European Respiratory Review (Dec 2018)

Patients' perceptions and patient-reported outcomes in progressive-fibrosing interstitial lung diseases

  • Jeffrey J. Swigris,
  • Kevin K. Brown,
  • Rayid Abdulqawi,
  • Ketan Buch,
  • Daniel F. Dilling,
  • Dirk Koschel,
  • Krishna Thavarajah,
  • Rade Tomic,
  • Yoshikazu Inoue

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/16000617.0075-2018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 150

Abstract

Read online

The effects of interstitial lung disease (ILD) create a significant burden on patients, unsettling almost every domain of their lives, disrupting their physical and emotional well-being and impairing their quality of life (QoL). Because many ILDs are incurable, and there are limited reliably-effective, life-prolonging treatment options available, the focus of many therapeutic interventions has been on improving or maintaining how patients with ILD feel and function, and by extension, their QoL. Such patient-centred outcomes are best assessed by patients themselves through tools that capture their perceptions, which inherently incorporate their values and judgements. These patient-reported outcome measures (PROs) can be used to assess an array of constructs affected by a disease or the interventions implemented to treat it. Here, we review the impact of ILD that may present with a progressive-fibrosing phenotype on patients' lives and examine how PROs have been used to measure that impact and the effectiveness of therapeutic interventions.