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Status of inflammation in relation to health related quality of life in hepatocellular carcinoma patients

Authors :
Allen K.C. Chan
Cheuk Man Chu
Nelson Ls Tang
Frankie Mo
Stephen L. Chan
Edwin P. Hui
Joyce W.Y. Hui
Kit Fai Lee
Leung Li
Simon C.H. Yu
Jane Koh
Winnie Yeo
Source :
Quality of Life Research. 28:2597-2607
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Both Inflammation and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are independent prognosticators in HCC patients. We hypothesized that inflammation can cause impairment in HRQoL and investigated the correlation between inflammatory status and HRQoL in HCC patients. Clinical, laboratory and HRQoL (using EORTC QLQ-C30, QLQ-HCC18, C30 and HCC18 index-scores) data were prospectively collected from HCC patients at diagnosis. Correlation analyses were performed between HRQoL and inflammation-based markers including C-reactive protein (CRP), CRP/albumin ratio (CRP/alb), Glasgow Prognostic Score (GPS), Inflammation-Based Index (IBI) and Prognostic Index (PI). Among 445 HCC patients, higher inflammatory states were significantly correlated with worse HRQoL. For CRP and CRP/alb ratio, the HRQoL factors with higher correlations included C30 and HCC18 index-scores, certain QLQ-C30 domains and items (‘physical functioning’, ‘role functioning’, ‘fatigue’, ‘pain’, ‘appetite loss’) and QLQ-HCC18 items (‘fatigue’, ‘body image’, ‘nutrition’ and ‘abdominal swelling’), where the Pearson’s correlation coefficients were up to 0.416. Multivariate analyses indicated that worse HRQoL factors were significantly correlated with worse scores in GPS, IBI and PI. In HCC patients, inflammatory status correlates with HRQoL at presentation. In particular, relatively stronger correlations with CRP-based markers have been observed in HRQoL scales that assess constitutional symptoms (QLQ-C30 ‘physical functioning’, ‘role functioning’, ‘fatigue’, ‘appetite loss’ and QLQ-HCC18 ‘fatigue’ and ‘nutrition’) and tumor burden (QLQ-C30 ‘pain’ and QLQ-HCC18 ‘abdominal swelling’ and ‘body image’). Future studies are warranted to evaluate whether intervention that reduces inflammation could improve HRQoL in HCC patients.

Details

ISSN :
15732649 and 09629343
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Quality of Life Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0a89989a77071ef5edfc67bfeb1094e5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-019-02190-0