Outcomes in Hirschsprung’s disease with coexisting learning disability

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作者
Joseph R. Davidson
Kristiina Kyrklund
Simon Eaton
Mikko P. Pakarinen
David Thompson
Simon C. Blackburn
Kate Cross
Paolo De Coppi
Joe Curry
机构
[1] Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children,Department of Specialist Neonatal and Paediatric Surgery
[2] UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health,Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine Section
[3] New Children’s Hospital Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital,Division of Pediatric Surgery
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Hirschsprung’s; Learning disability; Down syndrome; Bowel function; Quality of life; Long-term outcomes;
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摘要
This study describes functional and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) outcomes in patients with Hirschsprung’s disease (HSCR) with associated learning disability or neurodevelopmental delay (LD), completing a core outcome set for HSCR. This was a cross-sectional study from a tertiary pediatric surgery center. Patients treated between 1977 and 2013 were prospectively contacted to complete an outcomes survey. Children under 12 and older patients with LD were assisted to complete these by a proxy. Bowel and urologic function were assessed (Rintala’s BFS and modified DanPSS) along with HRQoL (PedsQL/GIQLI/SF-36). Thirty-two patients with LD were compared to 186 patients with normal cognition. Patients with LD had 76% survival over the follow-up period, compared to 99% in the remainder of the cohort. Poor functional outcomes were common in the patients with LD, considerably higher than cognitively normal patients: with weekly issues withholding stool, soiling and fecal accidents in over half of patients surveyed (44–60%), and urinary incontinence in 46%. Use of permanent stoma was significantly higher (22% vs. 4%; p = 0.001). HRQoL was worse in domains of physical functioning in adults and children but not for social or emotional domains in adults. Subgroup analysis of patients with Down syndrome suggested similar functional results but better QoL. Multivariate analysis demonstrated a dramatically higher incidence of poor continence outcomes in patients with LD (adjusted OR 9.6 [4.0–23]).
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页码:3499 / 3507
页数:8
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