Health and Quality of Life Outcomes (Oct 2017)

Health-related quality of life in children with congenital adrenal hyperplasia

  • Alyssa Halper,
  • Mary C. Hooke,
  • Maria Teresa Gonzalez-Bolanos,
  • Nancy Vanderburg,
  • Thang N. Tran,
  • Jane Torkelson,
  • Kyriakie Sarafoglou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-017-0769-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Children with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) require life-long glucocorticoid replacement and have daily intermittent hyper/hypocortisolemia and hyperandrogenemia. Health-related quality of life (HRQL) is important for understanding the impact the disease and therapy have on physical, mental, emotional, and social functioning. Little is known about HRQL in CAH. We compared HRQL in children with CAH to healthy norms and examined how these scores related to physiologic variables. Methods A cross-sectional study examined 45 patients (mean age 8.2(4.5) years). Thirty-two self-reported their quality of life (QoL) on the PedsQL™ Generic Core Scale and PedsQL™ Fatigue Scale, and 44 parents completed a parent report. Bone age Z-scores were calculated from the most recent bone age. Results Children with CAH did not report lower QoL than healthy norms. However, their parents reported lower overall QoL and fatigue scores than parents of healthy norms. Children with CAH rated sleep poorer than their parents. QoL scores did not differ by sex or CAH subtype and were not associated with total daily hydrocortisone dose. Bone age Z-scores were negatively associated with child-reported emotional health and cognitive fatigue. Conclusions Parents of children with CAH reported a negative impact of disease on their children’s QoL, but their children did not. The negative associations between bone age Z-scores and emotional health and cognitive fatigue suggest an impact from chronic hypocortisolemia and hyperandrogenemia.

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