The Relationship Between Postoperative Complications and Children's Quality of Life: A Mediation Analysis to Explore the Role of Family Factors

Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2023 Mar 1;24(3):194-203. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0000000000003137. Epub 2022 Dec 30.

Abstract

Objectives: To explore whether postoperative morbidities after pediatric cardiac surgery affected children's health-related quality of life (HRQOL) at 6 months, through potentially modifiable parental psychological factors.

Design: We undertook a mediation analysis, to explore the causal pathway, based on data from a prospective, case-matched cohort study.

Patients: Six hundred sixty-six children undergoing cardiac surgery.

Setting: Five centers in the United Kingdom.

Interventions: No intervention.

Measurements and main results: Cases of morbidity were identified early after pediatric cardiac surgery, and matched controls with no morbidities were identified at discharge. Four mediators were assessed at 6 weeks after surgery, using the PedsQL Family Impact Module (Parent HRQOL and Family Function) and the PHQ-4 (Anxiety and Depression). The study outcome of child HRQOL was assessed at 6 months with the PedsQL. Of 666 children, 408 (65% of those surviving) contributed to the primary outcome. Children who had extracorporeal life support (ECLS) ( n = 11) ( p < 0.05) and multiple morbidities ( n = 62) ( p < 0.01) had worse 6-month HRQOL than those with a single morbidity ( n = 125) or no morbidity ( n = 209). After adjustment for case mix complexity and sociodemographic variables, there were significant indirect effects of parent HRQOL at 6 weeks, on the PedsQL Total Score (ECLS, -5.1 [-8.4 to -1.8]; p = 0.003; multiple morbidities, -2.1 [-3.7 to -0.5]; p = 0.01), PedsQL Physical Score (ECLS, -5.1 [-8.7 to -1.4]; p = 0.007; multiple morbidities, -2.1 [-3.8 to -0.4]; p = 0.016), and PedsQL Psychosocial Score (ECLS: -5.3 [-8.7 to -1.8); p = 0.003; multiple morbidities, -2.2 [-3.9 to -0.5]; p = 0.01). The proportion of the total effect of ECLS and multiple morbidity on the study outcomes mediated through parent HRQOL ranges between 18% and 61%. There was no evidence that the other three mediators had indirect effects on the study outcome.

Conclusions: Parental HRQOL at 6 weeks after surgery contributes to child HRQOL at 6 months, among those with the severest types of morbidity, and as such should be a target for future interventions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Cohort Studies
  • Humans
  • Mediation Analysis*
  • Parents / psychology
  • Postoperative Complications / epidemiology
  • Postoperative Complications / etiology
  • Prospective Studies
  • Quality of Life* / psychology
  • Surveys and Questionnaires