For Me, Quality of Life Is When I Get Through the Day Without Thinking: I Won't Make It: A Participatory Qualitative Study of Health‐Related Quality of Life in Rare Liver Diseases

Alary, Anouck;Sattoe, Jane;Sifer‐Rivière, Lynda;Aujoulat, Isabelle;Dumas, Agnes;et.al.
(2026) Health Expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy — Vol. 29, n° 3, p. 1-12 (2026)

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Authors
  • Alary, Anouckorcid-logoINSERM, Aix‐Marseille Univ, IRD, ISSPAM, SESSTIM (Economic and Social Sciences of Health and Medical Information Processing), CALIPSO team Marseille France
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  • Sattoe, JaneRotterdam University of Applied Sciences, Research Centre Innovations in Care Rotterdam The Netherlands
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  • Sifer‐Rivière, LyndaINSERM, Aix‐Marseille Univ, IRD, ISSPAM, SESSTIM (Economic and Social Sciences of Health and Medical Information Processing), CALIPSO team Marseille France
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  • Dumas, AgnesINSERM, Aix‐Marseille Univ, IRD, ISSPAM, SESSTIM (Economic and Social Sciences of Health and Medical Information Processing), CALIPSO team Marseille France
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Abstract
Background: Vascular liver diseases (VLDs) predominantly affect young adults and require lifelong monitoring. The health‐related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients with VLDs is deteriorated, with high levels of fatigue and depressive symptoms, but their lived experience and unmet needs remain unknown. To fully integrate the patients’ perspective and generate actionable insights, we conducted a qualitative peer‐research study. Methods: Twelve peer researchers conducted interviews with patients in France, Spain, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. Analysis proceeded in three phases: individual inductive thematic analysis independently made by peer and academic researchers, followed by an international workshop to build a shared thematic framework. Third, directed content analysis, informed by the shared framework, was made by an academic researcher. Results: From 27 interviews, five themes were identified, mapping the disease's impact on quality of life from diagnosis onward, and throughout the patient journey. First, the diagnosis trajectory was characterised by ‘uncertainty and biographical disruption’. Then, long‐term symptoms were described as impacting daily life through the experience of ‘chronic uncertainty, loss of ability and social exclusion’. Participants’ accounts also reflected the social impact of VLDs, which resulted in ‘renegotiating roles, ties and identities’. All along the care journey, their healthcare experience could be marked by ‘relational and institutional gaps shaping illness’. Finally, ‘the sense of belonging to a community of peers’ was highlighted as a potential but lacking resource. Conclusions: Living with a rare VLD involves uncertainty, unpredictable fatigue, stigma, and social disruption, alongside efforts to maintain dignity and autonomy. While patients can demonstrate resilience, this does not negate ongoing needs. Improving quality of life requires addressing not only symptoms such as fatigue, anxiety or sexual dysfunction but requires guidance on physical activity, nutrition or occupational and financial challenges. Patient and Public Contribution: Ten patients and two caregivers were involved as peer researchers throughout the study, ensuring that priorities, interpretations, and conclusions reflected patient‐defined concerns. All peer researchers contributed to the design, data collection and analysis activities. Due to professional and health constraints, about half of the PRs could only participate in the first local analysis phase. PRs were financially compensated
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Alary, A., Sattoe, J., Sifer‐Rivière, L., Aujoulat, I., Mira, J., Bernegger, G., Danesi, G., Gil‐Hernández, E., Ballester, P., Guilabert, M., Nipius, D., Kousemaker‐Nieuwdorp, J., van der Meer‐Kuiper, K., Cannavò, S., Drossart, C., Veniat, L., Zufferey, M. C., & Dumas, A. (2026). For Me, Quality of Life Is When I Get Through the Day Without Thinking: I Won’t Make It: A Participatory Qualitative Study of Health‐Related Quality of Life in Rare Liver Diseases. Health Expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy, 29(3), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.70721 (Original work published 2026)