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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Quality of life in dogs with skin disease and their owners

By Noli, Chiara et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2011·Ospedale Veterinario Cuneese, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Quality of life of dogs with skin disease and of their owners. Part 2: administration of a questionnaire in various skin diseases and correlation to efficacy of therapy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study looked at the quality of life for dogs with skin problems and their owners. Owners of 200 dogs with various skin diseases completed a questionnaire about their pets' conditions and how they felt about them. The results showed that dogs with conditions like scabies and complicated atopic dermatitis had the lowest quality of life scores. After treatment, dogs with atopic dermatitis showed some improvement, but the owners' perception of their dogs' quality of life didn't always match the clinical improvements. This suggests that while treatments can help, the ongoing management of skin issues can still be challenging for both pets and their owners.

People also search for: dog skin disease quality of life · atopic dermatitis treatment for dogs · scabies in dogs symptoms

Abstract

A previously validated 15-item questionnaire on dogs' life quality (QoL1) and that of their owners (QoL2) was applied in a multicentre study to owners of 200 dogs with different dermatological conditions, together with a question on the owner-perceived disease severity (S). Factor analysis was applied to the whole questionnaire. The correlation of S with QoL1 and QoL2 scores was evaluated using Spearman's rank correlation tests. Owner sex, age, educational level and willingness to pay for a potential definitive cure of the disease were recorded, and compared with quality of life (QoL) scores. In 23 atopic dogs, CADESI-03, pruritus Visual Analogue Scale and QoL scores were obtained before and after therapy, and their correlation was evaluated with linear regression. Factor analysis revealed that three factors (S, QoL1 and QoL2) explained 75% of the variance. Owner-perceived severity correlated significantly with QoL1 and QoL2 (P = 0.002 and P = 0.015, respectively). The five diseases with the worst QoL scores were scabies, pododermatitis, complicated atopic dermatitis, pemphigus foliaceus and endocrine alopecia. Pruritic diseases did not give significantly higher QoL1 or QoL2 scores compared with nonpruritic diseases (P = 0.19, Kruskall-Wallis test). Owner sex, age or educational level did not influence QoL scores. Female sex, a younger age and a higher educational level were significantly associated with more willingness to pay. In atopic dogs, all the scores decreased after therapy, but post-treatment CADESI-03 and Visual Analogue Scale scores did not correlate with QoL1 and QoL2. Questions related to the burden of maintenance therapy showed the lowest improvements in score.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21435044/