| Literature DB >> 31931822 |
Michael Nagel1,2, Christian Labenz3,4, Marcus A Wörns3,4, J U Marquardt3,4,5, Peter R Galle3,4, Jörn M Schattenberg3,4,6, Marc Nguyen-Tat7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with liver cirrhosis often suffer from complications such as ascites, gastrointestinal bleeding, and infections, resulting in impaired quality of life. Frequently, the close relatives of patients also suffer from a lower quality of life in chronic diseases. In recent years, acute-to-chronic liver failure has been defined as a separate entity with high mortality. Often several organs are affected which makes intensive care therapy necessary. Little is known about the influence of acute-on-chronic-liver failure (ACLF) on the quality of life of patients and the psychosocial burden on close relatives. AIM: The purpose of this prospective study is to investigate the influence of decompensated liver cirrhosis and the onset of ACLF of the patient's' quality of life and the psychosocial burden of close relatives.Entities:
Keywords: Acute – on – chronic liver failure; Liver cirrhosis; Psychosocial burden of relatives; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31931822 PMCID: PMC6958780 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-019-1268-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Patient characteristics. The most common etiology was alcoholic liver cirrhosis (41% vs. 22%) in both groups followed by NASH (16% vs. 10%; p value 0,7). Impairment of liver function was higher in patients with ACLF measured by MELD Score (15 ± 6 vs. 22 ± 7; p value < 0,001) and Organ Failure Score (7 ± 1 vs. 10 ± 2; p value < 0,001)
| Parameter | Decompensated liver cirrhosis | Acute-on-chronic liver failure | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Gender (N; %) | 25 (40%) | 13 (21%) | 0,9 |
| Age (years) (MEAN; SD) | 58 ± 14 | 58 ± 10 | 0,9 |
| Etiology | 0,7 | ||
| | 26 (41%) | 14 (22%) | |
| | 10 (16%) | 6 (10%) | |
| | 3 (5%) | 0 (0%) | |
| | 2 (3%) | 1 (2%) | |
| | 1 (2%) | 0 (0%) | |
| MELD (MEAN; SD) | 15 ± 6 | 22 ± 7 | < 0,001 |
| Organ Failure Score (MEAN; SD) | 7 ± 1 | 10 ± 2 | < 0,001 |
Shows the quality of life of patients with aspects of fatigue, emotional function, worries, abdominal symptoms, activity and systemic symptoms assessed by CQLD. Patients with ACLF showed a significantly reduced quality of life in terms of worry (4,48 ± 1,3 vs. 3,57 ± 1,2) and systemic symptoms (4,48 ± 1,6 vs. 3,29 ± 1,2)
| Parameter | Decompensated liver cirrhosis | Acute-on-chronic liver failure | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fatigue (MEAN; SD) | 3,98 ± 1,12 | 3,76 ± 1,09 | 0,5 |
| Emotional Function (MEAN; SD) | 4,24 ± 1,14 | 3,67 ± 1,07 | 0,06 |
| Worries (MEAN; SD) | 4,48 ± 1,27 | 3,57 ± 1,17 | 0,008 |
| Abdominal symptoms (MEAN; SD) | 4,43 ± 1,4 | 3,9 ± 1,22 | 0,2 |
| Activity (MEAN; SD) | 4,43 ± 1,31 | 4,1 ± 1,55 | 0,4 |
| Systemic symptoms (MEAN; SD) | 4,48 ± 1,58 | 3,29 ± 1,19 | 0,004 |
| Total Quality of Life (MEAN; SD) | 4,33 ± 1,14 | 3,67 ± 0,91 | 0,02 |
Shows the univariate analysis in patients with ACLF. In addition to clinical factors such as CHILD status (p value: 0,03), hepatorenal syndrome as a cause of decompensation (p value: 0,007), duration of hospitalization (p value: 0,03) and intensive care therapy (p value: 0,04), the analysis also showed an influence on patients’ quality of life. The partial aspect of patient’s worries shows a significant association with the presence of ACLF (p value: 0,04)
| Univariant analysis - ACLF | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | OR | 95% - CI | ||
| CHILD Status | 0,44 | 0,211 | 0,931 | 0,03 |
| hepatorenal syndrome | 20,5 | 2314 | 181,596 | 0,007 |
| worries of patient | 1,79 | 1133 | 2817 | 0,01 |
| Duration of hospitalization | 0,94 | 0,886 | 0,994 | 0,03 |
| ICU therapy | 0,16 | 0,028 | 0,911 | 0,04 |
Shows the correlation of the individual aspects of the patients’ quality of life with the Organ Failure score. All partial aspects except abdominal symptoms like fatigue (r = −0,294; p value: 0,02), emotional function (r = − 0,27; p value: 0,03), worries (r = − 0,42; p value: < 0,001), activity (r = − 0,256; p value: 0,042) and systemic symptoms (− 0,358; p value: 0,003) showed a significant correlation with organ failure score
| Correlation with Organ Failure Score | ||
|---|---|---|
| Parameter | Correlation | |
| Fatigue | - 0,294 | 0,02 |
| Emotional function | - 0,270 | 0,03 |
| Worries | - 0,420 | < 0,001 |
| Abdominal symptoms | - 0,152 | 0,2 |
| Activity | - 0,256 | 0,04 |
| Systemic symptoms | - 0,358 | 0,003 |
Showed the quality of life of the relatives and the psychosocial burden. There is no difference between the quality of life and psychosocial burden of relatives of patients with ACLF or decompensated cirrhosis
| Parameter | Decompensated liver cirrhosis | Acute-on-chronic liver failure | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Psychosocial burden of relatives (MEAN; SD) | 19,9 ± 11,5 | 25,9 ± 14,1 | 0,18 |
| physical strength of relatives (MEAN; SD) | 77,5 ± 18,9 | 69,5 ± 21,9 | 0,27 |
| mental strength of relatives (MEAN; SD) | 67,2 ± 12,9 | 61,6 ± 11,9 | 0,19 |
| social strength of relatives (MEAN; SD) | 68,4 ± 15,2 | 65,4 ± 19,3 | 0,62 |
| Environmental strength of relatives (MEAN; SD) | 77,5 ± 14,8 | 70,6 ± 16,4 | 0,21 |
Shows the univariate analysis of psychosocial burden of relatives. Interestingly, there is a significant influence of the patient’s age (p value: 0,05), sodium (p value: 0,04) and hepatic encephalopathy (p value: 0,02) on the psychosocial burden of the relative. In addition, all aspects of impaired quality of life of patients such as fatigue (p value: 0,0004), emotional function (p value: < 0,00001), worries (p value: < 0,00001), abdominal symptoms (p value: 0,0002), patient activity (p value: 0,00005) and systemic symptoms (p value: 0,002) are associated with increased psychosocial stress in relatives
| Univariate analysis – psychosocial burden of relatives | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | OR | 95% - CI | ||
| Age | −0,35 | -0,690 | -0,001 | 0,05 |
| Sodium | -0,87 | − 1704 | −0,030 | 0,04 |
| hepatic encephalopathy | 10,59 | 20,544 | 19,125 | 0,02 |
| fatigue of patient | −6,52 | − 9869 | − 3179 | 0,0004 |
| Emotional function of patient | −7,48 | −10,333 | − 4622 | < 0,0001 |
| worries of patient | − 7238 | − 9618 | − 4847 | < 0,0001 |
| Abdominal symptoms of patients | −5,14 | − 7669 | − 2611 | 0,0002 |
| Activity of patient | −5,66 | − 8126 | − 3188 | < 0,0001 |
| Systemic symptoms of patient | −0,32 | − 0,510 | −0,129 | 0,002 |