Nancy Pus’s research while affiliated with Western University and other places

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Publications (3)


A Self-Administered Quality of Life Questionnaire for Renal Transplant Recipients
  • Article

February 1998

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43 Reads

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12 Citations

Nephron

R. Jake Jacobs

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Mark D. Pescovitz

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Bonnie Brook

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[...]

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Nancy Pus

A selection of instruments has been developed to measure health-related quality of life (QOL). Generic instruments are designed for use across medical conditions, but may not detect small but clinically important QOL changes [1]. Disease-specific measures improve the sensitivity of QOL measurement, and may help detect differences between alternative interventions for kidney transplant recipients.


A study of the quality of life and cost-utility of renal transplantation
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 1996

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861 Reads

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1,173 Citations

Kidney International

The objective of this study was to assess the cost-utility of renal transplantation compared with dialysis. To accomplish this, a prospective cohort of pre-transplant patients were followed for up to two years after renal transplantation at three University-based Canadian hospitals. A total of 168 patients were followed for an average of 19.5 months after transplantation. Health-related quality of life was assessed using a hemodialysis questionnaire, a transplant questionnaire, the Sickness Impact Profile, and the Time Trade-Off Technique. Fully allocated costs were determined by prospectively recording resource use in all patients. A societal perspective was taken. By six months after transplantation, the mean health-related quality of life scores of almost all measures had improved compared to pre-transplantation, and they stayed improved throughout the two years of follow up. The mean time trade-off score was 0.57 pre-transplant and 0.70 two years after transplantation. The proportion of individuals employed increased from 30% before transplantation to 45% two years after transplantation. Employment prior to transplantation [relative risk (RR) = 23], graft function (RR 10) and age (RR 1.6 for every decrease in age by one decade), independently predicted employment status after transplantation. The cost of pre-transplant care (66,782Can1994)andthecostofthefirstyearaftertransplantation(66,782 Can 1994) and the cost of the first year after transplantation (66,290) were similar. Transplantation was considerably less expensive during the second year after transplantation ($27,875). Over the two years, transplantation was both more effective and less costly than dialysis. This was true for all subgroups of patients examined, including patients older than 60 and diabetics. We conclude that renal transplantation was more effective and less costly than dialysis in all subgroups of patients examined.

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Disease-Specific Questionnaire for Patients with a Renal Transplant

June 1993

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76 Reads

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110 Citations

Nephron

A disease-specific questionnaire to assess the quality of life of renal transplant recipients was developed. A list of items of potential relevance to these patients was created and 50 transplant recipients rated the importance of each item. A combination of factor analysis and clinical judgment was then used to create the final questionnaire which consists of 25 questions in 5 dimensions (physical symptoms, fatigue, uncertainty/fear, appearance and emotions). The physical symptoms dimension is patient specific. All questions are scored on a 7-point Likert scale. The reproducibility of the questionnaire when it was administered to stable transplant recipients was high (intraclass correlation coefficients between 0.82 and 0.91 for the 5 dimensions). The scores of all dimensions except appearance improved 6 months after transplantation, when compared to pretransplantation scores. Patients who had a well-functioning graft (creatinine < 250 mmol/l) had higher scores than those with poorly functioning grafts. This questionnaire is easy to administer and is valid, reproducible in stable patients and responsive to change.

Citations (3)


... A comprehensive and systematic evaluation of the health status of kidney transplant recipients is of great significance for understanding the outcomes after transplantation. Currently, patient assessment tools include the Disease-Specific Questionnaire for Kidney Transplant Patients, 33 Kidney transplantation understand tool, 34,35 kidney transplantation knowledge assessment, 36,37 self-management scale, 38,39 kidney transplantation quality of life scale, 40 kidney transplant recipient dietary self-management evaluation tool, 41 immunosuppression-related side effect symptom experience scale, 42 kidney transplant recipient extended care effectiveness evaluation index system. 43 Future research in this domain should aim to encompass a broader spectrum of influencing factors and account for temporal dynamics to construct a forward-looking, scientifically rigorous, and comprehensive evaluation tool. ...

Reference:

Self-Management of Kidney Transplant Recipients Research: A Comprehensive Bibliometric Analysis
Disease-Specific Questionnaire for Patients with a Renal Transplant
  • Citing Article
  • June 1993

Nephron

... Kidney transplantation is the best treatment option for patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) [1][2][3][4]. Owing to recent improvements in available immunosuppressants (ISs), kidney transplantation has become the best treatment for ESRD in older adults [5,6]. In Japan, the number of recipients between the ages of 60 and 79 years was higher in 2015 than in 2007 [7] and continues to increase. ...

A study of the quality of life and cost-utility of renal transplantation

Kidney International

... Plusieurs études ont déjà utilisé ce questionnaire pour évaluer la qualité de vie chez des patients transplantés rénaux à différents délais post-greffe selon les études, notamment en Europe, en Australie, au Canada, aux Etats-Unis et en Iran (67,69,76,78,(100)(101)(102)(103)(104). ...

A Self-Administered Quality of Life Questionnaire for Renal Transplant Recipients
  • Citing Article
  • February 1998

Nephron