Scientific Reports (Oct 2021)

Fatigue in patients with chronic disease: results from the population-based Lifelines Cohort Study

  • Yvonne M. J. Goërtz,
  • Annemarie M. J. Braamse,
  • Martijn A. Spruit,
  • Daisy J. A. Janssen,
  • Zjala Ebadi,
  • Maarten Van Herck,
  • Chris Burtin,
  • Jeannette B. Peters,
  • Mirjam A. G. Sprangers,
  • Femke Lamers,
  • Jos W. R. Twisk,
  • Melissa S. Y. Thong,
  • Jan H. Vercoulen,
  • Suzanne E. Geerlings,
  • Anouk W. Vaes,
  • Rosanne J. H. C. G. Beijers,
  • Martijn van Beers,
  • Annemie M. W. J. Schols,
  • Judith G. M. Rosmalen,
  • Hans Knoop

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-00337-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract (1) To evaluate the prevalence of severe and chronic fatigue in subjects with and without chronic disease; (2) to assess to which extent multi-morbidity contributes to severe and chronic fatigue; and (3) to identify predisposing and associated factors for severe and chronic fatigue and whether these are disease-specific, trans-diagnostic, or generic. The Dutch Lifelines cohort was used, including 78,363 subjects with (n = 31,039, 53 ± 12 years, 33% male) and without (n = 47,324, 48 ± 12 years, 46% male) ≥ 1 of 23 chronic diseases. Fatigue was assessed with the Checklist Individual Strength-Fatigue. Compared to participants without a chronic disease, a higher proportion of participants with ≥ 1 chronic disease were severely (23% versus 15%, p < 0.001) and chronically (17% versus 10%, p < 0.001) fatigued. The odds of having severe fatigue (OR [95% CI]) increased from 1.6 [1.5–1.7] with one chronic disease to 5.5 [4.5–6.7] with four chronic diseases; for chronic fatigue from 1.5 [1.5–1.6] to 4.9 [3.9–6.1]. Multiple trans-diagnostic predisposing and associated factors of fatigue were found, explaining 26% of variance in fatigue in chronic disease. Severe and chronic fatigue are highly prevalent in chronic diseases. Multi-morbidity increases the odds of having severe and chronic fatigue. Several trans-diagnostic factors were associated with fatigue, providing a rationale for a trans-diagnostic approach.