Physician and Patient Determinants of Prognostic Counseling in Idiopathic REM Sleep-Behavior Disorder

2019 
Abstract Objectives/Background: Prognostic counseling about the risk for developing overt neurodegenerative disorders for patients with idiopathic REM sleep-behavior disorder (iRBD) and isolated REM sleep without atonia (iRSWA) is difficult, given lack of disease-modifying interventions and uncertainty in accurate prognostication for individuals. We aimed to analyze patient and physician characteristics associated with documented prognostic discussions for patients with iRBD and iRSWA. Patients/Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the medical records for 138 (112 iRBD and 26 iRSWA) patients seen at Mayo Clinic between 2012 and 2015. We analyzed physician and patient demographics, initial complaint, and other information discussed during office visits. We then comparatively analyzed the impact of physician and patient characteristics on documented prognostic discussions using Chi Square or Fischer’s exact test. Results Mean iRBD patient age was 65.0 ± 13.0, and mean iRSWA age was 58 +/- 15 years. 78 (69.6%) iRBD and 22 (84.6%) iRSWA patients were men. 62 (55%) iRBD and 3 (12%) iRSWA patients received prognostic counseling about phenoconversion risk. iRBD was a secondary complaint in 67 (59.8%). Patients over age 60 years and those having iRBD as a chief complaint more frequently received prognostic discussions than those with opposite characteristics (all p Conclusions Several patient and physician characteristics appear to influence documented prognostic counseling for iRBD/RSWA patients. Future studies of iRBD/RSWA patients’ preferences are needed to clarify ethically appropriate physician-patient communication concerning prognosis.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    41
    References
    6
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []