Anxiety, depression and impaired health-related quality of life are therapeutic challenges in patients with multiple sclerosis

Dominik Michalski (Department of Neurology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;)
Stefanie Liebig (Department of Neurology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;)
Eva Thomae (Department of Neurology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;) (Translational Centre of Regenerative Medicine (TRM-Leipzig), University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;)
Susanne Singer (Department of Medical Psychology and Medical Sociology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany)
Andreas Hinz (Department of Medical Psychology and Medical Sociology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany)
Florian Then Berg (Department of Neurology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;) (Translational Centre of Regenerative Medicine (TRM-Leipzig), University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;)

Mental Illness

ISSN: 2036-7465

Article publication date: 25 January 2010

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Abstract

Anxiety, depression and impaired health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are commonly reported in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and are of great interest for therapeutic approaches. Based on regional differences a quantitative assessment of these factors in comparison to the general population, and the consideration of demographic cofactors, would be useful when designing specific interventions. We adopted such an approach in a German cohort of MS patients. Anxiety, depression (HADS) and HRQoL (SF-36) were measured in 49 consecutive outpatients with MS and compared to age- and gender-adjusted control groups (n=1330 for HADS; n=5087 for SF-36) extracted from German National Health Surveys. Patients with MS showed significantly increased levels of anxiety and depression as well as decreased HRQoL with the exception of mental health; the effect sizes ranged from 0.39 (depression) to 1.06 (physical functioning). As could be expected, MS patients with relapsing-remitting clinical course had better physical functioning than patients with secondary progressive MS. There were strong relations between anxiety and depression (r=0.54; P<0.01), and between neurological impairment (EDSS) and physical functioning (r=-0.80; P<0.001) as well as depression (r=0.48; P<0.05). This investigation of MS patients confirms the prevalence and impact of anxiety, depression and most of the HRQoL dimensions in MS patients and provides evidence for the usefulness of a quantitative comparison to a region-specific general population as a starting point for therapeutic approaches.

Keywords

Citation

Michalski, D., Liebig, S., Thomae, E., Singer, S., Hinz, A. and Berg, F.T. (2010), "Anxiety, depression and impaired health-related quality of life are therapeutic challenges in patients with multiple sclerosis", Mental Illness, Vol. 2 No. 1, pp. 20-24. https://doi.org/10.4081/mi.2010.e5

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010 D. Michalski et al.

License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (by-nc 3.0).


Corresponding author

Dominik Michalski, Dept. of Neurology, University of Leipzig, Liebigstr. 20, 04103, Leipzig, Germany.

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