Nonmedical Factors and Health-Related Quality of Life in CKD in India

Author:

Modi Gopesh K.,Yadav Ashok K.,Ghosh Arpita,Kamboj Kajal,Kaur Prabhjot,Kumar Vivek,Bhansali Shobhit,Prasad Narayan,Sahay Manisha,Parameswaran Sreejith,Varughese SantoshORCID,Gang Sishir,Singh Shivendra,Sircar Dipankar,Gopalakrishnan Natarajan,Jaryal Ajay,Vikrant Sanjay,Agarwal Seema Baid,Jha VivekanandORCID

Abstract

Background and objectivesPatient-reported outcomes have gained prominence in the management of chronic noncommunicable diseases. Measurement of health-related quality of life is being increasingly incorporated into medical decision making and health care delivery processes.Design, setting, participants, & measurementsThe Indian Chronic Kidney Disease Study is a prospective cohort of participants with mild to moderate CKD. Baseline health-related quality of life scores, determined by the standardized Kidney Disease Quality of Life 36 item instrument, are presented for the inception cohort (n=2919). Scores are presented on five subscales: mental component summary, physical component summary, burden, effect of kidney disease, and symptom and problems; each is scored 0–100. The associations of socioeconomic and clinical parameters with the five subscale scores and lower quality of life (defined as subscale score <1 SD of the sample mean) were examined. The main socioeconomic factors studied were sex, education, occupation, and income. The key medical factors studied were age, eGFR, diabetes, hypertension, and albuminuria.ResultsThe mean (SD) subscale scores were physical component summary score, 43±9; mental component summary score, 48±10; burden, 61±33; effects, 87±13; and symptoms, 90±20. Among the socioeconomic variables, women, lower education, and lower income were negatively associated with reduced scores across all subscales. For instance, the respective β-coefficients (SD) for association with the physical component summary subscale were −2.6 (−3.4 to −1.8), −1.5 (−2.2 to −0.7), and −1.6 (−2.7 to −0.5). Medical factors had inconsistent or no association with subscale scores. The quality of life scores also displayed regional variations.ConclusionsIn this first of its kind analysis from India, predominantly socioeconomic factors were associated with quality of life scores in patients with CKD.

Funder

Baxter Healthcare Corporation

Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology

Department of Science and Technology, India

GlaxoSmithKline

Indian Council of Medical Research

UK Medical Research Council

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Epidemiology

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