| Literature DB >> 29795616 |
Inge Spronk1,2, Catherine Legemate1,3, Irma Oen4, Nancy van Loey5,6, Suzanne Polinder2, Margriet van Baar1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Measurement of health-related quality of life (HRQL) is essential to qualify the subjective burden of burns in survivors. We performed a systematic review of HRQL studies in adult burn patients to evaluate study design, instruments used, methodological quality, and recovery patterns.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29795616 PMCID: PMC5967732 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart outlining selection of studies.
Study characteristics of 94 studies measuring HRQL in adult burn patients.
| Study characteristics | Studies (n) | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case-control | 3 | [ | |
| Cohort | 32 | [ | |
| Cross-sectional | 56 | [ | |
| Trial | 3 | [ | |
| 0–20 | 7 | [ | |
| >20–50 | 19 | [ | |
| >50–100 | 30 | [ | |
| >100–200 | 25 | [ | |
| >200–500 | 9 | [ | |
| >500 | 3 | [ | |
| NA | 1 | [ | |
| 0–10% | 9 | [ | |
| >10–20% | 32 | [ | |
| >20–30% | 26 | [ | |
| >30–40% | 6 | [ | |
| >40–50% | 5 | [ | |
| >50–60% | 4 | [ | |
| >60–70% | 2 | [ | |
| >70–80% | 0 | - | |
| >80–90% | 2 | [ | |
| NA | 8 | [ | |
| 0–10 | 2 | [ | |
| >10–20 | 15 | [ | |
| >20–30 | 29 | [ | |
| >30–40 | 8 | [ | |
| >40–50 | 1 | [ | |
| >50–60 | 0 | - | |
| >60–70 | 1 | [ | |
| >70–80 | 1 | [ | |
| >80 | 2 | [ | |
| NA | 35 | [ | |
| 1 instrument | 63 | [ | |
| 2 instruments | 24 | [ | |
| 3 instruments | 7 | [ | |
| 1 time point | 61 | [ | |
| 2 time points | 5 | [ | |
| 3 time points | 4 | [ | |
| 4 time points | 12 | [ | |
| 5 time points | 10 | [ | |
| >5 time points | 1 | [ | |
| NA | 1 | [ | |
Note. NA = not applicable, TBSA = total body surface area
Fig 2Instruments used to measure health-related quality of life in >1 study.
BSHS-B = Burn Specific Health Scale—Brief, SF-36 = Medical Outcome Study Short Form—36 items, EQ-5D = EuroQol five dimensions questionnaire, BSHS = Burn Specific Health Scale, BSHS-A = Burn Specific Health Scale—Abbreviated, BSHS-R = Burn Specific Health Scale Revised, 15D = 15-dimensional health-related quality of life instrument, QLQ = Quality of Life Questionnaire, SF-12 = Medical Outcome Study Short Form—12 items, QOLS = Quality of Life Scale, WHOQOL-BREF = World Health Organization Quality of Life—BREF, YABOQ = Young Adult Burn Outcome Questionnaire.
Fig 3Time points at which health-related quality of life in burn patients was assessed.
Note. Data on pre-burn HRQL is collected retrospectively.
Fig 4Risk of bias assessed with four domains of the Quality in Prognostic Studies (QUIPS) risk of bias tool.
Fig 5a. BSHS-B domain scores for six domains for seventeen studies. b. BSHS-B domain scores for three domains for seventeen studies.
Fig 6SF-36 physical component summary scores and mental component summary scores for five studies.
The black line in the figures represents the US-norm score.
Fig 7a. SF-36 domain scores for six dimensions for fourteen studies. The line in the figures represent the US-norm score. b. SF-36 domain scores for two dimensions for fourteen studies. The line in the figures represent the US-norm score.
Fig 8EQ-5D scores the visual analogue scale, the EQ-5D index and five dimensions for three to five studies.
The line in the figures represent the composed norm score based on norm scores of the countries where the studies were conducted [111]. The y-axis represents 0–100% patients with no problems on a specific domain.