The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of anxiety, depression, and coping on quality of life in patients after liver transplantation. Patients were asked to fill out a postal survey. Two hundred thirty-six of 375 patients (63%) who entered the study returned the questionnaires, and 186 of these patients could be included in the assessment. Anxiety and depression were surveyed using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; health-related quality of life, using the 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey; and coping strategies, using the Freiburg Questionnaire on Coping With Illness. In terms of physical and mental dimensions of health-related quality of life, psychosocial factors are far more relevant in liver transplant recipients than purely somatic factors, such as the number of posttransplantation complications or length of hospital stay. Through multiple regression analysis, we were able to account for 51% of the variance in the physical dimension of health-related quality of life and 58% of the variance in the mental dimension. Physical factors of depression, age, and employment and mental factors of anxiety and depression were significant for predicting healthrelated quality of life after liver transplantation. Depressive coping, anxiety, and depression, as well as aspects of the social environment, contribute considerably to determine well-being and health-related quality of life of patients after liver transplantation. O ver the past 15 years, liver transplantation has proven to be the treatment of choice in patients with terminal liver disease. The 1-year survival rate is approximately 80%; after 8 years, 61% of patients are still alive. 1 From the physician's point of view, it is necessary to optimize therapy with immunosuppressants and minimize complications with medical treatment. Diabetes mellitus, malignancies, weight gain, and, particularly, non-Hodgkin's lymphomas have been observed, in addition to increased rates of hypertension. Furthermore, the likelihood of fractures increases after transplantation. 2,3 These associated diseases, along with the transplantation procedure itself and changes in the patient's surroundings, exert considerable influence on a patient's quality of life.Previous investigations into quality of life in transplant recipients focused primarily on the relation between medical treatment and transplantation, i.e., type of immunosuppression, duration and severity of illness, and course of the transplantation (revisions, retransplantation, rejection responses), in addition to effects of these factors on patients' quality of life. 4,5 Posttransplantation health-related quality of life is impaired by disease severity and previous transplantations. 6 A controlled study found no difference in quality of life or psychiatric outcomes between patients who underwent liver transplantation because of alcoholic liver disease and those who underwent liver transplantation because of other chronic liver diseases. 7 Previous results indicated that lung, heart, and liver transplant re...