| Literature DB >> 30486833 |
Carlota Pascoal1,2,3, Sandra Brasil1,2,3, Rita Francisco1,2,3, Dorinda Marques-da-Silva1,2,3, Agnes Rafalko4, Jaak Jaeken5, Paula A Videira1,2,3, Luísa Barros2,6, Vanessa Dos Reis Ferreira7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health-related Quality of Life (HrQoL) is a multidimensional measure, which has gained clinical and social relevance. Implementation of a patient-centred approach to both clinical research and care settings, has increased the recognition of patient and/or observer reported outcome measures (PROMs or ObsROMs) as informative and reliable tools for HrQoL assessment. Inherited Metabolic Diseases (IMDs) are a group of heterogeneous conditions with phenotypes ranging from mild to severe and mostly lacking effective therapies. Consequently, HrQoL evaluation is particularly relevant.Entities:
Keywords: Health-related quality of life (HrQoL); Inherited metabolic disease(s) (IMD(s)); Observer reported outcome measures (ObsROMs); Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs); Quality of life (QoL)
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30486833 PMCID: PMC6263554 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-018-0953-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Flowchart of the literature search; Legend: Flowchart showing the workflow overview of the literature search and study selection process
HrQoL instruments used across IMDs as PROMs or ObsROMs
| Instrument Name | Sub-scales | Item number | Target Group (years) | IMDs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adolescent- and adult-oriented instruments | ||||
| General | ||||
| 15D | Mobility, vision, hearing, breathing, sleeping, eating, speech, excretion, usual activities, mental function, discomfort, depression, distress, vitality, sexual activity | 15 | > 16 | Familial hypercholesterolemia [ |
| AQOL-4D | Independent living (self-care, household tasks and mobility), relationships (friendships, isolation and family role), mental health (sleeping, worrying and pain) and senses (seeing, hearing and communication) | 12 | 15–19 (norm) | Hereditary haemochromatosis [ |
| EQ-5D | Mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, anxiety/depression | 5 plus the VAS | > 18 | Acute porphyrias [ |
| EQ-5D-5 L | 5 plus the VAS | MPS IVa [ | ||
| EQ-5D-3 L | 5 plus the VAS | Fabry disease [ | ||
| EQ-5 VAS | 1 | Fabry disease [ | ||
| NHP | Energy level, pain, emotional reaction, sleep, social isolation, physical abilities, work, house tasks, social functioning, sex life, interests and hobbies, vacations. | 45 | > 16 | Pompe disease [ |
| PGWBI | Anxiety, depression, positive well-being, self-control, general health, vitality | 22 | > 18 | PKU [ |
| PLC | Emotional, practical and social impact, disease-specific symptoms, diet and therapeutic impact | 40 | Adolescents and adults | Galactosemia [ |
| SIP-136 | Sleep and rest, eating, work, home management, recreation and pastimes, ambulation, mobility, body care and movement, social interaction, alertness behavior, emotional behavior, communication | 136 | Adolescents, adults and elderly | MELAS [ |
| SIP-68 | Somatic autonomy, mobility control, mobility range, social behaviour, emotional stability, psychological autonomy/communication | 68 | Adolescents, adults and elderly | Niemann-Pick disease type C [ |
| SF-36 | Physical functioning, role limitations due to physical health, body pain, general health, vitality, social functioning, role limitations due to emotional problems, and mental health. | 36 | > 14 | Acute porphyrias [ |
| SF-36-6D | Physical functioning, role limitations due to physical health, bodily pain, general health, vitality, social functioning, role limitations due to emotional problems, and mental health. | 11 | Pompe disease [ | |
| SF-12 | Physical functioning, role limitations, social functioning, pain, mental health, vitality | 12 | > 12 | Familial hypercholesterolemia [ |
| TAAQOL | Gross motor functioning, fine motor functioning, cognition, sleep, pain, social contacts, daily activities, sex, vitality, happiness, depressive mood, anger | 45 | > 16 | Galactosemia [ |
| WHOQOL-100 | Vitality, psychological well-being, relationship with friends, leisure activities, relationship with parents, physical well-being, relationship with teachers, school, body image, relationship with medical staff. | 100 | > 18 | IMDs [ |
| WHOQOL-BREF | Physical health, psychological health, social relationships, and environment | 26 | > 18 | Pompe disease [ |
| Specific | ||||
| PKU-QOL Adult version | PKU symptoms, PKU in general (emotional, practical, social and overall impact), administration of Phe-free protein supplements, dietary protein restriction | 65 | > 18 | PKU [ |
| Pediatric instruments | ||||
| General | ||||
| CHQ | General health, physical functioning, role limitations due to emotional problems, role limitations due to physical health, body pain, behaviour, global behaviour, mental health, self-esteem, general health perceptions, emotional parental impact, time parental impact, family activities, family cohesion. | 5–18 | Familial hypomagnesemia [ | |
| CHQ-CF87 | 87 | 5–18 | Fabry disease [ | |
| CHQ-PF28 | 28 | 5–18 | PKU [ | |
| CHQ-PF50 | 50 | 5–18 | Fabry disease [ | |
| DISABKIDS-37 | Independence, emotion, inclusion, exclusion, limitations, treatment | 37 | Children and adolescents with chronic diseases | PKU [ |
| HUI 2 | Sensation, mobility, emotion, cognition, self-care, pain, fertility | 15 (self) | > 5 | Fabry disease [ |
| HUI 3 | Vision, hearing, speech, ambulation, dexterity, emotion, cognition, pain | 15 (self) | > 5 | Fabry disease [ |
| KIDSCREEN-27 | Walking/standing, Reach/grip, Sleeping, School/work, Activities and Breathing; and a satisfaction-with-function and a botheredness-with-function domains | 27 | 8–18 | MPS II [ |
| KINDL | Physical well-being, psychological well-being, autonomy and parents, peers & social support, school environment | 4–16 | PKU [ | |
| KiddyKINDL | 12: self | 4–6 or their parents | Propionic acidemia [ | |
| KidKINDL | 24 | 7–13 or their parents | ||
| KiddoKINDL | 24 | 14–17 or their parents | ||
| PedsQL | Physical, emotional, social and school functioning | 23 | 5–18 | PKU [ |
| PedsQL parent version | 23 | Parents of 2–18 years old patients | Batten disease [ | |
| PODCI | Upper extremity function, transfers and mobility, physical function and sports, comfort (lack of pain), happiness, satisfaction, and expectations | 42 | 2–18 | MPS IVa [ |
| SF-10 | Physical functioning, role-physical, bodily pain, general health perceptions, vitality, social functioning, role emotional and mental health | 10 | 5–18 children’s parents | LC-FAOD [ |
| TACQOL | General physical functioning, motor functioning, autonomy, cognition, social contacts, positive mood, negative mood | 56 | 6–11 or their parents (parent form) | Cystinosis [ |
| TAPQOL | Stomach problems, skin problems, lung problems, sleeping problems, appetite, problem behaviour, positive mood, anxiety, liveliness, social functioning*, motor functioning* and communication* | 43 | Parents of 9 months-6 years children | Galactosemia [ |
| VSP-Ae | Gross motor functioning, fine motor functioning, cognition, sleep, pain, social contacts, daily activities, sex, vitality, happiness, depressive mood, anger | 38 | 8–10 | OAs, UCDs, MSUD [ |
| VSP-A | Physical functioning, motor functioning, autonomy, cognitive functioning, social functioning, positive and negative emotional functioning | 39 | 11–17 | OAs, UCDs, MSUD [ |
| VSP-Ap | Symptoms, sleeping, appetite, motor functioning, behaviour, social functioning, communication, positive and negative emotional functioning | 37 | Parents of patients of all ages | OAs, UCDs, MSUD [ |
| Specific | ||||
| PKU-QOL | PKU symptoms, PKU in general (emotional, practical, social and overall impact), administration of Phe-free protein supplements, dietary protein restriction | PKU [ | ||
| Child | 40 | 9–11 | ||
| Adolescent | 58 | 12–17 | ||
| Parent | 54 | PKU patients’ parents | ||
| PKU-QOLQ | Impact, worries, satisfaction, support, well-being | NA | 10–18 | PKU [ |
| QoL Scale for Metabolic Diseases – Parent Form | Impact of disease, attention, perception of disease, physical function, stigmatization, social support, school status, and health perception | 28 | Parents of children (1–15) with a metabolic disorder treated with restrictive diet for at least 1 year | Carbohydrate metabolism disorders, including GSD, galactosemia, fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase deficiency; OA including MMA, PA, MSUD, 3- methylcrotonyl CoA carboxylase deficiency, 3-hydroxy-2-methylglutaryl CoA lyase deficiency; amino acid metabolism disorders including PKU, alkaptonuria, homocystinuria, tyrosinemia [ |
HrQoL tools were divided into 2 main categories: adult-oriented and pediatric instruments. They were then further classified into general and disease-specific tools. Abbreviations: AQOL-4D Assessment of Quality of Life 4D, ASL Argininosuccinate lyase, CHQ Child Health Questionnaire, CPS1 Carbamylphosphate synthase 1, GA1 Glutaric aciduria type I, GSD Glycogen storage disease, HHH Hyperammonemia-hyperomithinemia-homocitrullinuria, HUI Health Utilities Index, MELAS Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episode, LC-FAOD Long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders, MMA Methylmalonic acidemia, IVA Isovaleric acidemia, MPS Mucopolysaccharidosis, MSUD Maple syrup urine disease, NHP Nottingham Health Profile, OAs Organic acidurias, OTC Ornithine transcarbamylase, PA Propionic acidemia, PedsQL Pediatric Quality of Life inventory, PGWBI Psychological General Well-Being Index, PLC Profile for the Chronically ill, PKU-QOL Phenylketonuria-Quality of Life, SIP Sickness Impact Profile, SF-36 36-Item Short Form survey, TAAQOL TNO-AZL questionnaire for adult’s HrQoL, TACQOL TNO-AZL questionnaire for children’s HrQoL, TAPQOL TNOAZL questionnaire for preschool children’s HrQoL, UCDs Urea cycle disorders, VAS Visual analogue scale, VSP-A Vécu et Santé Percue de l’Adolescent, WHOQOL World Health Organization Quality of Life
*Only for children older than 18 months
PROMs/ObsROMs HrQoL instruments used across IMDs to evaluate therapeutic benefit in clinical studies
| IMD | Sample (age in years) | Treatment/Therapy | Follow up time | HrQoL tool | Effects on HrQoL and major findings | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carnitine palmitoyl transferase II deficiency | Adults | Bezafibrate | 6 months | SF-36 | - ↑ HrQoL in all domains, specially role limitations due to physical health and body pain | [ |
| Children and adults (10–55) | Anaplerotic diet therapy | 7–61 months | SF-36 | - ↑ HrQoL in the physical component score | [ | |
| Fabry disease | Male adults (16–48) | Agalsidase-β | 10 days-20 weeks | SF-36 | - Phase 1/2 trial that proved the efficiency and safety of Fabrazyme including an ↑ HrQoL, namely regarding bodily pain, general health, vitality, physical role and emotional role domains. Placebo effects were noticed. | [ |
| Adults and adolescents (> 14) | Agalsidase-β | 3 years | SF-36 | - ↑ HrQoL more pronounced in men | [ | |
| Adults (41.4, mean) | Agalsidase-β | 2 years | SF-36 | - Ns changes in HrQoL | [ | |
| Male adults (16–34) | Agalsidase-β | 20 weeks | SF-36 | - ↑ HrQoL with significant changes in the general health and the mental component score | [ | |
| Adults | Agalsidade-α | 2 years | EQ-5D | - Significant ↑ HrQoL | [ | |
| Adults | Agalsidase-α | 2 years | EQ-5D | - Significant ↑ HrQoL which negatively correlates with pain | [ | |
| Adults (39.2 ± 12.3, mean) | Agalsidase-α | 5 years | EuroQoL | - Significant ↑ HrQoL | [ | |
| Adults (males: 44.25 ± 11; females: 52.3 ± 10.5, means) | Agalsidase-α | 4 weeks | EQ-5D | - Ns differences in HrQoL in the 3 dose regimens. (NCT01218659) | [ | |
| Heterozygous females (20–66) | Agalsidase-α | 55 weeks | SF-36 | - Phase 3 study that proved the agalsidase-α safety and efficacy in heterozygous females with significant ↑ HrQoL, mostly in the physical domain. | [ | |
| Children (7–18) | Agalsidase-α | 55 weeks | HUI, CHQ | - Phase 2 study that showed the efficiency and safety of agalsidase-α, however HrQoL remained unchanged. (NCT01363492) | [ | |
| Adults (42.5 ± 12.5, mean) | ERT | 6.1 ± 2.5 years | EQ-5D | - ↑ HrQoL in severely affected males | [ | |
| Adults (26–68) | ERT | 4–7 years | SF-36 | - Stable HrQoL except for the social functioning score. | [ | |
| Children (6–18) | ERT | – | PedsQL | - Children on ERT had higher scores that approached significance. | [ | |
| Adults (16–74) | Migalastat | 2 years | SF-36 | - Results did not reveal any clinical benefit (NCT00925301 and NCT01458119) | [ | |
| Familial hypercholesterolemia | Children and adults (9–57) | LDL apheresis | NA | SF-36 | - ↑ HrQoL in 2 patients with baseline data | [ |
| Gaucher disease type I | Children and adults (12–70) | Imiglucerase | 4 years | SF-36 | - Significant ↑ HrQoL in the physical component score and, particularly, the physical functioning, physical role limitations and bodily pain subscores. (NCT00365131) | [ |
| Adults (18–82) | Imiglucerase | 2 years | SF-36 | - Since baseline HrQoL approached those of the general population, there was no space for improvements and ns changes were observed. | [ | |
| Adults (17–69) | Miglustat | 6–24 months | SF-36 | - Miglustat administration significantly ↑ HrQoL, while imiglucerase or combination of both reduced HrQoL | [ | |
| Adults (35.2 ± 10.2, mean at start) | Miglustat | 12–48 months | SF-36 | - Similar improvements in HrQoL between miglustat and ERT-treated patients. | [ | |
| Adults (18–66) | ERT | 2 years | SF-36 | - Self-perception of global health, physical activity and social functioning improved with ERT. | [ | |
| Children and adults (> 5) | ERT or SRT | 10 years (mean) | SF-36 | - 65 patients achieved the therapeutic goal for HrQoL but differences between treated and untreated patients were ns. | [ | |
| Children and adults (> 12) (one type 3 Gaucher disease patient) | ERT | 8.5 years (mean) | SF-36 | - Bodily pain was significantly decreased in ERT-naïve patients but physical functioning, role physical, general health, social functioning and role emotional scores showed clinical meaningful impairments too. | [ | |
| Hereditary hemochromatosis | Adults (55 ± 9.0, mean) | Erythrocytaphe-resis | 2 years | SF-36 | - There is no benefit in terms of HrQoL of erythrocytapheresis over phlebotomy. (NCT01398644) | [ |
| MPS IH | Children and adults (2–25) | Hematopoietic cell transplant | 9 years (mean) | CHQ-PF50 | - Higher age at transplant correlates with poor physical scores | [ |
| LC-FAOD | Children and adults (12.06 ± 13.2, mean) | Triheptanoin (UX007) | 24 weeks | SF-12, SF-10 | - Significant ↑ HrQoL in the physical and mental domains for adults but not for children. (NCT01886378) | [ |
| MPS VI | Children and adults (5–21) | Arylsulfatase B | 1.3–5-4 years | TAPQOL, TACQOL | - ↑ HrQoL regarding lung problems, sleeping, liveliness, positive mood, social functioning and communication | [ |
| McArdle’s disease | Adults (18–60) | Ramipril | 3 months | SF-36 | -↑ HrQoL in the emotional status and social role in both ramipril and placebo groups | [ |
| MPS IV | Children and adults (9.8–42.2) | Elosulfase-α | 48–96 weeks | SF-36, PODCI | - Stable HrQoL, except in 1 child with ↓ HrQoL (NCT01697319) | [ |
| Nephropathic cystinosis | Children and adolescents (6–21) | Delayed-release cysteamine birtrate | 2 years | PedsQL | - Significant ↑ HrQoL particularly in social, school and total function. | [ |
| Pompe disease | Adults (41–42) | Alglucosidase-α | 2 years | SF-36 | - ↑ HrQoL, particularly in the bodily pain domain | [ |
| Adults (28–62) | Alglucosidase-α | 52 weeks | SF-36 | - 3/5 patients improved both physical and mental scores while 1/5 improved only the mental or the physical score | [ | |
| Late onset adults (27–73) | Alglucosidase-α | 36 months | SF-36 | - Ns differences from baseline | [ | |
| Late onset adults (21–69) | Alglucosidase-α | 1 year | SF-36 | - Ns differences from baseline | [ | |
| Adults (24–76, at start) | ERT | 4 years (median) | SF-36 | - Significant ↑ HrQoL in the physical functioning, role physical, general health, vitality and mental health subscores, after 2 years. After 4 years, the bodily pain domain significantly worsened. | [ | |
| Adult (65) | L-alanine | 6 months | SF-36 | - ↓ HrQoL, mainly the physical domain due to worsening of muscle function. ↑ HrQoL during placebo interval reflecting the optimism of entering a trial. | [ | |
| Adults (20–71) | Exercise program | 12 weeks | SF-36 | - Borderline ↑ HrQoL at the mental component | [ | |
| Late onset adults (35.5–60.7) | Inspiratory muscle training program | 8 weeks | NHP | - Significant ↑ HrQoL exclusively in the social isolation subscore | [ | |
| PKU | Children and adults (4–44) | BH4 | 1 year | PedsQL, TAAQOL | - Unchanged HrQoL and similar between responsive and non-responsive patients | [ |
| Children and adolescents (6.6–18.7) | BH4 | 6 months | KINDL | - Unchanged HrQoL and similar between responsive and non-responsive patients | [ | |
| Children and adults (10–49) | BH4 | 1 year | PKU-QOLQ | - ↑ HrQoL in responders, provisional responders and non-responders in terms of impact, satisfaction | [ | |
| Wilson disease | Children and adults (8–41) | Orthotopic liver transplantation | 97 months (mean) | SF-36 | - Ns difference between norm-based scores and patients who underwent transplantation | [ |
| Adults (36.6 ± 12.9) | D-penicillamine, trientine, zinc | 8.1–12.6 years (mean) | SF-36 | - D-penicillamine-treated patients had the highest HrQoL scores compared to trientine- or zinc-treated patients. | [ |
Abbreviations: AQOL-4D Assessment of Quality of Life 4D, CHQ Child Health Questionnaire, HUI Health Utilities Index, LDL Low-density lipoprotein, NA non available, NHP Nottingham Health Profile, Ns No significant, PedsQL Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory, PGWBI Psychological General Well-Being Index, PLC Profile for the Chronically Ill, PODCI Pediatric Outcomes Data Collection Instrument, PKU-QOL Phenylketonuria-Quality of Life, SF-36 36-Item Short Form Survey, TAAQOL TNO-AZL questionnaire for Adult’s HrQoL, TACQOL TNO-AZL Questionnaire for Children’s HrQoL, TAPQOL TNOAZL Questionnaire for Preschool Children’s HrQoL, VSP-A Vécu et Santé Percue de l’Adolescent, WHOQOL World Health Organization Quality of Life
Fig. 2HrQoL assessment studies VS approved therapies in IMDs; Legend: Graph showing the number of HrQoL assessment studies (light blue) and approved therapies (dark blue) for the IMDs included in this review over time. The number of approved therapies is based on a specific search including EMA (http://www.ema.europa.eu), FDA (https://www.fda.gov) and Clinical Trials.gov (https://clinicaltrials.gov)