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Symptom-burden in people living with frailty and chronic kidney disease

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posted on 2021-06-18, 10:17 authored by AC Nixon, TJ Wilkinson, HML Young, MW Taal, N Pendleton, S Mitra, ME Brady, AP Dhaygude, AC Smith
Background
Frailty is independently associated with worse health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in chronic kidney disease (CKD). However, the relationship between frailty and symptom experience is not well described in people living with CKD. This study’s aim was to evaluate the relationship between frailty and symptom-burden in CKD.

Methods
This study is a secondary analysis of a cross-sectional observational study, the QCKD study (ISRCTN87066351), in which participants completed physical activity, cardiopulmonary fitness, symptom-burden and HRQOL questionnaires. A modified version of the Frailty Phenotype, comprising 3 self-report components, was created to assess frailty status. Multiple linear regression was performed to assess the association between symptom-burden/HRQOL and frailty. Logistic regression was performed to assess the association between experiencing symptoms frequently and frailty. Principal Component Analysis was used to assess the experienced symptom clusters.

Results
A total of 353 patients with CKD were recruited with 225 (64%) participants categorised as frail. Frail participants reported more symptoms, had higher symptom scores and worse HRQOL scores. Frailty was independently associated with higher total symptom score and lower HRQOL scores. Frailty was also independently associated with higher odds of frequently experiencing 9 out of 12 reported symptoms. Finally, frail participants experienced an additional symptom cluster that included loss of appetite, tiredness, feeling cold and poor concentration.

Conclusions
Frailty is independently associated with high symptom-burden and poor HRQOL in CKD. Moreover, people living with frailty and CKD have a distinctive symptom experience. Proactive interventions are needed that can effectively identify and address problematic symptoms to mitigate their impact on HRQOL.

Funding

This report is independent research supported by the NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre and the NIHR Lancashire Clinical Research Facility. HMLY is supported by a grant from the NIHR (DRF-2016-09-015). This research was part-funded by the Stoneygate Trust and a British Renal Society Research Grant (2011).

History

Citation

Nixon, A.C., Wilkinson, T.J., Young, H. et al. Symptom-burden in people living with frailty and chronic kidney disease. BMC Nephrol 21, 411 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-020-02063-6

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMC Nephrology

Volume

21

Pagination

411

Publisher

BMC

issn

1471-2369

Acceptance date

2020-09-10

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-06-18

Language

en

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