Illness Perception in Primary Cutaneous T-cell Lymphomas: What Patients Believe About Their Disease
Johanna Eder, Martina Kammerstätter, Friedrich Erhart, Daniela Mairhofer-Muri, Franz Trautinger
DOI: 10.2340/00015555-2245
Abstract
There is currently no information available on illness perception in primary cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCL). The aim of this study was therefore to gather initial information on disease understanding and interpretation in patients with CTCL. Consecutive patients from a hospital-based primary cutaneous lymphoma ward completed the Revised Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ-R) on 2 consecutive visits. A total of 24 patients with different variants of CTCL were included in the study. Patients experienced their condition as being long-lasting, but not fundamentally affecting their lives. Patients had poor belief in personal control, but strong belief in treatment control. They did not show a good understanding of their disease, and had a moderately negative emotional response to their illness. In conclusion, the IPQ-R provides a feasible and reproducible tool for measurement and better understanding of illness perception in patients with CTCL. Knowledge of patients’ attitudes towards their disease should enable optimization of the patient–physician relationship and patient care.
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