Long term quality of life outcomes after body contouring surgery: Phase IV results for the body-QoL (R) Cohort
Author
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Suijker, Jaco
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Troncoso, Ekaterina
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Pizarro, Francisca
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Montecinos, Sofía
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Villarroel, Galia
Author
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Erazo Cortes, Cristian
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Cisternas, Juan Pablo
Author
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Andrades Cvitanic, Patricio
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Benítez Seguel, Susana Alejandra
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Sepúlveda Pereira, Sergio
Author
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Danilla Enei, Stefan
Admission date
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2018-07-30T15:49:05Z
Available date
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2018-07-30T15:49:05Z
Publication date
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2018
Cita de ítem
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Aesthetic Surgery Journal 2018, Vol 38(3): 279–288
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1093/asj/sjx090
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/150430
Abstract
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Background: Body contouring surgery (BCS) is becoming increasing popular for aesthetic and reconstructive purposes, particularly among patients with massive weight loss (MWL). However, data on quality of life (QoL) following the surgery are limited, especially long-term QoL.
Objectives: The authors evaluated the effect of BCS on QoL and the durability of this effect over time.
Methods: QoL was measured with the Body-QoL (R) instrument at 3 time points among consecutively treated patients: the day before BCS, 1 to 9 months postoperatively (short term), and 1 to 2.7 years postoperatively (long term). Total Body-QoL scores were compiled, as were scores for the instrument's main domains: body satisfaction, sex life, self-esteem and social performance, and physical symptoms. Scores were examined for the entire study population and separately for the cosmetic and MWL cohorts.
Results: Fifty-seven of the 112 patients participated in the short-term assessment and 84 in the long-term assessment. Total Body-QoL scores increased significantly (P < 0.0001), from 44.0 +/- 14.1 preoperatively to 85.5 +/- 17.5 short-term postoperatively and to 84.4 +/- 12.7 long-term postoperatively. Scores for the 2 postoperative assessments did not differ significantly. Similar results were observed for scores on each separate domain. Although preoperative scores were lower for the MWL cohort than the cosmetic cohort (33.9 +/- 15.6 vs 46.1 +/- 12.8; P = 0.0002), they improved substantially after BCS, approaching scores for the cosmetic cohort.
Conclusions: QoL increases significantly after BCS. This favorable outcome remained stable throughout long-term follow-up and was true for the cosmetic and MWL cohorts.