Health and quality of life of patients with haemophilia: A national study of 124 Danish men

Christina Schnohr*, Ola Ekholm, Lone Hvitfeldt Poulsen, Lars Lehrmann, Terkel Andersen, Eva Funding, Karen Binger Holm, Jakob Bue Bjorner

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Purpose: In the past decades, haemophilia treatment has greatly improved the health of persons with haemophilia (PWH). This study compares PWH to the general population on social conditions and health. Methods: In December 2021, all Danes with moderate or severe haemophilia A or B, or von Willebrands disease type 3 were invited to participate in an online self-report survey concerning sociodemographic factors, self-rated health, teeth status, chronic health conditions, symptoms and loneliness. This study compares responses from the 124 adult male PWH with responses from a male general population sample (N = 4849). Analyses used logistic regression, controlling for age and highest completed education. Results: Fewer PWH were in the oldest age group (65-84 years). Controlling for age, no significant differences were found regarding cohabitation status or education. Fewer PWH were employed (OR =.48, [.33-.71])—particularly in the 45–64 age group. PWH were less likely to report good health (OR =.49, [.31-.77]). The odds of joint disease was much higher (OR = 13.00, [8.37-20.28]). Also, hypertension (OR = 2.25, [1.13-5.65]) and previous stroke (OR = 2.51, [1.44-3.50]) were more frequent. PWH were more likely to report pain in the arms/hands/legs/hips (OR = 2.94, [1.92-4.52]), but less likely to report pain in the head/neck/shoulder (OR =.66, [.45-.96]). Conclusion: The disease burden of haemophilia has improved so PWH resembles the general population in areas such as marriage and education. However, even for young PWH, the disease still imposes a significant burden from hemophilia arthropathy and pain in extremities and joints. Middle-aged PWH also have poorer levels of employment than same-aged peers.

Original languageEnglish
Book seriesHaemophilia
Volume29
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)538-544
Number of pages7
ISSN1351-8216
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Haemophilia published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Keywords

  • haemophilia
  • quality of life
  • questionnaire

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