Edelson Jonathan B, Huang Jing, Wang Zi, Tam Vicky, Lefktowitz Debra, O'Connor Matthew J, White Rachel, Ha Lynne, Wittlieb-Weber Carol A, Rossano Joseph W, Lin Kimberly, Cousino Melissa K, Lane-Fall Meghan, O'Byrne Michael L
Division of Cardiology, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and Department of Pediatrics Perelman School of Medicine at The University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Philadelphia.
Leonard Davis Institute, The University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Philadelphia.
JHLT Open. 2025 Apr 1;8:100250. doi: 10.1016/j.jhlto.2025.100250. eCollection 2025 May.
Pediatric heart transplant (PHT) recipients have impaired health-related quality of life (HRQOL) that is not fully explained by cardiac limitations. Environment is known to influence HRQOL in other chronic disease populations but is less understood in PHT. Understanding the determinants of HRQOL is a necessary step in identifying high-risk groups and designing actionable interventions.
This cross-sectional study includes 8- to 18-year heart transplant (HT) recipients and their families. Generalized estimating equations were used to evaluate the associations of individual characteristics (diagnosis, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure [PCWP], cardiac index [CI]), microenvironment (parent education level, financial security, parental stress [PSI], assessment of child anxiety) and macroenvironment [Child Opportunity Index (COI)] with HRQOL.
Of 31 participants, 32% self-identified as Black, and 40% had congenital heart disease. On cardiac catheterization, 61% had a CI ≥3 liter/min/m and PCWP ≤10 mm Hg. Most households had ≥1 parent who had completed college (58%); 28% of households expressed difficulty paying bills. The PSI showed elevated parental stress [64.5 (interquartile range [IQR] 52.0, 77.8)], while the COI was low [73.0 (IQR 44.5, 89.0)] as was HRQOL [Pediatric Quality of Life 4.0 Core Scales 71.7 (IQR 64.2-82.5), Pediatric Cardiac Quality of Life Index 61.8 (IQR 55.7-74.8)]. Higher parental stress ( = 0.036), higher parental perception of child anxiety ( = 0.058), lower Max VO ( = 0.059), and higher PCWP ( = 0.006) were independently associated with worse quality of life.
HRQOL in children after heart transplant is reduced and determined not only by traditional measures of cardiovascular function, but also by patient psychology and their household environment, highlighting the utility of using an adapted ecological systems framework to understand HRQOL.
小儿心脏移植(PHT)受者的健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)受损,而心脏功能受限并不能完全解释这一现象。已知环境会影响其他慢性病患者群体的HRQOL,但在PHT中对此了解较少。了解HRQOL的决定因素是识别高危群体和设计可行干预措施的必要步骤。
这项横断面研究纳入了8至18岁的心脏移植(HT)受者及其家庭。采用广义估计方程来评估个体特征(诊断、肺毛细血管楔压[PCWP]、心脏指数[CI])、微环境(父母教育水平、经济保障、父母压力[PSI]、对儿童焦虑的评估)和宏观环境[儿童机会指数(COI)]与HRQOL之间的关联。
在31名参与者中,32%自我认定为黑人,40%患有先天性心脏病。在心脏导管检查中,61%的人心脏指数≥3升/分钟/平方米且PCWP≤10毫米汞柱。大多数家庭有至少1名完成大学学业的家长(58%);此外,28%的家庭表示支付账单有困难。PSI显示父母压力升高[64.5(四分位间距[IQR]52.0,77.8)],而COI较低[73.0(IQR 44.5,89.0)],HRQOL也较低[儿童生活质量4.0核心量表71.7(IQR 64.2 - 82.5),小儿心脏生活质量指数61.8(IQR 55.7 - 74.8)]。较高的父母压力(P = 0.036)、父母对儿童焦虑的较高认知(P = 0.058)、较低的最大摄氧量(P = 0.059)以及较高的PCWP(P = 0.006)与较差的生活质量独立相关。
心脏移植后儿童的HRQOL降低,其不仅由传统的心血管功能指标决定,还受患者心理及其家庭环境影响,这凸显了采用适应性生态系统框架来理解HRQOL的实用性。