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Disabling foot pain and its impact on daily living among people with Psoriatic Arthritis in Singapore: a cross-sectional observational investigation

Disabling foot pain and its impact on daily living among people with Psoriatic Arthritis in Singapore: a cross-sectional observational investigation
Disabling foot pain and its impact on daily living among people with Psoriatic Arthritis in Singapore: a cross-sectional observational investigation
Background: Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA)-related foot involvement has been shown to have a profound impact on daily functioning, with most studies having focused on predominantly Caucasian populations. The aim was to describe disabling foot pain (DFP) and its impact on daily living in PsA in Singapore.

Methods: a cross-sectional, retrospective study was conducted using clinical data collected during a single-visit to a rheumatology clinic in Singapore. Records for adults with physician-diagnosed PsA were reviewed for sociodemographic information, disease characteristics, global disease activity and burden. Foot-specific measures included clinical assessment and the Manchester Foot Pain and Disability Index used to define DFP and evaluate between-group differences.

Results: forty-two participants with PsA (83% female, 57% Chinese, 31% Malay, 9.5% Indian, mean (SD) age 54-years (16)) attended the rheumatology clinic over the study-period. The median (IQR) disease duration was 2-years (11) and all were taking current DMARDs. Global disease measures demonstrated mild-to-moderate global disease activity and mild functional impairment, and were significantly higher in those with DFP.


Despite 90% reporting to be coping well with their condition, self-care and having emotional support (n=38), this study sample demonstrated high levels of anxiety/depression (29%), sleep disturbance (34%) and fatigue (24%), and a lack of disease- and drug-specific knowledge (64%). Further management was indicated for medication adherence counselling (48%), occupational therapy (43%), physiotherapy (36%) and podiatry (30%).

Nearly half had current foot pain with 40% reporting DFP (n=17), which caused significantly greater difficulty walking 3km and with 1-2 household tasks than those without DFP (p<0.05). Rearfoot enthesitis (plantar fasciitis, Achilles enthesitis) was the most common cause of DFP (67%) with pain lasting longer than 1-year. 72% were overweight or obese, with a high proportion not engaging in any cardiovascular exercise (70%). Three of 42 participants had previously seen a podiatrist.

Conclusions
People with DFP in PsA experience more severe global disease activity, reduced mobility and higher levels of negative impact on their daily lives in Singapore. In the absence of working in a multidisciplinary-team, there is value in comprehensive assessments that have potential to capture a holistic view of personal impact and improve person-centred care in PsA.
Disabling foot pain, Disease impact, Multidisciplinary team care, Psoriatic arthritis, Singapore
Teo, Vanessa H.Y.
8484a8bd-1565-4c78-8654-69fcca8dd463
Chia, Kai Li
9578c22d-c712-4362-924c-b77925fad5cc
Bowen, Catherine
fd85c3c5-96d9-49b8-86c6-caa94e1a222b
Lahiri, Manjari
7d02ff85-2a2a-462f-ace2-f620ec30e9d6
Cheung, Peter P.M.
c558bca0-fe1a-4e88-879e-87943bc0aa92
Turner, Deborah E.
22c909eb-efaf-42be-b625-a467f226237d
Carter, Kate
cfd39d50-c0b6-46d5-9517-aaf6c28e8358
Teo, Vanessa H.Y.
8484a8bd-1565-4c78-8654-69fcca8dd463
Chia, Kai Li
9578c22d-c712-4362-924c-b77925fad5cc
Bowen, Catherine
fd85c3c5-96d9-49b8-86c6-caa94e1a222b
Lahiri, Manjari
7d02ff85-2a2a-462f-ace2-f620ec30e9d6
Cheung, Peter P.M.
c558bca0-fe1a-4e88-879e-87943bc0aa92
Turner, Deborah E.
22c909eb-efaf-42be-b625-a467f226237d
Carter, Kate
cfd39d50-c0b6-46d5-9517-aaf6c28e8358

Teo, Vanessa H.Y., Chia, Kai Li, Bowen, Catherine, Lahiri, Manjari, Cheung, Peter P.M., Turner, Deborah E. and Carter, Kate (2024) Disabling foot pain and its impact on daily living among people with Psoriatic Arthritis in Singapore: a cross-sectional observational investigation. BMC Rheumatology, 8 (52), [52]. (doi:10.1186/s41927-024-00409-3).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA)-related foot involvement has been shown to have a profound impact on daily functioning, with most studies having focused on predominantly Caucasian populations. The aim was to describe disabling foot pain (DFP) and its impact on daily living in PsA in Singapore.

Methods: a cross-sectional, retrospective study was conducted using clinical data collected during a single-visit to a rheumatology clinic in Singapore. Records for adults with physician-diagnosed PsA were reviewed for sociodemographic information, disease characteristics, global disease activity and burden. Foot-specific measures included clinical assessment and the Manchester Foot Pain and Disability Index used to define DFP and evaluate between-group differences.

Results: forty-two participants with PsA (83% female, 57% Chinese, 31% Malay, 9.5% Indian, mean (SD) age 54-years (16)) attended the rheumatology clinic over the study-period. The median (IQR) disease duration was 2-years (11) and all were taking current DMARDs. Global disease measures demonstrated mild-to-moderate global disease activity and mild functional impairment, and were significantly higher in those with DFP.


Despite 90% reporting to be coping well with their condition, self-care and having emotional support (n=38), this study sample demonstrated high levels of anxiety/depression (29%), sleep disturbance (34%) and fatigue (24%), and a lack of disease- and drug-specific knowledge (64%). Further management was indicated for medication adherence counselling (48%), occupational therapy (43%), physiotherapy (36%) and podiatry (30%).

Nearly half had current foot pain with 40% reporting DFP (n=17), which caused significantly greater difficulty walking 3km and with 1-2 household tasks than those without DFP (p<0.05). Rearfoot enthesitis (plantar fasciitis, Achilles enthesitis) was the most common cause of DFP (67%) with pain lasting longer than 1-year. 72% were overweight or obese, with a high proportion not engaging in any cardiovascular exercise (70%). Three of 42 participants had previously seen a podiatrist.

Conclusions
People with DFP in PsA experience more severe global disease activity, reduced mobility and higher levels of negative impact on their daily lives in Singapore. In the absence of working in a multidisciplinary-team, there is value in comprehensive assessments that have potential to capture a holistic view of personal impact and improve person-centred care in PsA.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 August 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 October 2024
Keywords: Disabling foot pain, Disease impact, Multidisciplinary team care, Psoriatic arthritis, Singapore

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494912
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494912
PURE UUID: 20e0b047-1785-4e90-82cf-39124335d112
ORCID for Catherine Bowen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7252-9515

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Oct 2024 16:31
Last modified: 01 Nov 2024 02:37

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Contributors

Author: Vanessa H.Y. Teo
Author: Kai Li Chia
Author: Catherine Bowen ORCID iD
Author: Manjari Lahiri
Author: Peter P.M. Cheung
Author: Deborah E. Turner
Author: Kate Carter

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