CHARACTERIZATION OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY BEHAVIOUR IN VASCULITIS PATIENTS

Nain K, Schönau V, Guilhon de Araujo E, Reis P, Ebner I, Coppers B, Tascilar K, Kleyer A, Schett G, Liphardt AM (2024)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2024

Journal

Pages Range: 1098.2-1099

DOI: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2024-eular.5692

Abstract

Background: Physical activity (PA) is a measure of physical function and related to quality of life. PA can be influenced by disease-specific symptoms, disability or fear of movement and physical activity-related health competence. There is currently little knowledge on the characteristics of PA behaviour in patients with giant cell arteritis (GCA) and anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV) [1,2].


Objectives: To characterize PA behaviour and to assess health-related quality of life, disability, physical activity-related health competence, kinesiophobia, fatigue and their relationship to physical activity in patients with GCA and AAV.


Methods: GCA and AAV patients (Internal Medicine 3 outpatient clinics Erlangen, Germany) were enrolled in this cross-sectional study after giving written informed consent. Subject characteristics, illness-related medical history, and disease scores (Vasculitis Damage Index [VDI], Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Scale [BVAS], visual analogue scale on pain [VAS-P] and disease activity [VAS-DA]) were retrieved from patient records. Subjects completed questionnaires on health-related quality of life (Short Form 36 [SF-36]), disability (Health Assessment Questionnaire [HAQ]), physical activity-related health competence (PAHCO), kinesiophobia (Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia [TSK]) and fatigue (Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy – Fatigue [FACIT-F]). PA in daily life was assessed by wrist (non-dominant) worn accelerometer (GENEActiv® [Activinsights Ltd, Kimbolton, UK]) for 14 days, and the international physical activity questionnaire (IPAQ). Accelerometer data was analysed using open-source package GGIR [3]. Pearson’s correlation was computed to determine the relationship between PA behaviour and clinical scores.


Results: Subject characteristics and general outcomes of the 50 participants (23 GCA, 27 AAV [16 GPA, 8 EGPA, 3 MPA)] are summarized in Table 1. Most of the daytime was spent in inactivity (mean 73.3 % in both groups), whereas moderate to vigorous PA in at least 1-minute-bouts reached 16.8 % of total physical activity (15.3 % in GCA, 18.0 % in AAV). About two thirds of moderate to vigorous PA was in 1-10 min bouts (59.5 % in GCA, 67.7 % in AAV). AAV patients showed higher mean PAHCO scores in all three dimensions. Duration of inactivity correlated negatively with FACIT-F (r= -0.433, p=0.024) and energy/fatigue subset of the SF-36 questionnaire (r= -0.456, p= 0.017) in AAV, but not in GCA. Patient reported PA by IPAQ shows higher duration of moderate to vigorous PA and lower duration of inactivity/sitting than accelerometric data. There was no association between duration of moderate to vigorous PA and clinical scores.


Conclusion: These findings show that vasculitis patients spend most of their time in inactivity and that inactivity is related with fatigue in ANCA-associated vasculitis. Patients report a lack of advice on physical activity from health care providers (HCPs) for both diseases, GCA and AAV, highlighting the need for a better understanding of the relationship between physical activity and fatigue, and the importance of the assessment of physical activity in daily life.REFERENCES: NIL.

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APA:

Nain, K., Schönau, V., Guilhon de Araujo, E., Reis, P., Ebner, I., Coppers, B.,... Liphardt, A.-M. (2024). CHARACTERIZATION OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY BEHAVIOUR IN VASCULITIS PATIENTS. Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 1098.2-1099. https://doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2024-eular.5692

MLA:

Nain, Katharina, et al. "CHARACTERIZATION OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY BEHAVIOUR IN VASCULITIS PATIENTS." Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases (2024): 1098.2-1099.

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