Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1/3079
Title: Longitudinal Assessment of Health-Related Quality of Life in Adults with CKD
Authors: Ng, Owen;Teixeira-Pinto, Armando;Kieu, Anh ;van Zwieten, Anita;Krishnan, Anoushka;Howard, Kirsten;Lim, Wai H;Chapman, Jeremy R;Roger, Simon D ;Bourke, Michael J;Sen, Shaundeep;Chadban, Steven J;Pollock, Carol A;Jaure, Allison;Craig, Jonathan C;Yang, Jean;Wong, Germaine 
Affliation: Central Coast Local Health District
Gosford Hospital
Issue Date: 1-Apr-2026
Source: 7(4):767-776
Journal title: Kidney 360
Department: Renal
Abstract: Dialysis linked with poorer quality of life compared with transplant patients and patients with CKD. Quality of life trends were similar in both domain-specific and overall quality-of-life measures. There are sparse data about the change in health-related quality of life (HRQoL) with the temporal progression of CKD. In this study, we assessed the association between change in CKD stages, overall and domain-specific quality of life and determined the factors that were associated with this change. Data were sourced from a multicenter study that included 1290 adult patients aged 18 years and older across six centers in Australia. Three-level EuroQol five-dimensional questionnaire was collected at baseline and 2 and 4 years. Changes in CKD stages were treated as a time-varying exposure; generalized estimating equations were used to model the changes in HRQoL. With reference to patients with CKD (G3-5), patients treated with dialysis had a reduction of 0.06 (-0.09 to -0.04) in overall HRQoL scores over the 4 years and experienced higher odds of reporting lower HRQoL across all domains: mobility (1.91 [1.53-2.38]), self-care (2.30 [1.67-3.16]), usual activity (2.70 [2.18-3.38]), pain (1.19 [0.97-1.46]), and anxiety (1.40 [1.12-1.75]). Transplant recipients showed no significant decline in overall HRQoL ( P = 0.13), but had increased odds of reduced mobility (1.74 [1.40-2.18]) and usual activity (1.35 [1.07-1.71]). Female sex, smoking, prevalent diabetes mellitus, lower educational attainment, and Middle Eastern ethnicity were associated with lower HRQoL. Patients on maintenance dialysis, but not transplant recipients, experienced a significant decline in overall HRQoL (0.06) over the 4 years compared with patients with CKD (G3-5). These utility-based HRQoL estimates are essential for future economic evaluations in kidney trials.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/1/3079
DOI: 10.34067/KID.0000001009
Pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41359391
Publicaton type: Journal Article
Keywords: Kidney Disease
Appears in Collections:Renal Medicine

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