The characters shown are real patients and the required consent to use their stories has been obtained from the patients and families. Photographs are for illustrative purposes only.
No one understands the impact of SMA better than the patient. However, there can be confusion and a lack of awareness about the different care options that are available and the benefits they provide.
Optimising the care of adult patients living with SMA is all about delivering high-quality, evidence-based, and patient-centered healthcare.1 More importantly, it’s about helping patients get the most from their lives on a day-to-day basis.
“It is important to adapt the message especially when talking to adult patients to make sure they have understood. If you give information that is too complex, sometimes that gets more confusing for them. I want to be sure that they have understood the message.”2
- Neurologist, Academic Medical Centre, France
Adults living with SMA value healthcare services that set collaborative goals.1 To ensure the best outcome for your patients, it is important to incorporate patient views into clinical care plans and acknowledge the shared wisdom of people living with SMA.1
The goals of adults living with SMA may include maintaining their independence to continue studying, working, travelling or looking after their family.
Involving adults living with SMA in the decision-making process can lead to improved healthcare and better outcomes.3,4
In a study of how adults and adolescents with SMA perceive and experience healthcare,
10 of 25
PARTICIPANTS
described their experience with their healthcare provider as either brief or superficial.1
"It’s pretty important to me that I've got a good relationship with my doctor. I have to build up a rapport before I open up to them.”1
- Patient living with Type II SMA
In a US survey of adults living with SMA and their caregivers, the five most important treatment goals, ranked in order of importance, were:5
In the same survey, the five most important benefits, in terms of activities of daily living, ranked in order of importance, were:5
“Slowing down a disease that inevitably degenerates and progresses, it represents a greatvictory for me”2
- Neurologist, Hospital Network, Italy
The characters shown are real patients and the required consent to use their stories has been obtained from the patients and families. Photographs are for illustrative purposes only.
1. Wan HWY, et al. “Getting ready for the adult world”: how adults with spinal muscular atrophy perceive and experience healthcare, transition and well-being. Orphanet J Rare Dis 2019;14:74.
2. IQVIA Qualitative Research 2020. Conduced with 47 adult SMA patients and 36 neurologists in five countries (Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Spain).
3. De Santis M, et al. Patient empowerment of people living with rare diseases. Its contribution to sustainable and resilient healthcare systems. Ann 1st Super Sanita 2019;55:283–91.
4. Spatz ES, Spertus JA. Shared decision making: a path toward improved patient-centered outcomes. Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes 2012;5:e75–7.
5. Cruz R, et al. Evaluating benefit-risk decision-making in spinal muscular atrophy: a first-ever study to assess risk tolerance in the SMA patient community. Clin Ther 2019;41:943–60.e4.
6. Mongiovi P, et al. Patient reported impact of symptoms in spinal muscular atrophy (PRISM-SMA). Neurology 2018;91:e1206–14.