PLoS One. 2026 Mar 16;21(3):e0341371. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0341371. eCollection 2026.
ABSTRACT
Patients' quality of life is a key consideration of chronic kidney disease care. Nonetheless, qualitative research on patients' experience, quality of life, and frequent associated comorbidities remains limited. This study identifies aspects of the disease experience, healthcare journey, and caregiver experience contributing to quality of life for early-stage (stage 3 CKD) and advanced chronic kidney disease (stages 4-5) patients and their caregivers. In this cross-sectional, observational, multicenter study based on qualitative methodology, participants completed a general (Short Form-36) and disease-specific (Kidney Disease Quality of Life Short Form-36) quality of life assessment and semi-structured interviews. Quota and convenience sampling were used to enroll 36 patients selected by clinicians based on chronic kidney disease stage and the presence of key comorbidities (heart failure, hyperkalemia). Twelve caregivers were also invited to participate in patient interviews. All data were examined thematically. Three themes emerged: (1) Impact of chronic kidney disease on quality of life throughout the patient journey (physical, social, and emotional); (2) attitudes toward the disease (characterized by 'acceptance' or 'powerlessness'); and (3) caregivers' role and burden. Patients' characteristics and caregiver support must be considered for designing medical interventions and improvement of patient-doctor communication. Family caregivers are pillars clinicians should rely on to raise awareness about chronic kidney disease's relevance among patients and families.
PMID:41838670 | PMC:PMC12991225 | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0341371

