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Título
Factors affecting diabetic patient's long-term quality of life after simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation: a single-center analysis.
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Pancreas transplantation
Simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation
Predialysis
Health-related quality-of-life
Clasificación UNESCO
3205.02 Endocrinología
Fecha de publicación
2021-05
Editor
Springer
Citación
López-Sánchez, J., Esteban, C., Iglesias, M. J., González, L. M., Quiñones, J. E., González-Muñoz, J. I., Tabernero, G., Iglesias, R. A., Fraile, P., Muñoz-González, J. I., & Muñoz-Bellvís, L. (2021). Factors affecting diabetic patient's long-term quality of life after simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation: a single-center analysis. Langenbeck's archives of surgery, 406(3), 873–882. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00423-020-02059-8
Resumen
[EN]Pancreas transplantation (PT) is one of the few ways to restore euglycemia within diabetic patients; however, the high morbidity caused by surgical complications and the need for immunosuppressive therapy has raised controversy about PT improving the health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL). The aim of this study is to assess the long-term (≥ 5 years after PT) HRQoL and to identify the factors affecting it.
A single-center, cross-sectional study of 49 sequential PT was performed. All patients conducted a telephone interview to fulfill the modification of Medical Outcome Health Survey Short Form questionnaire (SF-36v2) and were compared to similar post-PT studies from the literature.
Patients with a history of replacement renal therapy (RRT) or neuropathy undergoing a PT were associated to a worse bodily pain (P = 0.03) and physical function (P = 0.04), respectively, whereas those with retinopathy showed an improved Role Emotional (P = 0.04). Multivariate analysis revealed the presence of RRT as the only independent prognostic factor for a worse bodily pain [relative risk = 3.9; 95% confidence interval (1.1-14.6)], (P = 0.04). Furthermore, nearly all PT recipients (91.8%) claimed an overall better health than prior to PT.
Our study confirms that PT recipients' HRQoL improves after PT, showing similar HRQoL scores across different populations and suggests that patients in predialysis could benefit from an improved HRQoL if transplanted on the early stages of the disease.
URI
ISSN
1435-2443
DOI
10.1007/s00423-020-02059-8
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