Impact of advanced Parkinson’s disease on caregivers: an international real-world study

Author:

Martinez-Martin PabloORCID,Skorvanek MatejORCID,Henriksen ToveORCID,Lindvall Susanna,Domingos JosefaORCID,Alobaidi AliORCID,Kandukuri Prasanna L.ORCID,Chaudhari Vivek S.ORCID,Patel Apeksha B.ORCID,Parra Juan CarlosORCID,Pike JamesORCID,Antonini AngeloORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Caring for a partner or family member with Parkinson’s disease (PD) negatively affects the caregiver’s own physical and emotional well-being, especially those caring for people with advanced PD (APD). This study was designed to examine the impact of APD on caregiver perceived burden, quality of life (QoL), and health status. Methods Dyads of people with PD and their primary caregivers were identified from the Adelphi Parkinson’s Disease Specific Program (DSP™) using real-world data from the United States, Japan and five European countries. Questionnaires were used to capture measures of clinical burden (people with PD) and caregiver burden (caregivers). Results Data from 721 patient-caregiver dyads in seven countries were captured. Caregivers had a mean age 62.6 years, 71.6% were female, and 70.4% were a spouse. Caregivers for people with APD had a greater perceived burden, were more likely to take medication and had lower caregiver treatment satisfaction than those caring for people with early or intermediate PD; similar findings were observed for caregivers of people with intermediate versus early PD. Caregivers for people with intermediate PD were also less likely to be employed than those with early PD (25.3% vs 42.4%) and spent more time caring (6.6 vs 3.2 h/day). Conclusions This real-world study demonstrates that caregivers of people with APD experience a greater burden than those caring for people with early PD. This highlights the importance of including caregiver-centric measures in future studies, and emphasizes the need for implementing treatments that reduce caregiver burden in APD. Trial registration: N/A.

Funder

AbbVie

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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