Abstracts of the 2022 Annual Meeting of the ALEH
More infoIn chronic pathologies, such as cirrhosis, information is essential for disease acceptance, adherence to treatment and prevention of complications. This study aimed to determine whether written information in patients with cirrhosis has an effect on the level of knowledge and treatment adherence and to evaluate possible factors associated with disease-related knowledge in cirrhosis.
Materials and MethodsLongitudinal, analytical study. Adult outpatients with cirrhosis were included in July-December 2021. Self-completed survey with demographic, clinical information, disease-related knowledge with "Cirrhosis Knowledge Questionnaire" (1 - 7 points) and treatment adherence with Morisky-Green-Levine scale (Low, Medium, High) were assessed. History of complications and hospitalizations in the last two years were obtained from clinical records. Patients were provided with an educational brochure and after four months, the disease-related knowledge and treatment adherence were re-evaluated. Comparative analysis was performed with T Student or ANOVA. Multiple linear regression models were assessed to identify possible associated factors (p < 0.05).
ResultsWe included 104 patients, 53% men, the median age of 64 years, and 80% of them with middle or higher education. The most frequent etiologies of cirrhosis were alcohol (27%) and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (26%). The median level of disease-related knowledge was 3 (RIC 2 - 5). Forty-three percent of the patients answered >50% of the answers correctly. Bivariate and multivariate analyses of the disease-related knowledge are described in Table 1. Disease-related knowledge levels increased after delivery of written information at the 4-month follow-up (3.21 vs. 3.96; p=0.0007), but treatment adherence did not.
ConclusionsLess than half of the patients answered > 50% of disease-related knowledge correctly. Higher educational levels, history of hospitalization and complications due to cirrhosis were associated with a higher disease-related knowledge level score. The provision of written information is associated with an increase in disease-related knowledge levels in patients with cirrhosis.
Table 1. Bivariate analysis
For bivariate analysis, T Student or ANOVA was used depending on the number of variables. For multivariate analysis, a linear regression model was used (r-squared 0.250).
¥Reference category marital status: married
£Reference category educational level: elementary