| Literature DB >> 31443363 |
Youn-Jung Son1, Kyoung-Hwa Baek2, Suk Jeong Lee1, Eun Ji Seo3.
Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a common cardiac arrhythmia associated with poor health-related quality of life (HRQoL). However, the factors influencing HRQoL in patients with AF are not well understood. The purpose of integrative review was to investigate the factors affecting HRQoL in patients with AF based on the six domains of Ferrans and colleagues' HRQoL model. A total of 23 relevant articles published between January 2000 and March 2018 were identified using four databases and analyzed in this study. Our review showed that the HRQoL in patients with AF was consistently lower than both healthy individuals and patients with other cardiovascular diseases. The most common factor associated with HRQoL in patients with AF was anxiety-specific to AF in the symptoms domain, followed by frequency and severity of symptoms and the New York Heart Association functional class. This study highlights that monitoring and assessing patients' symptoms is vital for improving HRQoL in patients with AF. Disease-specific and cross-culturally validated tools can allow healthcare professionals to provide tailored interventions for patients with AF.Entities:
Keywords: atrial fibrillation; health-related quality of life; integrative review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31443363 PMCID: PMC6747178 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16173042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram of the literature search and study selection process.
Descriptive summary of main characteristics and results of studies (n = 23).
| Author (year), Country | Study Design | Admission Type | Sample Characteristics | Main Findings | Quality Appraisal by MMA (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AF Type | ||||||
| Dorian et al. (2000), Canada [ | Case-control | Outpatients | Paroxysmal Persistent | AF; 152, 73%, 58.0 | The SF-36 subscale scores were lower in AF patients compared to the PTCA, healthy group ( | 100 |
| Suzuki et al. (2004), Japan [ | Cross-sectional | Outpatients | Paroxysmal | 240, 69.6%, 57.9 | A significant difference was found between agoraphobic patients and nonagoraphobic patients in SDQL. Psychological stress is the main perceived inducer in daily life, and attack induced by psychological stress affects their anxiety symptoms and QoL. | 50 |
| Van den Berg et al. (2005), Netherlands [ | Cross-sectional | Outpatients | Paroxysmal | 73, 68.5%, 55.5 | QoL in the physical domain and pain was not related to the degree of neuroticism ( | 50 |
| Maryniak et al. (2006), Poland [ | Cross-sectional | Inpatients | Paroxysmal | 76, 73%, 53.2 | No significant relationship was shown among disease duration, comorbidities, and QoL. | 50 |
| Ong et al. (2006), Canada [ | Cross-sectional | Outpatients | Paroxysmal Persistent Permanent | 93, 66%, 61.8 | PCS was 45.31 and MCS was 52.52 (SF-36: 0–100). | 75 |
| Singh et al. (2006), USA and Canada [ | Randomized controlled trial | Outpatients | Persistent | Con; 305, 99%, 67.3 | Favorable changes were seen in SF-36 subscales in SR patients at 1 year in general health ( | 50 |
| Hegbom et al. (2007), Norway [ | Randomized controlled trial | Outpatients | Chronic | Con. 15, 86.7%, 64.0 | SF-36 subscales (physical functioning, bodily pain, vitality, and role-emotional) improved significantly following Exercise Training Program. | 50 |
| Baek et al. (2008), Korea [ | Cross-sectional | Outpatients | Persistent Permanent | 102, 55.9% | QoL measured by SF-36 (range: 0–100) had a low to moderate correlation with symptom frequency and severity. | 100 |
| Kang (2009), Korea [ | Cross-sectional | Outpatients | Not mentioned | 129, 50.3%, 63.2 | Americans’ QoL measured by SF-36 (range: 0–100); 33.53/51.43 vs. 41.46/46.12 (physical function/mental health, female vs. male) | 75 |
| Lane et al. (2009), UK [ | Prospective cohort | Outpatients | Persistent Permanent | 70, 64.3%, 71.4 | There were no significant differences in the levels of depression and perceived stress and HRQoL (except for an increase in energy and decline in general health perception) over the 12 months following diagnosis. Illness identity and beliefs about medication are significant predictors of the improvement in physical HRQoL over time. | 100 |
| Dabrowski et al. (2010), Poland [ | Case-control | Not mentioned | Paroxysmal Persistent Permanent | AF; 95, 63.3%, 67.8 | The scores of NHP (range: 0–100) were lower in paroxysmal, persistent, and permanent AF patients compared to the healthy. | 100 |
| Jaber et al. (2010), Brazil [ | Case-control | Outpatients | Chronic | 89, 100%, 54.2 | There was a significant difference in QoL in physical and mental summary scores in patients with maximal HR ≤ 110 bpm on 6MWT in comparison with HR > 110 bpm and in the physical summary score in patients with average HR ≤ 80 bpm on Holter monitor in comparison with HR > 80 bpm. | 75 |
| McCabe et al. (2011), USA [ | Phenomenology | Outpatients | Paroxysmal Persistent | 15, 53.3%, 59.8 | Themes included (1) finding the meaning of symptoms, (2) feeling uninformed and unsupported, (3) turning points, (4) steering clear of AF, (5) managing unpredictable and function-limiting symptoms, (6) emotional distress, and (7) accommodation to AF tempered with hope for a cure. | 100 |
| Dorian et al. (2013), Canada [ | Prospective cohort | Inpatients | Paroxysmal Persistent Permanent | 210, 56.7%, 62.1 | AF patients’ QoL measured by AFEQT (range: 0–100). | 100 |
| Goren et al. (2013), USA [ | Case-control | Outpatients | Not mentioned | 1,296, 65.1%, 64.9 | AF patients’ vs. non-AF controls’ QoL measured by SF-36 (range: 0-100); 38.6 vs. 44.8 ( | 75 |
| Lakkireddy et al. (2013), USA [ | Prospective cohort | Outpatients | Paroxysmal | 49, 46.9%, 60.6 | Yoga training improved the QoL parameters of physical functioning, general health, vitality, social functioning, and mental health domains on SF-36. | 100 |
| Lee et al. (2013), Korea [ | Cross-sectional | Inpatients | Paroxysmal Persistent | 150, 51.3%, 62.4 | PCS was 38.92 and MCS was 41.49 (SF-36: 0–100). | 100 |
| Schron et al. (2014), USA [ | Cross-sectional | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 693, 62.2%, 69.8 | History of stroke, heart failure, rhythm control, lower QoL (PCS and MCS in SF-36) predicted hospitalization. Diabetes, female gender, older age, CAD, hypertension, and lower PCS in SF-36 predicted mortality. | 75 |
| Tsounis et al. (2014), Greece [ | Cross-sectional | Inpatients | Paroxysmal Persistent Permanent | 108, 64%, 65.4 | PCS was 40.28 and MCS was 40.89 (SF-36, range: 0–100). | 50 |
| Yamamoto et al. (2014), Japan [ | Prospective cohort | Outpatients | Paroxysmal | 233, 71%, 64.9 | Asymptomatic AF episode frequency correlates with a reduced QoL in patients with paroxysmal AF. | 100 |
| Altiok et al. (2015), Turkey [ | Phenomenology | Outpatients | Not mentioned | 32, 50%, 66.9 | Four main themes and 15 subthemes were identified: | 100 |
| Freeman et al. (2015), USA [ | Prospective cohort | Outpatients | Paroxysmal Persistent Permanent | 10,087, 57.6%, 75 | The AFEQT score decreased with increasing EHRA symptom severity class. | 100 |
| Bowyer et al. (2017), Australia [ | Randomized controlled trial | Inpatients | Paroxysmal Non-paroxysmal | Con; 19, 57.9%, 62.1 | The nurse intervention group showed significant differences compared to the control with respect to higher QoL on the SF-36 score of physical functioning and vitality at six months. | 100 |
For all reported scores, a higher score indicates a worse QoL (quality of life) in the NHP (Nottingham Health Profile) but a better QoL in others. Higher score indicates more frequent and serious symptoms. AF: Atrial fibrillation; AFEQT: Atrial fibrillation effect on quality of life; AFQLQ: Atrial fibrillation quality of life questionnaire; AFSS: University of Toronto atrial fibrillation severity scale; Con: Control group; EQ-5D: Euroqol-5d; EQ-VAS: Euroqol-visual analog scale; Exp: Experimental group; HR: Heart rate; HRQoL: Health-related quality of life; IIRS: Illness intrusiveness rating scale; MMA: Mixed methods appraisal; MWT: Minute walk test; PCS: Physical component summary; PTCA: Percutaneous transluminal coronary angiography; QLI-CV: Quality of life index-cardiac version; SAS: Specific activity scale; SCL: Symptom checklist; SDQL, Scale of disease and quality of life; SF-36: Short form 36 health survey; SR: Sinus rhythm, yrs: Years.
Instruments used to measure HRQoL in patients with AF in reviewed studies.
| Instrument Type | Instrument | Article Number | No. of Items | Reliability * | Validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AF-specific | AFEQT | [ | 20 | 0.88–0.95 | Reported |
| AFSS | [ | 14 | 0.94 | Reported | |
| AFQLQ | [ | 26 | 0.78–0.89 | Reported | |
| Cardiac-specific | NHP | [ | 45 | 0.72 | Reported |
| IIRS | [ | 13 | 0.88 | Reported | |
| QLI-CV | [ | 35 | 0.94–0.95 | Reported | |
| SCL | [ | 16 | 0.84–0.91 | Reported | |
| SDQL | [ | 8 | Reported | Reported | |
| Generic | SF-12 | [ | 12 | 0.89 (PCS) and 0.86 (MCS) | Reported |
| SF-36 | [ | 36 | 0.89–0.93 (PCS) and 0.84–0.88 (MCS) | Reported | |
| SAS | [ | 20 | 0.62 ** | Reported | |
| EQ-5D | [ | 5 | 0.70 | Reported | |
| EQ-VAS | [ | 1 | NA | Reported |
* Cronbach alpha. ** Weighted kappa statistic for reproducibility. AFEQT: Atrial fibrillation effect on quality of life; AFSC: Atrial fibrillation symptom checklist; AFQLQ: Atrial fibrillation quality of life questionnaire; EQ-5D: Euroqol-5d; EQ-VAS: Euroqol-visual analog scale; IIRS: Illness intrusiveness rating scale; NA: Not applicable; NHP: Nottingham health profile; QLI-CV: Quality of life index-cardiac version; SAS: Specific activity scale; SCL: Symptom checklist; SDQL: Scale of disease and quality of life; SF-12: 12-item short form survey, SF-36: Short form 36 health survey.
Factors affecting HRQoL in patients with AF according to Ferrans and colleagues’ conceptual model.
| Domain (No. of Predictors/Articles) | Factors (Frequency) | Article Number(s) | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biological function | Duration of illness (2) | [ | –/+++ |
| (9/7) | Left ventricle ejection fraction (LVEF) (1) | [ | – |
| Left atrial dimension (1) | [ | – | |
| Stroke of comorbidity (1) | [ | ++ | |
| Type of AF (1) | [ | + | |
| Heart rate (1) | [ | + | |
| CHADS2 score (1) | [ | +++ | |
| Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) level (1) | [ | ++ | |
| LV systolic and diastolic function (1) | [ | +++ | |
| Symptoms | Anxiety (4) | [ | ++/++/++/+++ |
| (5/9) | Symptom frequency and severity (4) | [ | +/+++/NA/+++ |
| Depression (2) | [ | ++/+++ | |
| Perceived stress (1) | [ | +++ | |
| Uncertainty (1) | [ | +++ | |
| Functional status | NYHA class (3) | [ | +/+++/+++ |
| (2/4) | Exercise performance (1) | [ | ++ |
| General health | Fear of AF attack (1) | [ | ++ |
| perceptions | Illness perception/identity (1) | [ | + |
| (9/4) | Emotional distress including anxiety and fear of stroke (2) | [ | Qualitative studies |
| Feeling uninformed and unsupported (2) | [ | Qualitative studies | |
| Acceptance of the disease (2) | [ | Qualitative studies | |
| Positive coping with living with AF (2) | [ | Qualitative studies | |
| Adverse effect of social life (1) | [ | Qualitative studies | |
| Inability to carry out daily living activities (1) | [ | Qualitative studies | |
| Sexual problem (1) | [ | Qualitative studies | |
| Characteristics of | Exercise intervention (2) | [ | ++/+++ |
| the individual | Gender (3) | [ | +/+/+ |
| (8/9) | Age (2) | [ | ++/+++ |
| Alcohol use (1) | [ | +++ | |
| Sleep (1) | [ | ++ | |
| Employment (1) | [ | + | |
| Optimism (1) | [ | ++ | |
| Neuroticism (1) | [ | ++ | |
| Characteristics of | Significant others (1) | [ | +++ |
| the environment (2/1) | Financial burden (1) | [ | +++ |
+: p < 0.05; ++: p < 0.01; +++: p < 0.001; NA: Not applicable to study; AF: Atrial fibrillation; CHADS2: Congestive heart failure history, hypertension history, age ≥75 years, diabetes mellitus history, stroke or transient ischemic attack symptoms previously; NYHA class: New York Heart Association functional class.