Systematic review: the impact of inflammatory bowel disease-related fatigue on health-related quality of life

Author:

Radford Shellie JeanORCID,McGing Jordan,Czuber-Dochan Wladyslawa,Moran Gordon

Abstract

BackgroundFatigue is frequently reported in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and impacts on health-related quality of life (HRQoL). HRQoL has not been systematically reviewed in IBD fatigue.AimTo investigate what impact IBD fatigue has on HRQoL in adults with IBD.MethodsSystematic searches (CINAHL, EMBASE, PsychINFO, Medline) were conducted on 25 September 2018, restricted to ‘human’, ‘adult’, ‘primary research’ and ‘English language’. Search terms encompassed concepts of ‘fatigue’, ‘IBD’ and ‘HRQoL’. A 5-year time limit (2013–2018) was set to include the most relevant publications. Publications were screened, data extracted and quality appraised by two authors. A narrative synthesis was conducted.ResultsEleven studies were included, presenting data from 2823 participants. Fatigue experiences were significantly related to three HRQoL areas: symptom acceptance, psychosocial well-being and physical activity. Patients reporting high fatigue levels had low symptom acceptance. Psychosocial factors were strongly associated with both fatigue and HRQoL. Higher social support levels were associated with higher HRQoL. Physical activity was impaired by higher fatigue levels, lowering HRQoL, but it was also used as a means of reducing fatigue and improving HRQoL. Quality appraisal revealed methodological shortcomings in a number of studies. Notably, use of multiple measures, comparison without statistical adjustment and fatigue and HRQoL assessment using the same tool were some of the methodological shortcomings.ConclusionPsychosocial factors, symptom management and acceptance and physical activity levels have significant impact on HRQoL. Results support application of psychosocial or exercise interventions for fatigue management. Further exploration of HRQoL factors in IBD fatigue is required, using validated fatigue and HRQoL measures.PROSPERO registration numberCRD42018110005.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology,Hepatology

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