Conference Coverage

Young lupus patients need more than medications


 

REPORTING FROM LUPUS 2019

Adolescents and young adults diagnosed with SLE during childhood constitute a special subgroup with “very, very low” quality of life and poor treatment adherence – and therein lies the importance of introducing interventions beyond simply prescribing appropriate medications, Hermine I. Brunner, MD, asserted at an international congress on systemic lupus erythematosus.

Dr. Hermine I. Brunner, professor of pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati and scientific director of the Pediatric Rheumatology Collaborative Study Group. Bruce Jancin/MDedge News

Dr. Hermine I. Brunner

Pilot studies conducted by her research group as well as others suggest that brief cognitive-behavioral interventions, web-based patient and caregiver education, and social media interactions significantly improve the fatigue and depression, poor quality of life, and lack of adherence to medication that are pervasive in young patients with SLE, according to Dr. Brunner, director of the division of rheumatology and professor of pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati and scientific director of the Pediatric Rheumatology Collaborative Study Group.

“Don’t misunderstand: I don’t think we can treat lupus simply with a psychological intervention at the bedside. However, I think doctors would be well advised to offer both psychological interventions and medication when they see young lupus patients, because without the psychological intervention the patients may not feel sufficiently at ease to take their medication. They will not get the benefit of the medications you’ve prescribed,” she said.

Patients with SLE take an average of eight medications daily. Their medication adherence rate is comparable to that of patients with diabetes or many other chronic diseases: that is to say, lousy. When investigators at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, utilized an electronic monitoring system to chart adherence to prescribed oral medications in adults with SLE, they found that over the course of 2 years of follow-up only one-fourth of them had an adherence rate of 80% or better, which is the standard definition of adherence (Lupus. 2012 Oct;21[11]:1158-65).

Treatment adherence is particularly problematic in adolescents and young adults with SLE. They often have great difficulty in mastering the self-management skills required to stay on top of their disease when they have so much else going on during what is a vulnerable and challenging period of development, even for healthy youths.

The texting intervention

Dr. Brunner and her colleagues at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center recognized the scope of the nonadherence problem early on. Years ago they started sending text messaging reminders of pending clinic visits to their patients who had a poor track record of showing up for appointments.

“We texted patients 2 weeks before their scheduled visit, 1 week before, and then again the day before the visit,” she explained.

This simple intervention resulted in a 47% reduction in missed appointments, compared with a control group. Also, text recipients were more likely to cancel appointments instead of simply not showing up, an important benefit from a practice management and scheduling standpoint (J Rheumatol. 2012 Jan;39[1]:174-9). Disappointingly, however, the text messaging intervention had no impact on adherence to prescribed use of hydroxychloroquine. This led the investigators to conduct a deeper dive into the roots of the nonadherence problem in childhood-onset lupus.

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