| Literature DB >> 33202650 |
Jacqueline Schmidt-RioValle1, Moath Abu Ejheisheh1, María José Membrive-Jiménez2, Nora Suleiman-Martos1, Luis Albendín-García1, María Correa-Rodríguez1, José Luis Gómez-Urquiza1.
Abstract
Coronary heart disease is a public health problem and is one of the leading causes of loss of quality of life, disability, and death worldwide. The main procedure these patients undergo is cardiac catheterisation, which helps improve their quality of life, symptoms of myocardial ischemia, and ventricular function, thus helping increase the survival rate of sufferers. It can also, however, lead to physical consequences, including kidney failure, acute myocardial infarction, and stroke. The objective of this study was to analyse how coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) influences quality of life. A systematic review and meta-analysis were conducted using the CINAHL, PubMed, Scopus, and Cuiden databases in June 2020. A total of 7537 subjects were included, 16 in the systematic review and 3 in the meta-analysis. The studies analysing quality of life using the SF questionnaire showed improvements in the quality of physical and mental appearance, and those using the NHP questionnaire showed score improvements and, in some cases, differences in quality of life between women and men. This operation seems to be a good choice for improving the quality of life of people with coronary pathologies, once the possible existing risks have been assessed.Entities:
Keywords: coronary artery bypass graft; follow-up study; meta-analysis; prevalence; quality of life; surgery; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33202650 PMCID: PMC7697861 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17228439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Study-selection diagram.
Characteristics of the included studies (n = 16).
| Study | Design | Sample | TYPE OF CABG | Quality of Life Measurement Questionnaire | Follow-Up | Average (DE) | Average (DE) | Main Results | EL/RG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lie | Prospective Cohorts | 185 | Elective | SF36 | Beforehand, after 6 months | MSC 47.7 (11.2) | MSC 51.3 (10.7) | Studying cardiac, non-cardiac, preoperative and early postoperative factors helps us predict the quality of life of patients after surgery. | 2b/B |
| Sjöland et al. [ | Prospective Cohorts | Pre: 1160 | Emergency and Elective | NHP | Beforehand (at angiography appointment), after 3 months, 1 year, 2 years | 20.5 | 3 months: 11.4 | The greatest improvement in quality of life was at 3 months, for physical capacity and patient pain. Sexual problems persisted for 2 years after the surgery. | 2b/B |
| Sandau et al. [ | Prospective Cohorts | 64 | Elective | SF12 (short form of SF36) | 72 h beforehand, after 3 months | MCS 49.6 (9.6) | MCS 53.2 (9.5) | Participants gained an average of 2.2 points (PCS) and 3.6 points (MCS). Although these changes appear small, the clinical significance of changes in an individual’s score depends largely on the functional capacity associated with the score. | 2b/B |
| Ballan and | Quasi-experimental | 62 | Elective | SF36 | Beforehand, after 6 weeks | MSC 53.4 (12.7) | MSC 53.7 (10.1) | The PCS scores improved and were statistically significant 6 weeks after surgery. No significant differences were found in MCS scores. | 1B/A |
| Herlitz et al. [ | Prospective Cohorts | 1225 (beforehand), 1358 (5 years), | Emergency and elective | NHP | Beforehand (during angiography), after 5 years, and 10 years | 20.8 | 12.1 (5 years) | Patient quality of life improved, generally, at 10 years, despite increasing age. The scores for the second and third measurements deteriorated. | 2b/B |
| Oreel et al. [ | Prospective Cohorts | 48 | Elective | SF36 | Beforehand, after 6 months | MCS 46.2(-) | MCS 51.9(-) | Quality of life was lower in women, and their physical health improved more slowly than that of male patients. | 2b/B |
| Herlitz et al. [ | Prospective Cohorts | 637 | (1) normal waiting list, (2) admitted patients, (3) patients with unstable angina, (4) emergency patients with unstable angiography, (5) emergency patients with acute myocardial infaction, (6) emergency patients with ventricular fibrillation | NHP | Beforehand, after 10 years | - | - | Being female, age, hypertension, obesity, renal failure, and cerebrovascular disease all play a role in the post-surgery recovery of quality of life. | 2b/B |
| Neto et al. [ | Prospective Cohorts | 44 | Elective | SF36 | Beforehand, after 3 and 6 months | - | - | The older population presents both cardiovascular and quality of life improvement after surgery. | 2b/B |
| Edell-Gustafsson | Prospective cohorts | 6 beforehand | Elective | NHP | Two days beforehand, 1 month after | 8.3 | 5.8 | After a month, quality of life improved, although wound pain persisted influencing sleep quality. | 2b/B |
| Grady et al. [ | Prospective cohorts | 136 | Elective | SF36 | Beforehand, after 3, 6, 12 months. Annually | MSC 51.88 (2.24) | MSC 54.94 (1.61) | There was an improvement in the quality of life between 3 and 6 months. After 3 years, it remained stable. | 2b/B |
| Sjöland et al. [ | Prospective cohorts | 1160 | - | NHP | Beforehand, 3 months, after 1 year, and 2 years | Men 19 | Men 10.4-8.7 Women 13.9-13.6 | The women presented increased concomitant illnesses and a lower quality of life. | 2b/B |
| Rumsfeld et al. [ | Prospective cohorts | 1973 | - | SF36 | Beforehand and after 6 months | MCS 44.3 | MSC 46.1 | Being a smoker and presenting a psychiatric pathology influences post-surgery quality of life. | 2b/B |
| Mathisen et al. [ | Prospective cohorts | 108 | - | SF36 (General-care subscale) | Beforehand, after 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year | 57.7 (21.1) | 67.2 (19.7) | Quality of life can both influence and be used as a health status outcome after surgery. | 2b/B |
| Peric et al. [ | Prospective cohorts | 243 | - | NHP | Beforehand and after 6 months | - | - | Patients with a higher degree of angina had worse quality of life both before and after the operation | 2b/B |
| Peric et al. [ | Prospective cohorts | 243 | Elective | NHP | Beforehand and after 6 months | - | - | Patients with a high mortality risk according to EUROSCORE have a worse quality of life before surgery and improved perceived energy after surgery. | 2b/B |
| Peric et al. [ | Prospective cohorts | 243 | Elective | NHP | Beforehand and after 6 months | - | - | Although the quality of life of both sexes improves after CABG, women have a worse quality of life both before and after surgery. | 2b/B |
Note: CABG = coronary artery bypass graftin; MSC = mental component of quality of life; NHP = Nottingham Health Profile; PCS = physical component of quality of life; SD = Standard deviation; SF = Short Form Health Survey.
Meta-analytical estimate of the impact on quality of life according to the 7 aspects of Part 2 of the NHP (n = 1997).
| Dimension | Prevalence Pre (CI-95%) | Prevalence Post (CI-95%) |
|---|---|---|
| Impact on working life | 17% (2–42%) | 6% (1–15%) |
| Impact on work/housework | 27% (5–59%) | 11% (3–23%) |
| Impact on social life | 15% (4–33%) | 4% (1–10%) |
| Impact on family relationships | 9% (2–20%) | 3% (1–9%) |
| Impact on sex life | 23% (2–58%) | 14% (1–40%) |
| Impact on hobbies | 30% (3–70%) | 12% (2–28%) |
| Impact on holidays | 22% (2–58%) | 8% (1–20%) |
Note. CI, confidence interval.
Figure 2Pre- and post-impact on working life.
Figure 3Pre- and post-impact on work/housework.
Figure 4Pre- and post-impact on social life.
Figure 5Pre- and Post-impact on family relationships.
Figure 6Pre- and post-impact on sex life.
Figure 7Pre- and post-impact on hobbies.
Figure 8Pre- and post-impact on holidays.