68 research outputs found
Evaluating country-specific characteristics
Background: Measuring quality of life (QOL) is fundamental to understanding the impact of disease and treatment on patientsâ lives. Objectives: This study aimed to explore QOL in an international sample of adults with congenital heart disease (CHD), the association between patient characteristics and QOL, and international variation in QOL and its relationship to country-specific characteristics.Objectives: This study aimed to explore QOL in an international sample of adults with congenital heart disease (CHD), the association between patient characteristics and QOL, and international variation in QOL and its relationship to country-specific characteristics.Methods: We enrolled 4,028 adults with CHD from 15 countries. QOL was assessed using a linear analog scale (LAS) (0 to 100) and the Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS) (5 to 35). Patient characteristics included sex, age, marital status, educational level, employment status, CHD complexity, and patient-reported New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class. Country-specific characteristics included general happiness and 6 cultural dimensions. Linear mixed models were applied.Results: Median QOL was 80 on the LAS and 27 on the SWLS. Older age, lack of employment, no marriage history, and worse NYHA functional class were associated with lower QOL (p < 0.001). Patients from Australia had the highest QOL (LAS: 82) and patients from Japan the lowest (LAS: 72). Happiness scores and cultural dimensions were not associated with variation in QOL after adjustment for patient characteristics and explained only an additional 0.1% of the variance above and beyond patient characteristics (p = 0.56).Conclusions: This large-scale, international study found that overall QOL in adults with CHD was generally good. Variation in QOL was related to patient characteristics but not country-specific characteristics. Hence, patients at risk for poorer QOL can be identified using uniform criteria. General principles for designing interventions to improve QOL can be developed.peer-reviewe
Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators and patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease : an international study
Background: Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) are increasingly being used to prevent sudden death in the growing population of adults with congenital heart disease (CHD). However, little is known about their impact on patient-reported outcomes (PROs).Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess and compare PROs in adults with CHD with and without ICDs.Methods: A propensity-based matching weight analysis was conducted to evaluate PROs in an international cross-sectional study of adults with CHD from 15 countries across 5 continents.Results:
A total of 3188 patients were included: 107 with ICDs and 3081 weight-matched controls without ICDs. ICD recipients were an average age of 40.1 ± 12.4 years, and >95% had moderate or complex CHD. Defibrillators were implanted for primary and secondary prevention in 38.3% and 61.7%, respectively. Perceived health status, psychological distress, sense of coherence, and health behaviors did not differ significantly among patients with and without ICDs. However, ICD recipients had a more threatening view of their illness (relative % difference 8.56; P = .011). Those with secondary compared to primary prevention indications had a significantly lower quality-of-life score (Linear Analogue Scale 72.0 ± 23.1 vs 79.2 ± 13.0; P = .047). Marked geographic variations were observed. Overall sense of well-being, assessed by a summary score that combines various PROs, was significantly lower in ICD recipients (vs controls) from Switzerland, Argentina, Taiwan, and the United States.Conclusion:In an international cohort of adults with CHD, ICDs were associated with a more threatening illness perception, with a lower quality of life in those with secondary compared to primary prevention indications. However, marked geographic variability in PROs was observed.peer-reviewe
Phenotypes of adults with congenital heart disease around the globe: a cluster analysis
Objective
To derive cluster analysis-based groupings for adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD) when it comes to perceived health, psychological functioning, health behaviours and quality of life (QoL).
Methods
This study was part of a larger worldwide multicentre study called APPROACH-IS; a cross sectional study which recruited 4028 patients (2013â2015) from 15 participating countries. A hierarchical cluster analysis was performed using Ward's method in order to group patients with similar psychological characteristics, which were defined by taking into consideration the scores of the following tests: Sense Of Coherence, Health Behavior Scale (physical exercise score), Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale, Illness Perception Questionnaire, Satisfaction with Life Scale and the Visual Analogue Scale scores of the EQ-5D perceived health scale and a linear analogue scale (0â100) measuring QoL.
Results
3768 patients with complete data were divided into 3 clusters. The first and second clusters represented 89.6% of patients in the analysis who reported a good health perception, QoL, psychological functioning and the greatest amount of exercise. Patients in the third cluster reported substantially lower scores in all PROs. This cluster was characterised by a significantly higher proportion of females, a higher average age the lowest education level, more complex forms of congenital heart disease and more medical comorbidities.
Conclusions
This study suggests that certain demographic and clinical characteristics may be linked to less favourable health perception, quality of life, psychological functioning, and health behaviours in ACHD. This information may be used to improve psychosocial screening and the timely provision of psychosocial care
Physical functioning, mental health, and quality of life in different congenital heart defects : comparative analysis in 3538 patients from 15 countries
Background: We compared physical functioning, mental health, and quality of life (QoL) of patients with different subtypes of congenital heart disease (CHD) in a large international sample and investigated the role of functional class in explaining the variance in outcomes across heart defects.
Methods: In the cross-sectional Assessment of Patterns of Patient-Reported Outcome in Adults with Congenital Heart Disease-International Study (APPROACH-IS), we enrolled 4028 adult patients with CHD from 15 countries. Diagnostic groups with at least 50 patients were included in these analyses, yielding a sample of 3538 patients (median age: 32 years; 52% women). Physical functioning, mental health, and QoL were measured with the SF-12 health status survey, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), linear analog scale (LAS) and Satisfaction with Life Scale, respectively. Functional class was assessed using the patient-reported New York Heart Association (NYHA) class. Multivariable general linear mixed models were applied to assess the relationship between the type of CHD and patient-reported outcomes, adjusted for patient characteristics, and with country as random effect.
Results: Patients with coarctation of the aorta and those with isolated aortic valve disease reported the best physical functioning, mental health, and QoL. Patients with cyanotic heart disease or Eisenmenger syndrome had worst outcomes. The differences were statistically significant, above and beyond other patient characteristics. However, the explained variances were small (0.6% to 4.1%) and decreased further when functional status was added to the models (0.4% to 0.9%).
Conclusions: Some types of CHD predict worse patient-reported outcomes. However, it appears that it is the functional status associated with the heart defect rather than the heart defect itself that shapes the outcomes.peer-reviewe
Patient-reported outcomes in the aging population of adults with congenital heart disease : results from APPROACH-IS
The congenital heart disease (CHD) population now comprises an increasing number of older persons in their 6th decade of life and beyond. We cross-sectionally evaluated patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in persons with CHD aged 60 years or older, and contrasted these with PROs of younger patients aged 40â59 years and 18â39 years. Adjusted for demographic and medical characteristics, patients â„60 years had a lower Physical Component Summary, higher Mental Component Summary, and lower anxiety (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale-Anxiety) scores than patients in the two younger categories. For satisfaction with life, older persons had a higher score than patients aged 40â59 years.peer-reviewe
Sense of coherence in adults with congenital heart disease in 15 countries : patient characteristics, cultural dimensions and quality of life
Background: Previous studies have found that sense of coherence (SOC) is positively related to quality of life (QoL) in persons with chronic conditions. In congenital heart disease (CHD), the evidence is scant.
Aims: We investigated (i) intercountry variation in SOC in a large international sample of adults with CHD; (ii) the relationship between demographic and clinical characteristics and SOC; (iii) the relationship between cultural dimensions of countries and SOC; and (iv) variation in relative importance of SOC in explaining QoL across the countries.
Methods: APPROACH-IS was a cross-sectional, observational study, with 4028 patients from 15 countries enrolled. SOC was measured using the 13-item SOC scale (range 13â91) and QoL was assessed by a linear analog scale (range 0â100). Results
The mean SOC score was 65.5±13.2. Large intercountry variation was observed with the strongest SOC in Switzerland (68.8±11.1) and the lowest SOC in Japan (59.9±14.5). A lower SOC was associated with a younger age; lower educational level; with job seeking, being unemployed or disabled; unmarried, divorced or widowed; from a worse functional class; and simple CHD. Power distance index and individualism vs collectivism were cultural dimensions significantly related to SOC. SOC was positively associated with QoL in all participating countries and in the total sample, with an explained variance ranging from 5.8% in Argentina to 30.4% in Japan.
Conclusion: In adults with CHD, SOC is positively associated with QoL. The implementation of SOC-enhancing interventions might improve QoL, but strategies would likely differ across countries given the substantial variation in explained variance.peer-reviewe
Heart failure and patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease from 15 countries
Background: Heart failure (HF) is the leading cause of mortality and associated with significant morbidity in adults with congenital heart disease. We sought to assess the association between HF and patientâreport outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease.
Methods and Results: As part of the APPROACHâIS (Assessment of Patterns of PatientâReported Outcomes in Adults with Congenital Heart diseaseâInternational Study), we collected data on HF status and patientâreported outcomes in 3959 patients from 15 countries across 5 continents. Patientâreport outcomes were: perceived health status (12âitem Short Form Health Survey), quality of life (Linear Analogue Scale and Satisfaction with Life Scale), sense of coherenceâ13, psychological distress (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), and illness perception (Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire). In this sample, 137 (3.5%) had HF at the time of investigation, 298 (7.5%) had a history of HF, and 3524 (89.0%) had no current or past episode of HF. Patients with current or past HF were older and had a higher prevalence of complex congenital heart disease, arrhythmias, implantable cardioverterâdefibrillators, other clinical comorbidities, and mood disorders than those who never had HF. Patients with HF had worse physical functioning, mental functioning, quality of life, satisfaction with life, sense of coherence, depressive symptoms, and illness perception scores. Magnitudes of differences were large for physical functioning and illness perception and moderate for mental functioning, quality of life, and depressive symptoms.
Conclusions: HF in adults with congenital heart disease is associated with poorer patientâreported outcomes, with large effect sizes for physical functioning and illness perception.peer-reviewe
Living with a congenital heart disease - adolescents' and young adults' experiences
LIVING WITH A CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE: ADOLESCENTSâ AND YOUNG
ADULTSâ EXPERIENCES
Malin Berghammer
Institute of Health and Caring Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden
Abstract
Adolescents and young adults with a congenital heart disease (CHD) belong to a new and in several respects unexplored population within health research. They represent a diversity of heart defects requiring different surgical procedures and interventions that create different physiological and anatomical structures, with various impacts on life. Extensive improvements in congenital cardiology
and heart surgery have created new groups of children surviving into adolescence and adulthood.
One of these new groups comprises adolescents and young adults living with a surgically palliated
univentricular heart. The overall aim in this thesis was to illuminate how adolescents and young adults with a CHD experience life and their life situation. Furthermore, the thesis aims to describe the impact of a CHD on health perception, sense of coherence, quality of life and satisfaction with life in adolescents and young adults with a CHD or, in particular, a surgically palliated univentricular heart.
A multiâmethod approach was used, consisting of inâdepth interviews and surveys. The first two
studies involved adults with various kinds of CHD. Study I involved six inâdepth interviews,
analysed with the phenomenologicalâhermeneutical method. Study II consisted of statistical analysis of EQâ5D questionnaire data from 1435 adults included in the GUCH registry. The last two studies involved adolescents and young adults living with a surgically palliated univentricular heart. Seven inâdepth interviews in Study III were complemented by a survey in Study IV using the Sense of Coherence scale and the modified studyâspecific Essence of Existence questionnaire. The 33 responses
were analysed with a combination of content analysis and descriptive statistics.
The results show that adolescents and adults with a CHD in most cases perceive their health to be good, and the same as their peers. Pain or discomfort and anxiety or depression were found to be prevalent health problems, but adults with a CHD reported less pain or discomfort than a general population. It was further shown that symptoms may occur even if the adult with a CHD reports himself/herself to be asymptomatic. Despite limitations in everyday life, adolescents and young adults with a surgically palliated univentricular heart experience satisfaction with their lives and see themselves as exceptional, strong and healthy. This indicate that there is no direct association between the severity of the heart defect and the experience of satisfaction with life. The findings suggest that
the existential maturity they had developed, along with their experienced happiness over âbeing meâ, may promote a stronger sense of coherence.
The conclusion from this thesis was that, through a process of adaptation, the CHD becomes integrated and a normal part of life. However, adolescents and young adults could at the same time be seen as âwalking a fine lineâ when balancing the aspects of health and disease that coâexist in the life of a person with a CHD. Thus, the concept of âhealth within diseaseâ (as opposed to âhealth within illnessâ) emerges to describe this population, since they experience themselves most of the time
as healthy.
Key words: congenital heart disease, health, hermeneutics, interviews, quality of life, sense of
coherence
ISBN 978-91-628-8506-9 http://hdl.handle.net/2077/2971
"The only thing I wonder is when I will have surgery again" : everyday life for children with right ventricle outflow tract anomalies during assessment for heart surgery
Many children with complex right ventricle outflow tract anomalies such as Tetralogy of Fallot, common arterial trunk, and pulmonary atresia with ventricular septal defect require repeated heart surgeries early in life, but also later throughout their lifetime, thereby emphasising the importance of careful life-long follow-up. The need for repeated heart surgeries during childhood is recognised as a heavy burden on the child. Optimising the time point for re-intervention is important, since delaying re-intervention for these children can lead to complications such as ventricular arrhythmias, heart failure, and death. To this purpose, thorough pre-operative assessment (henceforth named as assessment) including clinical examination, echocardiography, MRI, and exercise test need to be performed whenever the indication for reoperation is suspected. It is likely to believe that children who are going through this kind of assessment that may lead to heart surgery need extra support. According to previous research, children with complex heart disease fear for the possibility of surgery and the thought of future repeated heart surgery is associated with anxiety. This might have an impact on children's everyday life and in research nowadays involving children with CHD, the focus has changed from survival to how these children experience their everyday life. Earlier studies have shown that they experience physical activities limitation and feelings of isolation, but no study has yet studied how children with right ventricle outflow tract anomalies experience their everyday life. To be able to provide support, studies are needed to explore how these children experience the period from assessment to decision, as well as the months thereafter. Therefore, the aim of this study was to explore how children diagnosed with complex right ventricle outflow tract anomalies experience their heart disease and their everyday life during the assessment and after the decision on whether to perform a new cardiac surgery
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