| Literature DB >> 23564339 |
X Badia1, E Valassi, M Roset, S M Webb.
Abstract
Cushing's syndrome (CS) has a considerable negative impact on patient health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Two disease-specific instruments (the CushingQoL and the Tuebingen CD-25 questionnaire) are now available to assess the impact of the disease and its treatment on HRQoL. The purpose of this review was to summarize the characteristics of the studies which have used these two instruments to date and summarize their findings regarding (a) the determinants of disease-specific HRQoL in patients with CS and (b) the impact of treatment for CS on disease-specific HRQoL. A total of 7 studies were identified, 5 with the CushingQoL and 2 with the Tuebingen CD-25. Most were observational studies, though the CushingQoL had been used in one randomized clinical trial. In terms of clinical factors, there was some evidence for an association between UFC levels and disease-specific HRQoL, though the presence and strength of the association varied between studies. There was also some evidence that a more recent diagnosis of CS could lead to poorer HRQoL, and that length of time with adrenal insufficiency may also affect HRQoL. There was no evidence for an impact on disease-specific HRQoL of etiology or of the clinical signs and symptoms associated with CS, such as bruising, rubor, and fat deposits. One factor which did have a significant negative effect on HRQoL was the presence of depression. No clear picture emerged as to the effect of demographic variables such as age and gender on HRQoL scores, though there was some evidence for poorer HRQoL in female patients. As regards treatment, the two interventions studied to date (transsphenoidal surgery and pasireotide) both showed significant gains in HRQoL, with moderate to large effect sizes. This type of review is useful in summarizing knowledge to date and suggesting future research directions.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 23564339 PMCID: PMC3942630 DOI: 10.1007/s11102-013-0484-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pituitary ISSN: 1386-341X Impact factor: 4.107
Characteristics of studies using disease-specific questionnaires to assess quality of life in patients with Cushing’s syndrome
| First author and year of publication | Questionnaire used | Type of study | Study design | Setting | Number of patients | Inclusion/exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Webb et al. [ | CushingQoL | Validation study | Cross-sectional | 5 European countries (Spain, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy) | 125 | Patients with histologically determined CS of pituitary or adrenal origin |
| Valassi et al. [ | CushingQoL | European Registry on Cushing’s syndrome (ERCUSYN) | Cross-sectional, observational | 23 European countries | 508 | Any etiology. Patients with adrenal cancer excluded. |
| Colao et al. [ | CushingQoL | Clinical trial | Randomized, double-blind, phase 3 of pasireotide | 11 European countries, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, USA, China and Turkey. | 162 | Confirmed persistent or recurrent Cushing’s disease or newly diagnosed disease, if they were not candidates for surgery. |
| Santos et al. [ | CushingQoL | Study to evaluate CushingQoL test–retest reliability and sensitivity | Longitudinal study | Spain | 59 | None specified |
| Tiemensma et al. [ | CushingQoL | Exploration of impact of illness perceptions on HRQoL | Observational Patients completed questionnaires at home | Netherlands | 52 | Age > 18 years and in remission for at least 1 year |
| Milian et al. [ | Tuebingen CD-25 | Development and validation study | Cross-sectional, retrospective | Germany | 63 | Age > 18 years with pituitary-dependent Cushing’s disease. |
| Milian et al. [ | Tuebingen CD-25 | Normative study | Cross-sectional | Germany | 63 patients with CD 1784 healthy controls | None specified for control group |
Main findings of studies reviewed
| Study | Main findings |
|---|---|
| Webb et al. [ | Significant differences on CushingQoL scores between patients with active [mean 46.1 (SD 22.6)] and controlled [mean 56.1 (SD 19.5)] disease (based on UFC levels) ( Significant differences between patients with [mean 47.6 (SD 20.5)] and without [mean 56.1 (SD 22.3)] hypercortisolism ( Lower (poorer) CushingQoL scores in patients with a more recent diagnosis (last 2 years; mean score 44 ± 22) than in those diagnosed earlier (mean score 59 ± 22; Linear regression analysis showed that being female ( |
| Colao et al. [ | Differences in CushingQoL scores between patients with fully controlled mean UFC [58.0 (3.7)] and those with uncontrolled UFC [51.5 (3.4)] were not statistically significant No statistically significant differences were observed between groups classified by BMI, waist circumference, weight, amount of facial rubor, striae, bruising, supraclavicular fat, dorsal fat, or Karnofsky scores Consistent and significant differences related to depression. Mean CushingQoL scores in patients with minimal depression [mean = 61.6 (SE = 2.2) at month 12] were significantly higher (better HRQoL) than for patients with severe levels of depression based on the BDI-II [mean = 30.8 (SE = 6.9) at month 12] A high percentage of patients showed a significant improvement in terms of HRQoL (with improvements over 10 points on CushingQoL) at 3 months (50.0 % of patients), 6 months (48.0 %) and 12 months (52.0 %) CushingQoL score improved by 11.1 points (95 % CI, 6.8–15.5) after 12 months of treatment with pasireotide, representing effect sizes of 0.47 and 0.49 (for 600 ug) |
| Valassi et al. [ | No significant differences in CushingQoL score by etiology In multiple regression analysis, only depression was found to independently predict lower CushingQoL scores Transsphenoidal surgery produced improvements on CushingQoL from a mean (SD) score of 38.3 (22.1) at baseline to 56.6 after 12 months (a change of 18.3 points), representing an effect size of 0.82 |
| Santos et al. [ | CushingQoL scores were worse in patients with active disease than in those defined as ‘cured’ (46 ± 15 vs. 58 ± 20, No differences were seen between males and females with active disease nor between patients with hypercortisolism of adrenal and pituitary origin No differences in score between patients who had undergone radiotherapy and those who had not No statistically significant correlation was found between CushingQoL scores and age Transsphenoidal surgery produced improvements on CushingQoL from a mean (SD) of 41 (15) at baseline to 54 (13) at 4 months ( |
| Tiemensma et al. [ | Negative illness perceptions were associated with poorer HRQoL |
| Milian et al. [ | Non-linear correlation between Tuebingen CD-25 scores and patients’ age Preoperative 24 h urinary free cortisol (UFC) levels correlated significantly with the subscale Cognition and only marginally failed significance level for the subscale Eating Behaviour Preoperative cortisol and ACTH levels did not correlate with any scale |
| Milian et al. [ | Female patients perceived worse HRQoL than men in the domains of depressive symptoms and social environment ( |