Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases (Jan 2021)

Psychological processes in the experience of hereditary angioedema in adult patients: an observational study

  • Livia Savarese,
  • Maria Bova,
  • Assunta Maiello,
  • Angelica Petraroli,
  • Ilaria Mormile,
  • Mauro Cancian,
  • Riccardo Senter,
  • Andrea Zanichelli,
  • Giuseppe Spadaro,
  • Maria Francesca Freda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-020-01643-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Hereditary angioedema associated to C1 inhibitor deficiency (C1-INH-HAE) is a pathological condition characterized by episodes of subcutaneous swelling and it is frequently associated with discomfort and social impairment of the patients, due to the anxiety experienced for an unpreventable manifestation of an attack during daily life. In children increased level of stress and alexithymia have been associated to C1-INH-HAE, and the latter correlated also with the severity of the disease. We hypothesized that the involvement of psychological issues may impact on the severity of C1-INH-HAE in adult patients as well, interfering with their ability to engage with the management of the disease. Methods 28 adult patients with C1-INH-HAE were evaluated for clinical (C1-INH-HAE Severity Score) and psychological factors (alexithymia, emotion regulation, stress, patient health engagement, general severity index) by means of validated questionnaires. Results Mean age (standard deviation [SD]) was 45 (11) years and time from diagnosis was 20 (12) years. The mean C1-INH-HAE severity score was 6.4. Alexithymia was absent in 22 (78%) patients. Moderate and high stress levels were present in 17 (61%) and 4 (14%) patients, respectively. Moderate-high discomfort was experienced by 9 (36%) patients and a discomfort beyond the clinical attention threshold was shown by 3 (12%) patients. Stress correlated with patient health engagement and with psychological discomfort. Conclusions In C1-INH-HAE, patients health engagement and moderate-high psychological discomfort are linked with stress but not with the severity of the disease or alexithymia. A better patient health engagement may be a target for psychological intervention in clinics to ameliorate the stress perceived by C1-INH-HAE patients.

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