelihood of treatment utilization due to its association with health literacy. To investigate the impact of socioeconomic factors, we analyzed data from the LAM Patient Research Priorities (LAM-PREP) study, a cross-sectional survey of LAM patients representing ~ 20% of known cases globally. 624 participants completed the survey and 566 provided complete education data and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberous Sclerosis Complex Research · Neurofibromatosis and Schwannoma Cases · Vascular Tumors and Angiosarcomas
