Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND AND AIMS Glomerulonephritis and its treatment may be associated with disease or treatment-related complications causing significant symptom burden and hospitalizations affecting physical function and quality of life (QoL). Patient-centered care harnessing patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) can guide physicians to optimize patients’ functional well-being. Few studies have described health-related QoL (HRQOL) in patients with glomerulonephritis. We aimed to describe the HRQOL and determinants of HRQOL among patients with active glomerulonephritis. METHOD This was a cross-sectional study of adults with active glomerulonephritis recruited at the Singapore General Hospital Glomerulonephritis Disease Management Clinics between July 2020 and July 2021. HRQOL was assessed using the Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) and Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Informative System (PROMIS). Socio-demographic and clinical data were collected. Multivariate linear regression was used to determine predictors of HRQOL. RESULTS A total of 60 patients with glomerulonephritis (13 minimal change disease, 9 primary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, 8 membranous nephropathy, 15 lupus nephritis, 8 IgA nephropathy and 7 other glomerulonephritis) with median age 44.5 years old (IQR 32–57) participated. Most (83%) had received immunosuppressants within 60 days of study enrolment. The scores for general health and energy were lower than other health domains of SF-36 such as physical functioning (Table 1). Health domain scores of those with nephrotic presentations (minimal change disease, FSGS and membranous nephropathy) and nephritic presentations (lupus nephritis and IgA nephropathy) were not significantly different. In the multivariable model accounting for age, gender, eGFR, ethnicity, hematuria, edema and immunosuppressant use (Table 2), age correlated positively with emotional role and social functioning while ethnicity influenced the pain scores. Hematuria was associated with lower physical role scores while eGFR correlated positively with social functioning. Calcineurin inhibitor use was associated with higher global physical health scores. CONCLUSION Sociodemographic, clinical and treatment may affect SF-36 and PROMIS HRQOL scores in patients with glomerulonephritis.

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