Abstract

BackgroundA multistakeholder core outcome set created for asthma trials showed that asthma-specific quality of life (QoL) was a critically meaningful outcome. However, the definition and measurement methods were undetermined. The adverse effects (AEs) of corticosteroids may be a vital clinical trial outcome. Nevertheless, the AE burden from the patient perspective has not yet been elucidated in an asthma population. ObjectiveTo characterize patient burden of AEs in oral (OCS) and inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) and how this relates to QoL within an asthma population. MethodsWe used a convergent parallel mixed-methods design with quantitative surveys of known ICS and OCS AEs that were distributed through the Allergy & Asthma Network database, social channels, and the Asthma UK newsletter. Participants rated the AEs that were (1) most burdensome and (2) most desired to be eliminated. Qualitative interviews and focus groups were performed to better understand patient views on barriers reported in the quantitative data, and to identify patient-important barriers that were not a part of the quantitative survey. ResultsThe 3 most burdensome AEs for OCS were bone mineral density, infectious complications, and weight gain, whereas weight gain was the most desired to be eliminated. The 3 most burdensome AEs for ICS were pneumonia, hoarse voice, and oral thrush, with concordant results for the most desired to be eliminated. In the focus groups, OCS AEs were concordant with quantitative findings. Focus groups identified unmeasured psychosocial effects, such as embarrassment. ConclusionThe most burdensome AEs may not be those that would cause patients to stop therapy. Furthermore, qualitative focus groups suggest a psychosocial burden associated with ICS, which needs further investigation.

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