Systematic review: Exploration of the impact of psychosocial factors on quality of life in adults living with coeliac disease.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to review psychosocial factors associated with quality of life in adults with coeliac disease following a gluten-free diet.
Results Summary
The study found that symptoms of depression and anxiety, psychological distress, illness perceptions, coping strategies, and attitudes/behaviors regarding food and the gluten-free diet were differentially associated with quality of life in adults with coeliac disease. These factors may influence quality of life directly via reduced psychological well-being and indirectly via reduced adherence to the diet.
Population
Adults with coeliac disease (80.2% female, mean age = 46.4 years).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
gluten-free diet | decrease | symptoms | individuals living with coeliac disease | - | remission of symptoms | #1 |
gluten-free diet | increase | treatment burden | individuals living with coeliac disease | - | substantial treatment burden | #2 |
gluten-free diet | decrease | quality of life | individuals living with coeliac disease | - | ongoing quality of life issues | #3 |
psychosocial factors | neutral | post-diagnosis quality of life | individuals living with coeliac disease | - | play a significant role | #4 |
symptoms of depression and anxiety | neutral | psychosocial factors | adult coeliac disease cohorts | - | most examined | #5 |
psychological distress | neutral | quality of life | adults living with coeliac disease | - | differentially associated | #6 |
illness perceptions | neutral | quality of life | adults living with coeliac disease | - | differentially associated | #7 |
coping | neutral | quality of life | adults living with coeliac disease | - | differentially associated | #8 |
attitudes/behaviours regarding food and the gluten-free diet | neutral | quality of life | adults living with coeliac disease | - | differentially associated | #9 |
psychosocial factors | neutral | quality of life | adults living with coeliac disease | - | associated | #10 |
psychosocial factors | neutral | quality of life | adults living with coeliac disease | - | influence quality of life directly | #11 |
psychosocial factors | neutral | quality of life | adults living with coeliac disease | - | influence quality of life indirectly via reduced adherence to the gluten-free diet | #12 |
psychosocial factors | neutral | quality of life | adults living with coeliac disease | - | influence quality of life via reduced psychological well-being | #13 |
BACKGROUND: Individuals living with coeliac disease generally experience a remission of symptoms after adopting the gluten-free diet but often report substantial treatment burden and ongoing quality of life issues. Psychosocial factors have been suggested to play a significant role in post-diagnosis quality of life but have yet to be systematically reviewed. AIM: To review the evidence for psychosocial factors associated with quality of life in adult coeliac disease cohorts. METHODS: Studies were identified via systematic searches of eight databases (MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare, PsycINFO, Ovid Nursing, CINAHL, Informit Health Collection, Cochrane Library) in May 2019. RESULTS: Fourteen studies were included involving 3372 participants (80.2% female, mean age = 46.4 years). Symptoms of depression and anxiety were the most examined psychosocial factors across all studies. Quality of life was differentially associated with psychological distress, illness perceptions, coping, and attitudes/behaviours regarding food and the gluten-free diet. CONCLUSION: Several psychosocial factors are associated with quality of life in adults living with coeliac disease. Current evidence suggests these factors are interrelated and may influence quality of life directly, via reduced psychological well-being, and indirectly, via reduced adherence to the gluten-free diet. Future research is needed to examine these processes concurrently, with the aim of elucidating the psychosocial mechanisms underlying post-diagnosis well-being and identifying potential targets for psychosocial intervention.