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Potentially modifiable factors associated with longitudinal health-related quality of life in the National Unified Renal Translational Research Enterprise CKD (NURTuRE-CKD) cohort

Potentially modifiable factors associated with longitudinal health-related quality of life in the National Unified Renal Translational Research Enterprise CKD (NURTuRE-CKD) cohort
Potentially modifiable factors associated with longitudinal health-related quality of life in the National Unified Renal Translational Research Enterprise CKD (NURTuRE-CKD) cohort
Introduction People with non-dialysis-dependent chronic kidney disease (NDD-CKD) experience worse health-related quality of life (HRQoL) than those without. This study hypothesised that potentially modifiable factors affecting longitudinal HRQoL in a NDD-CKD cohort could be identified in order to identify potential therapeutic targets for improving HRQoL outcomes.

Methods The NURTuRE-CKD cohort study recruited 2996 participants with NDD-CKD from UK nephrology centres from 2017. Sociodemographic, medical history, medication, anthropometric, biomarker and patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) data were collected at baseline and first follow-up. HRQoL was measured at second follow-up. The primary outcome was HRQoL measured by EQ-5D-5L, mapped to EQ-5D-3L index value and visual analogue score (VAS). Multivariable mixed effects linear regression models were adjusted and fit to examine the effect of potentially modifiable factors at baseline on longitudinal EQ-5D-3L index value. Similar models were also fit to assess the effects of change in these factors across follow-up on index value and VAS.

Results 2062 participants (68.8%) attended first and 1019 (34.0%) second follow-up. EQ-5D-5L responses worsened over time for index value, VAS and in each dimension. Baseline factors independently associated with worse longitudinal HRQoL were obesity, smoking, sarcopenia, pain, breathlessness, weakness, anxiety, depression and raised parathyroid hormone (PTH), whereas renin-angiotensin-system inhibitor use at baseline was associated with improved HRQoL. The status of factors across follow-up such as persistent obesity, new sarcopenia, increasing phosphate, new and persistent anxiety and depression, and worsening pain were associated with worse HRQoL, whereas improved acidosis, improved pain and weakness were associated with improved HRQoL.

Conclusion Several potentially modifiable factors independently associated with HRQoL, and NDD-CKD interventions should consider these as therapeutic targets, as well as part of holistic CKD care.
0250-8095
Phillips, Thomas David
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Harris, Scott
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Aiyegbusi, Olalekan Lee
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Benavente, Melissa
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Cockwell, Paul
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Kalra, Phillip A.
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Roderick, Paul
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Wheeler, David C.
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Taal, Maarten W.
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Fraser, Simon
135884b6-8737-4e8a-a98c-5d803ac7a2dc
Phillips, Thomas David
30ef6ddd-1f4a-4791-89e5-37c092fcba51
Harris, Scott
19ea097b-df15-4f0f-be19-8ac42c190028
Aiyegbusi, Olalekan Lee
45b4713d-c1dd-4b1f-9547-542d6d55d0c1
Benavente, Melissa
1e213839-f9de-4d96-a02f-13915cccce6c
Cockwell, Paul
0139df0c-313f-41fe-a098-21585876b827
Kalra, Phillip A.
adec8e5e-b96d-4651-9cb0-5582f63ae947
Roderick, Paul
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Wheeler, David C.
7ba656e2-c874-4520-9d6e-a5fde2921ee8
Taal, Maarten W.
10eeea62-a2fc-43b6-b5af-359e75c501ea
Fraser, Simon
135884b6-8737-4e8a-a98c-5d803ac7a2dc

Phillips, Thomas David, Harris, Scott, Aiyegbusi, Olalekan Lee, Benavente, Melissa, Cockwell, Paul, Kalra, Phillip A., Roderick, Paul, Wheeler, David C., Taal, Maarten W. and Fraser, Simon (2026) Potentially modifiable factors associated with longitudinal health-related quality of life in the National Unified Renal Translational Research Enterprise CKD (NURTuRE-CKD) cohort. American Journal of Nephrology. (doi:10.1159/000551177).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction People with non-dialysis-dependent chronic kidney disease (NDD-CKD) experience worse health-related quality of life (HRQoL) than those without. This study hypothesised that potentially modifiable factors affecting longitudinal HRQoL in a NDD-CKD cohort could be identified in order to identify potential therapeutic targets for improving HRQoL outcomes.

Methods The NURTuRE-CKD cohort study recruited 2996 participants with NDD-CKD from UK nephrology centres from 2017. Sociodemographic, medical history, medication, anthropometric, biomarker and patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) data were collected at baseline and first follow-up. HRQoL was measured at second follow-up. The primary outcome was HRQoL measured by EQ-5D-5L, mapped to EQ-5D-3L index value and visual analogue score (VAS). Multivariable mixed effects linear regression models were adjusted and fit to examine the effect of potentially modifiable factors at baseline on longitudinal EQ-5D-3L index value. Similar models were also fit to assess the effects of change in these factors across follow-up on index value and VAS.

Results 2062 participants (68.8%) attended first and 1019 (34.0%) second follow-up. EQ-5D-5L responses worsened over time for index value, VAS and in each dimension. Baseline factors independently associated with worse longitudinal HRQoL were obesity, smoking, sarcopenia, pain, breathlessness, weakness, anxiety, depression and raised parathyroid hormone (PTH), whereas renin-angiotensin-system inhibitor use at baseline was associated with improved HRQoL. The status of factors across follow-up such as persistent obesity, new sarcopenia, increasing phosphate, new and persistent anxiety and depression, and worsening pain were associated with worse HRQoL, whereas improved acidosis, improved pain and weakness were associated with improved HRQoL.

Conclusion Several potentially modifiable factors independently associated with HRQoL, and NDD-CKD interventions should consider these as therapeutic targets, as well as part of holistic CKD care.

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Phillips_T_AJN_HRQoL_Manuscript-Accept_MS - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 February 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 April 2026

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511264
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511264
ISSN: 0250-8095
PURE UUID: 6352396a-ea2e-4a69-9297-cd48bf9fd372
ORCID for Thomas David Phillips: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6059-745X
ORCID for Paul Roderick: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9475-6850
ORCID for Simon Fraser: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4172-4406

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Date deposited: 11 May 2026 16:34
Last modified: 16 May 2026 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Thomas David Phillips ORCID iD
Author: Scott Harris
Author: Olalekan Lee Aiyegbusi
Author: Melissa Benavente
Author: Paul Cockwell
Author: Phillip A. Kalra
Author: Paul Roderick ORCID iD
Author: David C. Wheeler
Author: Maarten W. Taal
Author: Simon Fraser ORCID iD

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