| Literature DB >> 26880181 |
Joel Evans1, Stefano Seri2, Andrea E Cavanna3,4,5.
Abstract
Gilles de la Tourette syndrome (GTS) and other chronic tic disorders are neurodevelopmental conditions characterized by the presence of tics and associated behavioral problems. Whilst converging evidence indicates that these conditions can affect patients' quality of life (QoL), the extent of this impairment across the lifespan is not well understood. We conducted a systematic literature review of published QoL studies in GTS and other chronic tic disorders to comprehensively assess the effects of these conditions on QoL in different age groups. We found that QoL can be perceived differently by child and adult patients, especially with regard to the reciprocal contributions of tics and behavioral problems to the different domains of QoL. Specifically, QoL profiles in children often reflect the impact of co-morbid attention-deficit and hyperactivity symptoms, which tend to improve with age, whereas adults' perception of QoL seems to be more strongly affected by the presence of depression and anxiety. Management strategies should take into account differences in age-related QoL needs between children and adults with GTS or other chronic tic disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Adults; Behavior; Children; Gilles de la Tourette syndrome; Quality of life; Tics
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26880181 PMCID: PMC4990617 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-016-0823-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Fig. 1Flowchart outlining the study selection process
Fig. 2Studies investigating QoL in children (grey squares) and adults (black squares) with GTS or other CTDs, by year of publication
Summary of published studies investigating QoL in children with GTS or other CTDs
| Study/Country/setting |
| Mean age (range)/male gender (%) | Diagnosis (% co-morbidity) | QoL instrument (type)/subscales | QoL domains most affected | QoL domains least affected | Other findings | Quality score (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Storch et al. [ | 59 | 11.4 (8–17)/69 | GTS or CTDs (48 % +ADHD; 42 % +OCD) | PedsQL (self- and proxy-rated)/Physical health; Psychosocial health; Emotional functioning; Social functioning; School functioning | Psychological; | Physical | Stronger parent–child agreement for QoL ratings in younger children (aged 8–11); Parent-rated school functioning likely overestimated due to co-morbid ADHD | 63 |
| Cutler et al. [ | 57 | 11.4 (8–17)/80 | GTS (32 % +ADHD; 18 % +OCD) | PedsQL (self-rated)/Physical health; Psychosocial health; Emotional functioning; Social functioning; School functioning | Physical; Psychological; | – | Children’s reports of struggling to fit into society’s expectations; Psychological domain linked to school due to bullying | 83 |
| Pringsheim et al. [ | 71 | 11.2 (7–17)/79 | GTS (56 % +ADHD; 41 % +OCD) | CHQ (proxy-rated)/Role limitation; Psychosocial score; Bodily pain; Physical summary; General health perception; Mental health; Self-esteem; Family activities | Social | Physical; Psychological | Impact on QoL linked to co-morbidities; Physical domain not affected in any clinical subgroup | 63 |
| Bernard et al. [ | 56 | 10.0 (5–17)/92 | GTS (64 % +ADHD; 9 % +OCD) | TACQOL-PF (proxy-rated)/Body functioning; Motor functioning; Autonomy; Cognitive function; Social relationships; Emotional functioning | – | Physical; Psychological; Social; Cognitive | QoL affected by co-morbid ADHD and OCD but not tic severity | 35 |
| Hao et al. [ | 424 | −(8 to 12)/69 | GTS (−) | PedsQL (self-rated)/Physical health; Psychosocial health; Emotional functioning; Social functioning; School functioning | Physical; Psychological; | – | QoL in GTS worse than in controls, but better than in patients with leukaemia; GTS characterized by better social functioning but worse school and emotional functioning than migraine/epilepsy | 78 |
| Eddy et al. [ | 50 | 13.0 (10–17)/88 | GTS | YQOL-R (self-rated)/Relationships; Self; Environment; General | Physical; Psychological; | – | QoL differences in contextual items only; reduced social interaction and participation in activities; ‘Pure’ GTS more affected in environment domain, GTS + OCD in self/relationships domain | 73 |
| Conelea et al. [ | 232 | 12.4 (10–17)/83 | GTS or CTDs (37 % +ADHD; 39 % +OCD) | PedsQL (self-rated); FIQ (proxy-rated); TSIS (self-rated)/Physical health; Psychosocial health; Emotional functioning; Social functioning; School functioning; Negative family impact | Psychological; | Physical | Family functioning highlighted as relevant to QoL | 80 |
| Rizzo et al. [ | 100 | 16.0 (13–18)/86 | GTS (44 % +OCD; 3 % +ADHD + OCD) | YQOL-R (self-rated)/Relationships; Self; Environment; General | – | Physical; | 10-year follow-up revealed co-morbidity shift (increased OCD; decreased ADHD) | 68 |
| Cavanna et al. [ | 75 | 12.0 (6–18)/80 | GTS (8 % +ADHD; 33 % +OCD; 15 % +ADHD + OCD) | GTS-QOL-C&A (self-report)/Physical domain; Psychological domain; Obsessional domain; Cognitive domain | Physical; | – | Development and validation of first disease-specific QoL scale for adults with GTS (Italian language) | 85 |
| Cavanna et al. [ | 75 | 12.0 (6–18)/80 | GTS (8 % +ADHD; 33 % +OCD; 15 % +ADHD + OCD) | CTIM-P (proxy-report)/School activities; Home activities; Social activities | Social; | – | Significant differences between parent and child reports; Parents may overestimate impact of co-morbidities versus tics on QoL | 80 |
| Liu et al. [ | 107 | 10.1 (−)/86 | GTS (8 % +ADHD; 32 % +OCD; 11 % +ADHD + OCD) | ISQL (self-rated)/Family life; Peer relationships; School life; Environment; Self-awareness; Experience of depression; Cognitive component | Psychological; | – | Influence of family stress and social withdrawal on QoL | 63 |
| Rizzo et al. [ | 92 | 12.5 (7–17)/66 | GTS (22 % +ADHD; 22 % +OCD; 6 % +ADHD + OCD) | YQOL-R (self-rated)/Relationships; Self; Environment; General | Psychological; | Physical | Influence of emotional lability on QoL | 80 |
| McGuire et al. [ | 24 | 11.3 (7–17)/75 | GTS (42 % +ADHD; 38 % +OCD) | PedsQL (self-rated); CTIM-P (proxy-rated)/Physical health; Psychosocial health; Emotional functioning; Social functioning; School functioning; School activities; Home activities; Social activities | Physical; | – | Differences in parent- and doctor-rated tic phenomenology | 78 |
| Gutierrez-Colina et al. [ | 36 | 12.6 (8–18)/69 | GTS (58 % +ADHD; 47 % +OCD) | PedsQL (self-rated)/Physical health; Psychosocial health; Emotional functioning; Social functioning; School functioning | Physical; | – | No assessment of tic severity | 68 |
QoL quality of life, GTS Gilles de la Tourette syndrome, CTDs chronic tic disorders, ADHD attention-deficit and hyperactivity disorder, OCD obsessive–compulsive disorder, PedsQL pediatric quality of life inventory, CHQ child health questionnaire, TACQOL-PF TNO-AZL children’s quality of life questionnaire-parent form, YQOL-R youth quality of life instrument-research version, FIQ family impact questionnaire, TSIS Tourette syndrome impact survey, GTS-QOL-C&A Gilles de la Tourette syndrome-quality of life scale (children & adolescents version), CTIM-P child Tourette’s syndrome impairment scale-parent report, ISQL inventory of subjective quality of life
Summary of published studies investigating QoL in adults with GTS or other CTDs
| Study/Country/Setting |
| Mean age (range)/Male gender (%) | Diagnosis (% co-morbidity) | QoL instrument (type)/subscales | QoL domains most affected | QoL domains least affected | Other findings | Quality score (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elstner et al. [ | 103 | 29.0 (16–54)/68 | GTS (21 % +OCD) | QOLAS (self-rated); SF-36 (self-rated)/Social functioning; Role limitation —emotional; Mental health; Cognitive functioning; Economic; Physical functioning; Role limitation —physical; Pain | Physical; Psychological; Social; Occupational; Cognitive | – | Reported difficulty in making/maintaining relationships; Effects of tics on employment status | 63 |
| Cavanna et al. [ | 136 | 25.9 (−)/72 | GTS (51 % +ADHD; 32 % +OCD) | GTS-QOL (self-rated)/Physical domain; Psychological domain; Obsessional domain; Cognitive domain | Physical; Psychological; Obsessional; Cognitive | – | Development and validation of first disease-specific QoL scale for adults with GTS | 73 |
| Muller-Vahl et al. [ | 200 | 35.0 (18–75)/75 | GTS (–) | EQ-5D (self-rated)/Self-care; Usual activities; Pain and discomfort; Anxiety and depression; Mobility | Physical; Psychological | Physical (mobility only) | Higher anxiety/depression ratings compared to general population | 75 |
| Conelea et al. [ | 672 | 35.0 (18–77)/59 | GTS or CTDs (23 % +ADHD; 35 % +OCD; 28 % +affective dis) | PQOL (self-rated); TSIS (self-rated)/Physical interference | Physical; Psychological; | – | Impact of tics on occupation (7 % quit job; 13 % did not pursue job advancement) | 85 |
| Jalenques et al. [ | 167 | 29.0 (16–68)/74 | GTS (–) | WHOQOL-26 (self-rated); FSQ (self-rated)/Physical health; Psychological health; Social relationships; Environment; Physical functioning – ADL; Mental health; Work performance | Physical; Psychological; | – | Impact of depression on QoL; quality of social interactions rated as very poor | 78 |
| Cavanna et al. [ | 46 | 24.0 (16–41)/89 | GTS (54 % +ADHD; 30 % +OCD) | GTS-QOL (self-rated)/Physical domain; Psychological domain; Obsessional domain; Cognitive domain | Physical; Psychological; | – | Childhood tic severity and family history of tics as predictors of poor QoL in adulthood | 85 |
| Crossley et al. [ | 72 | 26.0 (16–64)/65 | GTS (22 % +ADHD; 18 % +OCD) | GTS-QOL (self-rated)/Physical domain; Psychological domain; Obsessional domain; Cognitive domain | Physical; Psychological; | – | Impact of sensory phenomena on QoL | 88 |
QoL quality of life, GTS Gilles de la Tourette syndrome, OCD obsessive–compulsive disorder, ADHD attention-deficit and hyperactivity disorder, CTDs chronic tic disorders, QOLAS quality of life assessment schedule, SF-36 Medical outcomes study 36-item short-form health survey, GTS-QOL Gilles de la Tourette syndrome-quality of life scale, PQOL perceived quality of life scale, TSIS Tourette syndrome impact survey, WHOQOL-26 World Health Organisation quality of Life 26-item scale, FSQ functional status questionnaire, ADL activities of daily living