ESPE Abstracts (2023) 97 P1-207

ESPE2023 Poster Category 1 Adrenals and HPA Axis (40 abstracts)

Health-Related Quality of Life in Children with Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Sumudu Seneviratne 1 , Shamaali Gunawardena 2 , Umesh Jayarajah 3 & Faisal Ahmed 4


1Faculty of Medicine, University of Colombo, Colombo, Sri Lanka. 2Base Hospital, Horana, Colombo, Sri Lanka. 3Post Graduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo, Colombo, Sri Lanka. 4University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom


Introduction: Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is a lifelong condition associated with long term medical and psychosocial issues, which can adversely affect Quality of Life (QoL). There is paucity of high-grade evidence on health-related QoL in children and adolescents with CAH, with available studies being limited by small study samples. We conducted a systematic-review(SR) and meta-analysis(MA) to assess factors associated with health-related QoL among children and adolescent with CAH worldwide, and compare self-reported and parent-reported QoL of children/adolescents with CAH with healthy children/adolescents.

Method: This study was registered prospectively in the PROSPERO International-prospective-register-of-systematic-reviews (reg no: CRD42022313389). Google-scholar, PubMed, LILACS, Cochrane and Scopus databases were searched up to 03/05/2022, using a pre-defined search strategy and MESH terms, to identify original studies describing/assessing self-reported/parent-reported health-related QoL in patients with CAH ≤21 years. Studies comparing QoL of children/ adolescents with CAH with healthy controls using standardised validated questionnaires were included in MA. Methodological quality of studies were assessed by the Newcastle-Ottawa quality-assessment Scale (NOS), and heterogeneity by I2 statistics.

Results: A total of 1308 publications were screened, from which ten studies (CAH n= 593) were eligible for the SR (NOS scores ranging from 3-7/9), while six studies were eligible for the MA, and they showed moderate-considerable heterogeneity. MA showed that compared to healthy controls, children and adolescents with CAH (n= 227) had lower parent-reported QoL in their overall psychosocial health (MD-9.9[-12.6,7.3], P=<0.001)), as well as in all three individual psychosocial domains: school domain ((MD-7.4[-12.2, -2.5], P=0.003); emotional domain (MD-5.6[-10.2, -0.9], P=0.02) and social domain (MD-4.3[-8.1, -0.5], P =0.03); while self-reported QoL in children/ adolescents with CAH was lower in school domain only (MD-8.5[-15.9, -1.2], P=0.02). Children/ adolescents did not show any difference to healthy controls in parent- and self-reported health-related physical QoL. Factors associated with lower overall QoL among children/adolescents with CAH included: poor disease control, poor compliance to medication, higher number of hospital admissions, greater virilization, and presence of hyperpigmentation, hypertension and urinary incontinence.

Conclusion: Children/ adolescents with CAH had impaired overall psychosocial QoL from parenteral perceptive, and impaired QoL in school domain from self-report, while their physical QoL was similar to healthy children. Factors associated with lower QoL included poor disease-control, and disease/treatment-related complications. Further research is needed to determine if better disease-control and increased psychosocial support could help improve QoL in children with CAH.

Volume 97

61st Annual ESPE (ESPE 2023)

The Hague, Netherlands
21 Sep 2023 - 23 Sep 2023

European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology 

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