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Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases logoLink to Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
. 2001 Nov;60(11):1033–1039. doi: 10.1136/ard.60.11.1033

Withdrawal from labour force due to work disability in patients with ankylosing spondylitis

A Boonen 1, A Chorus 1, H Miedema 1, D van der Heijde 1, R Landewe 1, H Schouten 1, H van der Tempel 1, S van der Linden 1
PMCID: PMC1753424  PMID: 11602474

Abstract

OBJECTIVE—To investigate withdrawal from the labour force because of inability to work owing to ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and to determine the characteristics of patients with no job because of work disability attributable to AS.
METHODS—A postal questionnaire was sent to 709 patients with AS aged 16-60 years followed up by a rheumatologist. Kaplan-Meier survival statistics were used to assess the time lapse between diagnosis and withdrawal from work. Standardised incidence ratios were calculated to compare withdrawal from the labour force in patients with AS and the general population. Determinants of withdrawal were assessed by Cox's proportional hazard regression analysis using variables assumed to be time independent. Cross sectional characteristics of patients without a job owing to disability were further analysed by simple and multiple regression analyses.
RESULTS—A total of 658 patients returned the questionnaire. Of 529 patients with a paid job before diagnosis of AS, 5% had left the labour force within the first year after the diagnosis, 13% after 5 years, 21% after 10 years, 23% after 15 years, and 31% after 20 years. Age and sex adjusted risk for withdrawal was 3.1 (95% CI 2.5 to 3.7) times higher than in the general population. In patients with AS, determinants of withdrawal from work were older age at diagnosis, manual work, and coping strategies characterised by limiting or adapting activities. Patients with work disability at the time of the study were older, came from a lower social class, and were more likely to have total hip replacement, peripheral arthritis, or comorbidity. Moreover, they reported worse physical function (BAS-FI), experienced lower quality of life, and more often had extraspinal disease than those with a job.
CONCLUSION—Withdrawal from work is 3.1 times higher in patients with AS than expected in the general population. Within patients, higher age at diagnosis, manual work, and unfavourable coping strategies are important determinants of withdrawal. Patients without a job experience a lower quality of life.



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Figure 1  .

Figure 1  

Kaplan-Meier curves illustrating probability to remain in the labour force for each of the risk factors in the Cox regression analysis.

Figure 2  .

Figure 2  

Kaplan-Meier curves illustrating withdrawal from the labour force for three different risk groups of patients with AS.

Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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