Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
J Pediatr. 2022 Jul;246:207-212.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2022.02.052. Epub 2022 Mar 2.
To identify pediatric patient-reported outcomes (PROs) that are associated with chronic conditions and to evaluate the effects of chronic disease activity on PROs.
Participants (8-24 years old) and their parents were enrolled into 14 studies that evaluated Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System PROs across 10 chronic conditions-asthma, atopic dermatitis, cancer, cancer survivors, chronic kidney disease, Crohn's disease, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, lupus, sickle cell disease, and type 1 diabetes mellitus. PRO scores were contrasted with the US general population of children using nationally representative percentiles. PRO-specific coefficients of variation were computed to illustrate the degree of variation in scores within vs between conditions. Condition-specific measures of disease severity and Cohen d effect sizes were used to examine PRO scores by disease activity.
Participants included 2975 child respondents and 2392 parent respondents who provided data for 3409 unique children: 52% were 5-12 years old, 52% female, 25% African American/Black, and 14% Hispanic. Across all 10 chronic conditions, children reported more anxiety, fatigue, pain, and mobility restrictions than the general pediatric population. Variation in PRO scores within chronic disease cohorts was equivalent to variation within the general population, exceeding between-cohort variation by factors of 1.9 (mobility) to 5.7 (anxiety). Disease activity was consistently associated with poorer self-reported health, and these effects were weakest for peer relationships.
Chronic conditions are associated with symptoms and functional status in children and adolescents across 10 different disorders. These findings highlight the need to complement conventional clinical evaluations with those obtained directly from patients themselves using PROs.
确定与慢性疾病相关的儿科患者报告结局(PRO),并评估慢性疾病活动度对 PRO 的影响。
参与者(8-24 岁)及其父母参加了 14 项研究,评估了跨越 10 种慢性疾病(哮喘、特应性皮炎、癌症、癌症幸存者、慢性肾脏病、克罗恩病、青少年特发性关节炎、狼疮、镰状细胞病和 1 型糖尿病)的患者报告结局测量信息系统 PRO。PRO 评分与美国儿童的一般人群进行了对比,使用了具有全国代表性的百分位数。计算了 PRO 特定的变异系数,以说明评分在疾病之间的差异。使用疾病严重程度的特定于疾病的指标和 Cohen d 效应大小,根据疾病活动度检查 PRO 评分。
研究纳入了 2975 名儿童受访者和 2392 名父母受访者,他们为 3409 名独特的儿童提供了数据:52%为 5-12 岁,52%为女性,25%为非裔/黑人,14%为西班牙裔。在所有 10 种慢性疾病中,儿童报告的焦虑、疲劳、疼痛和行动受限比一般儿科人群更多。慢性疾病队列内的 PRO 评分变化与一般人群内的变化相当,超过队列间变化的因素为 1.9(行动)至 5.7(焦虑)。疾病活动度与自我报告的健康状况较差始终相关,而这些影响在同伴关系方面最弱。
慢性疾病与 10 种不同疾病的儿童和青少年的症状和功能状态相关。这些发现强调需要使用 PRO 直接从患者自身获得的结果来补充常规的临床评估。