Impact of genital warts on health related quality of life in men and women in mainland China: a multicenter hospital-based cross-sectional study

Author:

Shi Ju-Fang,Kang Dian-Ju,Qi Shu-Zhen,Wu Hai-Yan,Liu Yan-Chun,Sun Li-Jun,Li Li,Yang Ying,Li Qing,Feng Xiang-Xian,Zhang Li-Qin,Li Jie,Li Xiao-Li,Yang Yun,Niyazi Mayinuer,Xu Ai-Di,Liu Jia-Hua,Xiao Qing,Li Lian-Kun,Wang Xin-Zheng,Qiao You-Lin

Abstract

Abstract Background Information on the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients with genital warts (GW) in populations in mainland China is still limited. The aim of the study was to use a generic instrument to measure the impact of genital warts on HRQoL in men and women in this setting. Methods A multi-centre hospital-based cross-sectional study across 18 centers in China was conducted to interview patients using the European quality of life-5 dimension (EQ-5D) instrument; respondents' demographic and clinical data were also collected. Results A total of 1,358 GW patients (612 men, 746 women) were included in the analysis, with a mean age of 32.0 ± 10.6 years. 56.4% of the patients reported some problems in the dimension of Anxiety/Depression (highest), followed by Pain/Discomfort (24.7%) and Mobility (3.5%). The overall visual analogue scale (VAS) score of the study population was found to be 65.2 ± 22.0, and the EQ-5D index score was found to be 0.843 ± 0.129 using Japanese preference weights (the Chinese preference was unavailable yet). Patients with lower VAS means and EQ-5D index scores were more often female, living in urban area, and suffering multiple GW (all p values < 0.05), but the values did not differ notably by age (p values > 0.05). Conclusions The HRQoL of patients with GW was substantially lower, compared to a national representative general population in China (VAS = ~80); the findings of different subgroups are informative for future GW prevention and control efforts.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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