Interdisciplinaria (Jun 2019)

Work status and cognitive performance in patients with relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis

  • Evangelina Valeria Cores,
  • Berenice Silva,
  • María Bárbara Eizaguirre,
  • Angeles Merino,
  • Sandra Vanotti,
  • Orlando Garcea

DOI
https://doi.org/10.16888/interd.2019.36.1.3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 36, no. 1
pp. 33 – 42

Abstract

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Employment is a very important aspect of a person’s life, and that is why any health-related factor that can interfere in such activity must be identified. The reality of a Latin American country is different and should be approached as a separate object of study. Many factors that contribute to a patient losing the job can be iden­tified in time in order to be reversed or com­pensated. Thus, identifying the vulnerability pro­file of the patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) who are at risk of losing their jobs is an impor­tant task for researchers. Physical disability and disease course are both strong predictors of work status in MS patients, however, cognition and af­fective variables do not have the same degree of evidence. This study raises the aim of investi­gating the relationship between employment sta­tus and cognitive performance in MS. With this knowledge, it would be possible to design a neuropsychological rehabilitation plan for pa­tients, which focuses on compensating and re­covering from cognitive impairment, as well as on serving as orientation for the person who is at risk of losing their job. A group difference design was used. The sample units were selected through a non-pro­bability accidental sampling. We collected the data of 61 patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) who had attended consultation between April 2014 and April 2015, in a public hospital. 29.5% were unemployed; 54.1% were emplo­yed; and 10.4% were students or housewives. The Brief Repeatable Battery of Neuropsycho­logy Tests adapted for Argentine population; Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Expan­ded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) and Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II), were admi­nistered individually in two sessions, one with a neurologist and one with the neuropsychologist in a private consulting room. Age and years of instruction differences bet­ween patients with and without employment were not significant. There were 60.8% of pa­tients with cognitive impairment. Among them, 38.7% were unemployed. The relationship bet­ween cognitive deterioration and work status was not significant, c2 = .404, df = 1, p = .371. When comparing the groups in the cognitive battery, a meaningful difference in cognitive performance was observed between the subjects who had a job with those who were unemployed in SDMT (t = -2.421, df = 49, p = .019); perfor­mance being higher among the former. No other cognitive score showed significant results. Unemployed patients had higher EDSS and de­pression, than those with jobs. The cognitive tests administered, together with the BDI-II and EDSS, were included in the binary logistic re­gression analysis. The second model retained the SDMT and the BDI-II; both tests were able to correctly classify almost 80% of the cases. Also, both SDMT (B = .080, p = .014) and BDI- II (B = -.098, p = .022) shown significant effects on work status. This study is one of the first attempts in Ar­gentina to analyze the possible determinants of unemployment, which is extremely important in the context of a lack of determining literature about the issue in Latin America. According to results, patients with RRMS who are unemplo­yed have worse performance in speed of infor­mation processing, more depression and physi­cal disability than those who retain their jobs. Results are in line with previous studies, al­though in the present research a cognitive va­riable showed a greater negative influence on employment status over motor difficulties or physical disability. Clinicians would be able to identify patients whose profile shows a higher tendency towards work life decline, so that they can receive early treatment and delay that pro­gression. It is suggested the realization of a mul­ticentric Latin American study, blind to the pa­tients labor status, with the aim of broadening the results by improving the study methodology.

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