Fatigue in patients with chronic disease: results from the population-based Lifelines Cohort Study

Author:

Goërtz Yvonne M. J.,Braamse Annemarie M. J.,Spruit Martijn A.,Janssen Daisy J. A.,Ebadi Zjala,Van Herck Maarten,Burtin Chris,Peters Jeannette B.,Sprangers Mirjam A. G.,Lamers Femke,Twisk Jos W. R.,Thong Melissa S. Y.,Vercoulen Jan H.,Geerlings Suzanne E.,Vaes Anouk W.,Beijers Rosanne J. H. C. G.,van Beers Martijn,Schols Annemie M. W. J.,Rosmalen Judith G. M.,Knoop Hans

Abstract

Abstract(1) To evaluate the prevalence of severe and chronic fatigue in subjects with and without chronic disease; (2) to assess to which extent multi-morbidity contributes to severe and chronic fatigue; and (3) to identify predisposing and associated factors for severe and chronic fatigue and whether these are disease-specific, trans-diagnostic, or generic. The Dutch Lifelines cohort was used, including 78,363 subjects with (n = 31,039, 53 ± 12 years, 33% male) and without (n = 47,324, 48 ± 12 years, 46% male) ≥ 1 of 23 chronic diseases. Fatigue was assessed with the Checklist Individual Strength-Fatigue. Compared to participants without a chronic disease, a higher proportion of participants with ≥ 1 chronic disease were severely (23% versus 15%, p < 0.001) and chronically (17% versus 10%, p < 0.001) fatigued. The odds of having severe fatigue (OR [95% CI]) increased from 1.6 [1.5–1.7] with one chronic disease to 5.5 [4.5–6.7] with four chronic diseases; for chronic fatigue from 1.5 [1.5–1.6] to 4.9 [3.9–6.1]. Multiple trans-diagnostic predisposing and associated factors of fatigue were found, explaining 26% of variance in fatigue in chronic disease. Severe and chronic fatigue are highly prevalent in chronic diseases. Multi-morbidity increases the odds of having severe and chronic fatigue. Several trans-diagnostic factors were associated with fatigue, providing a rationale for a trans-diagnostic approach.

Funder

Longfonds

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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