| Literature DB >> 32082389 |
Salma R Ali1, Zoe Macqueen1, David E Sandberg2, S Faisal Ahmed1, Melissa Gardner2, Yiqiao Xin3, Andreas Kyriakou1, Avril Mason1, M Guftar Shaikh1, Sze C Wong1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a paucity of tools that can be used in routine clinical practice to assess the psychosocial impact of Disorders/Differences of Sex Development (DSD) on parents and children.Entities:
Keywords: DSD; PRO; Psychosocial adjustment; Screening
Year: 2020 PMID: 32082389 PMCID: PMC7020572 DOI: 10.1186/s13633-020-0073-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-9848
Fig. 1Cases and recruitment details. DSD, Disorder of Sex Development. aCaregivers not approached due to consultation running simultaneously (n = 7) bCaregivers not able to complete questionnaires as insufficient time after clinic (n = 8), other commitments (n = 7) or already completed a separate hospital questionnaire (n = 1)
PRO questionnaire domains, score representation and reference mean (SD)
| Questionnaire Domains | Items | Domains derived from: | High subscale scores indicate: | Sample mean (SD) from reference samplea,b | Reference sample | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mothers | Fathers | Sample- All | |||||
| Parent Self-Report | |||||||
| Communication and Information | 2 | QOL-DSD | Better outcome | 74.86 (16.93) | 69.97 (23.15) | – | Alpern et al. (2017)4 |
| Talking to Others | 5 | QOL-DSD | Better outcome | 64.03 (24.52) | 85.55 (16.80) | – | |
| Future Concerns | 7 | QOL-DSD | Better outcome | 55.37 (25.86) | 79.14 (13.71) | – | |
| Medication | 4 | QOL-DSD | Better outcome | 70.39 (28.20) | 49.10 (28.31) | – | |
| Clinic Visit | 4 | QOL-DSD | Better outcome | 72.08 (27.81) | 33.38 (25.80) | – | |
| Surgery | 4 | QOL-DSD | Better outcome | 38.03 (25.12) | 81.10 (24.51) | – | |
| Stigma | 10 | Experiences & Reactions: Parent focused | Poorer outcome | 1.76 (0.63) | 1.56 (0.44) | – | Rolston et al. (2015)5 |
| PHQ-4 | 4 | Patient Health Questionnaire-4 | Poorer outcome | – | – | 2.5 (2.8) | Kroenke et al. (2009)19 |
| Parent Proxy-Report | |||||||
| Anxiety | 4 | PROMIS | Poorer outcome | – | – | 50 (10) | Irwin et al., (2012)18 |
| Depression | 4 | PROMIS | Poorer outcome | – | – | 50 (10) | |
| Anger | 5 | PROMIS | Poorer outcome | – | – | 50 (10) | |
| Peer Relations | 4 | PROMIS | Better outcome | – | – | 50 (10) | |
| Stigma | 4 | Experiences & Reactions: Child focused | Poorer outcome | 2.28 (0.91) | 2.05 (0.81) | – | Rolston et al. (2015)5 |
| Clinic Visit & Medication | 7 1 | QOL-DSD | Better outcome | 64.98 (24.49) | 78.10 (22.56) | – | Alpern et al. (2017)4 |
aSample mean (SD) from reference data was used to calculate median SDS for each domain [4, 5, 18, 19]. bMean (SD) represents the mean (SD) T score for PROMIS domains
Sample characteristics of children with DSD and other Endocrine diagnoses
| DSD sample | Parental Questionnaire | |
|---|---|---|
| Self-Reporta | Proxy-Reportb | |
| Index cases ( | 54 | 25 |
| Parents ( | 55 | 25 |
| Mother | 42 | 18 |
| Father | 13 | 7 |
| Child gender ( | ||
| Male | 44 (81.5%) | 16 (64.0%) |
| Female | 10 (18.5%) | 9 (36.0%) |
| Child age, years (median, range) | 1.8 (0.03, 6.8) | 4.5 (2.0, 6.5) |
| DSD category and diagnosis | ||
| Sex chromosome ( | 7 (13.0%) | 6 (24.0%) |
| Turner syndrome | 4 (7.4%) | 4 (16.0%) |
| Other sex chromosome DSD (e.g. Klinefelter syndrome, 45X/46Y primary gonadal dysgenesis, XO/X isodicentric Y chromosome complement) | 3 (5.5%) | 2 (8.0%) |
| 46, XX ( | 7 (13.0%) | 6 (24.0%) |
| Disorder of androgen excess (congenital adrenal hyperplasia) | 6 (11.1%) | 5 (20.0%) |
| Other 46, XX DSD (e.g. vaginal atresia) | 1 (1.9%) | 1 (4.0%) |
| 46, XY ( | 40 (74.0%) | 13 (52.0%) |
| Disorder of gonadal (testicular) development (e.g. bilateral anorchia) | 1 (1.9%) | 1 (4.0%) |
| Non-specific disorder of undermasculinisation (e.g. bilateral cryptorchidism, isolated hypospadias) | 28 (51.2%) | 9 (36.0%) |
| Other 46, XY DSD (e.g. combination of hypospadias and bilateral cryptorchidism or micropenis) | 11 (20.4%) | 3 (12.0%) |
| Endocrine sample | ||
| Index cases ( | 41 | 22 |
| Parents ( | 43 | 23 |
| Mother | 34 | 17 |
| Father | 9 | 6 |
| Child gender ( | ||
| Male | 23 (56.1%) | 13 (59%) |
| Female | 18 (43.9%) | 9 (40.9%) |
| Child age, years (median, range) | 2.0 (0.1, 6.8) | 5.0 (2.3, 6.9) |
| Endocrine category ( | ||
| Disorders of short stature or growth hormone deficiency | 14 (34%) | 11 (50.0%) |
| Disorder of calcium and phosphate homeostasis | 11 (26.9%) | 4 (18.1%) |
| Disorder of thyroid gland | 7 (17.1%) | 4 (18.1%) |
| Disorder of adrenal gland | 3 (7.3%) | 2 (9.1%) |
| Disorder of pituitary gland | 2 (4.9%) | 0 |
| Genetic disorders of glucose and insulin homeostasis | 2 (4.9%) | 0 |
| Other (e.g. primary polydipsia, premature tooth exfoliation) | 2 (4.9%) | 1 (4.5%) |
aParent Self-Report (PSR) questionnaire completed by parents of children from birth to 2 years. bParent Proxy-Report (PPR) questionnaire completed by parents of children aged 2 to 6 years
cFor one child, both parents completed PSR
dFor two children, both parents completed PSR and for one child, both parents completed PPR
Parent Self-Report questionnaire scores for children with DSD and children with other Endocrine conditions
| Self-Report Domains | DSD Sample | Endocrine Sample | DSD vs Endocrine | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subscale score, median (range) | SDSb, median (range) | Subscale score, median (range) | SDSb, median (range) | ||||
| Communication and Information | |||||||
| Mothers | 42 | 75.00 (37.50, 100.00) | 0.01 (−2.21, 1.49) | 34 | 75.00 (25.00, 100.00) | 0.01 (−2.95, 1.49) | NS |
| Fathers | 13 | 75.00 (37.50, 87.50) | 0.22 (−1.40, 0.76) | 9 | 62.5 (0.00, 87.50) | −0.32 (−3.02, 0.76) | NS |
| Talking to Others | |||||||
| Mothers | 41 | 62.50 (35.00, 100.00) | −0.06 (− 1.18, 1.47) | 34 | 83.13 (43.75, 100.00) | 0.78* (− 0.83, 1.47) | NS |
| Fathers | 12 | 81.25 (37.50, 100.00) | −0.25 (−2.86, 0.86) | 9 | 90.00 (45.00, 100.00) | 0.27 (−2.41, 0.86) | NS |
| Future Concerns | |||||||
| Mothers | 42 | 50.00 (0.00, 100.00) | −0.28 (−2.14, 1.73) | 35 | 85.71 (3.57, 100.00) | 1.17* (−2.00, 1.73) | 0.02 |
| Fathers | 13 | 57.14 (21.43, 92.86) | −1.60* (−4.21, 1.00) | 9 | 85.71 (50.00, 100.00) | 0.48 (− 2.13, 1.52) | 0.04 |
| Medication | |||||||
| Mothers | 14 | 66.67 (0.00, 100.00) | −0.13 (−2.50, 1.05) | 25 | 83.33 (0.00, 100.00) | 0.31 (−2.50, 1.05) | NS |
| Fathers | 6 | 100.00 (77.78, 100.00) | 1.80* (1.01, 1.80) | 3 | 100.00 (75.00, 100.00) | 1.80 (0.92, 1.80) | NS |
| Clinic Visit | |||||||
| Mothers | 38 | 70.83 (56.25, 100.00) | −0.05 (−1.69, 1.00) | 32 | 91.67 (33.33, 100.00) | 0.70* (−1.37, 0.99) | NS |
| Fathers | 11 | 87.50 (37.50, 100.00) | 2.10* (0.16, 2.58) | 8 | 68.75 (50.00, 91.67) | 1.37* (0.64, 2.60) | NS |
| Surgery | |||||||
| Mothers | 11 | 12.50 (0.00, 91.67) | −1.02 (−1.51, 2.14) | 4 | 31.30 (0.00, 83.30) | 0.47 (−1.02, 1.80) | NS |
| Fathers | 4 | 41.70 (25.0, 100.00) | −1.61 (−2.29, 0.77) | 1 | 12.50 (12.50, 12.50) | −2.80 (− 2.80,-2.80) | NS |
| Stigma | |||||||
| Mothers | 42 | 1.60 (1.00. 2.67) | −0.25 (−1.21, 1.44) | 35 | 1.40 (1.00, 3.20) | −0.57 (−1.21, 2.29) | NS |
| Fathers | 13 | 1.40 (1.00, 2.10) | −0.36 (−1.27, 1.23) | 9 | 1.60 (1.00, 2.11) | 0.09 (−1.27, 1.25) | NS |
| PHQ-4 | |||||||
| Mothers | 40 | 1.00 (0.00, 8.00) | 0.54 (0.89, 1.96) | 34 | 0.00 (0.00, 6.00) | 0.89 (−1.25, 0.89) | NS |
| Fathers | 12 | 0.00 (0.00, 6.00) | 0.89 (0.89, 1.25) | 9 | 0.00 (0.00, 4.00) | 0.89 (−0.54, 0.89) | NS |
an’s vary by domain due to item responses and not all children have had surgery or take medication. bSDS standard deviation score; subscale values are presented as SDS based on reference data. cp values have been adjusted for multiple comparisons using false discovery rates; significance has been assigned at adjusted p < 0.05. *p < 0.05, compared to SDS of zero. All p values have been adjusted for multiple comparisons
Fig. 2Boxplots for Future Concerns, Clinic Visits and Depression. DSD, Disorder of Sex Development; Endocrine, Children with other Endocrine conditions. *p < 0.05 represents a significant difference compared to zero
Parent Proxy-Report questionnaire scores for children with DSD and children with other Endocrine conditions
| Proxy-Report Domains | DSD Sample | Endocrine Sample | DSD vs Endocrine | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subscale scoreb, median (range) | SDSc, median (range) | Subscale scoreb, median (range) | SDS, median (range) | ||||
| Anxiety | 23 | 43.60 (36.30, 68.60) | 0.64 (−1.86, 1.37) | 21 | 46.00 (36.30, 75.30) | 0.40 (−2.53, 1.37) | NS |
| Depression | 23 | 37.20 (37.20, 65.20) | 1.28* (−1.52, 1.28) | 22 | 43.60 (37.20, 60.10) | 0.64* (−1.01, 1.28) | NS |
| Anger | 23 | 43.40 (29.00, 62.70) | 0.66 (−1.27, 2.10) | 22 | 42.50 (29.00, 67.70) | 0.75 (−1.77, 2.10) | NS |
| Peer Relations | 23 | 50.60 (27.30, 60.80) | 0.06 (−2.27, 1.08) | 22 | 48.25 (19.10, 60.80) | −0.18 (−3.09, 1.08) | NS |
| Stigma | |||||||
| Mothers | 17 | 1.33 (1.00, 4.00) | −1.04 (−1.41, 1.89) | 16 | 1.70 (1.00, 4.25) | −0.63 (−1.41, 2.17) | NS |
| Fathers | 6 | 1.13 (1.00, 3.00) | −1.14 (− 1.30, 1.17) | 6 | 1.75 (1.00, 2.50) | −0.37 (− 1.30, 0.56) | NS |
| Clinic Visit/ Medication | NS | ||||||
| Mothers | 16 | 81.67 (3.33, 100.00) | 0.68 (−2.52, 1.43) | 17 | 93.30 (54.17, 100.00) | 1.16 (−2.65, 1.43) | NS |
| Fathers | 6 | 75.00 (40.00, 83.33) | −0.14 (−1.69, 0.23) | 6 | 87.50 (66.67, 100.00) | 0.42 (−0.51, 0.97) | NS |
an’s vary by domain due to item responses and not all children take medication. bFor anxiety, depression, anger and peer relations, the subscale score represents the PROMIS T-score. cSDS standard deviation score, calculated using mean and SD from reference data. dp values have been adjusted for multiple comparisons using false discovery rates; significance has been assigned at adjusted p < 0.05. *p < 0.05, compared to SDS of zero. All p values have been adjusted for multiple comparisons