Published online Mar 19, 2022. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v12.i3.470
Peer-review started: August 1, 2021
First decision: December 4, 2021
Revised: November 26, 2021
Accepted: February 22, 2022
Article in press: February 22, 2022
Published online: March 19, 2022
Processing time: 229 Days and 7.9 Hours
The prevalence of depressive and anxiety-related symptoms in newly referred patients at neurology outpatient clinics is high, and mental state of myasthenia gravis (MG) patients were seldom assessed by mental scales routinely, so little is known about the exact relationship between MG and mental disorders that often accompany it.
Due to the frequent occurrence of comorbidities in older people that might be confused with MG symptoms, awareness of mental disorders in older age groups of MG is needed for earlier intervention and thus a better outcome. In the present, there have been few studies on the mental health of patients with late-onset MG, so we conducted this study to assess the related factors for developing mental disorders in the subgroup of MG patients.
This study aimed to investigate the relationship between clinical features and mental health in patients with late-onset MG, in addition to treating physical symptoms, attention should also be paid to mental disorders in late-onset MG patients.
A total of 105 patients diagnosed with MG were recruited consecutively from a neuromuscular outpatient clinic between December 2020 and February 2021 in our hospital. Clinical data including sociodemographic, neurological and mental information were collected, and scores on clinical scales were procured through face-to-face evaluations with professional neurologists. The relationship between clinical features and mental health in late-onset MG patients was examined using multivariate logistic regression analyses.
Late-onset MG patients had higher total scores on the MG Quality of Life 15 (MG-QOL-15) quest
We found that female patients with late-onset MG were more susceptible to anxiety and depression than their male counterparts, and that higher MG-QOL-15 scores were an independent risk factor for anxiety and depression in patients with late-onset MG. An MG-QOL-15 score cutoff of 14.5 could be a good indicator for poor mental health in need of attention among late-onset MG patients.
In the future, we will seek to determine protective factors against developing mental disorders among late-onset MG. Further follow-up and particularly studies that include healthy control groups are needed to validate the results.