| Literature DB >> 28596950 |
Anna Marie Nathan1,2, Jessie Anne de Bruyne1,2, Kah Peng Eg1,2, Surendran Thavagnanam1,2.
Abstract
Non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis (NCFB) has gained renewed interest, due to its increasing health-care burden. Annual mortality statistics in England and Wales showed that under 1,000 people die from bronchiectasis each year, and this number is increasing by 3% yearly. Unfortunately, there is a severe lack of well-powered, randomized controlled trials to guide clinicians how to manage NCFB effectively. Quality-of-life (QOL) measures in NCFB are an important aspect of clinical care that has not been studied well. Commonly used disease-specific questionnaires in children with NCFB are the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire, Short Form-36, the Leicester Cough Questionnaire, and the Parent Cough-Specific Quality of Life questionnaire (PC-QOL). Of these, only the PC-QOL can be used in young children, as it is a parent-proxy questionnaire. We reviewed pediatric studies looking at QOL in children with NCFB and cystic fibrosis. All types of airway clearance techniques appear to be safe and have no significant benefit over each other. Number of exacerbations and hospitalizations correlated with QOL scores, while symptom subscales correlated with lung function, worse QOL, frequent antibiotic requirements, and duration of regular follow-up in only one study. There was a correlation between QOL and age of diagnosis in children with primary ciliary dyskinesia. Other studies have shown no relationship between QOL scores and etiology of NCFB as well as CT changes. As for treatments, oral azithromycin and yoga have demonstrated some improvement in QOL scores. In conclusion, more studies are required to accurately determine important factors contributing to QOL.Entities:
Keywords: bronchiectasis; child; cough; quality of life; review; treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 28596950 PMCID: PMC5442180 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Summary of studies and their findings of quality of life (QOL) in children with non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis (NCFB).
| Country, year | Number | Type of study | Age (years) | Questionnaire | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia, 2010 | 69 | Cross-sectional | Median (IQR): 7 (3, 8, 10.9) | PC-QOL, DASS21 | Parents of young children were more likely to report an impaired QOL |
| Radiological extent, baseline lung function, underlying etiology, and chronic upper airway disease did not influence the burden of disease scores | |||||
| Malaysia, 2014 | 60 (CF = 10; others = 50) | Cross-sectional | Median (range): 1.3 (0.3–11) | PC-QOL, DASS21 | Mental health of parents with children with CF were better than those with NCFB |
| Frequent exacerbations, frequent cough, age of diagnosis, and age of patients were not significantly associated with PC-QOL scores | |||||
| Turkey, 2014 | 76 | Case–control | 11.7 (±2.6) | CDI, STAI-C, PedsQL-P, PedsQL-C | Patients did not have depression and anxiety scores significantly different from controls |
| CDI and STAI-C scores negatively correlated with QOL scores | |||||
| Parents reported worse QOL in physical, psychosocial, and total areas | |||||
| Number of exacerbations and hospitalizations, FEV1/FVC% predicted, dyspnea, and wheezing severity were the significant factors associated with a worse QOL | |||||
| Patients reported worse physical QOL | |||||
| Turkey, 2014 | 42 | Cross-sectional | 12.7 (±2.3) | SF-36, SGRQ | Symptom subscale of SGRQ correlated positively with low lung function and frequent antibiotic requirements |
| Inverse correlation between SGRQ symptom scores and the duration of regular follow-up | |||||
| No correlation between SGRQ scores and current age, age at diagnosis, age at the beginning of the symptoms, height and weight | |||||
| UK, 2010 | 78 PCD | Cross-sectional | SF-36, SGRQ | Patients with the highest treatment burden had worse QOL | |
| Positive correlation between time since diagnosis and improvement in perceived QOL | |||||
| No correlation between scores with age or age at diagnosis |
CDI, The Child Depression Inventory; STAI-C, State-Trait Anxiety Inventories for Children; PedsQL-P, Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory Parent Version; PedsQL-C, Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory Child Version; SF-36, Short Form-36; SGRQ, St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire; PCD, primary ciliary dyskinesia; CF, cystic fibrosis; DASS21, Depression Anxiety Stress Scale 21; PC-QOL, parent-cough specific quality of life questionnaire.