The associations between pediatric weight status and cystic fibrosis‐related diabetes status and health‐related quality of life among children and young adults with cystic fibrosis: A systematic review

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allison Gomes ◽  
Rachael Patusco ◽  
Mei Chung ◽  
Margaret R. Dreker ◽  
Laura Byham‐Gray ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 164-178
Author(s):  
Allison Gomes ◽  
Pamela Rothpletz-Puglia ◽  
Laura Matarese ◽  
Jane Ziegler

2018 ◽  
Vol 104 (4) ◽  
pp. 340-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laila Akbar Ladak ◽  
Babar Sultan Hasan ◽  
Janice Gullick ◽  
Robyn Gallagher

BackgroundAs survival improves in the congenital heart disease (CHD) population, health-related quality of life (HRQOL) outcomes become increasingly important. While surgery improves survival, poor HRQOL occurs postoperatively and cardiac-related HRQOL outcomes are rarely reported.ObjectiveTo conduct a systematic review and meta-analyses of general and cardiac-related HRQOL in CHD surgical children and young adults.MethodMedline, CINAHL and EMBASE were searched. Quantitative designs with a minimum of 80% CHD surgical patients and mean age ≤18 years compared with healthy controls were included in the review. Data were analysed in RevMan V.5.3 using a random effects model.Outcome measuresGeneral and cardiac-related HRQOL.ResultsStudies (n=20) were conducted in high-income countries and included 3808 patients plus 2951 parental reports of patients. HRQOL was worse in postoperative patients with CHD versus healthy controls in all domains with the largest difference seen for physical function (standard mean difference (SMD) of −0.56, 95% CI −0.82 to −0.30). Cardiac-related HRQOL was worse in complex compared with simple CHD with the largest SMD (−0.60, 95% CI −0.80 to −0.40) for symptoms. Heterogeneity ranged from 0% to 90%.ConclusionsCHD surgical patients have substantially worse HRQOL compared with age-matched healthy controls. Strategies should focus on improving HRQOL in this subgroup. Results may not be applicable to low/middle-income countries given the dearth of relevant research.


Author(s):  
Fedrico Riva ◽  
Mariana Seoane ◽  
Michael Eduardo Reichenheim ◽  
Georgios Tsakos ◽  
Roger Keller Celeste

Author(s):  
Carlos Zaror ◽  
Andrea Matamala‐Santander ◽  
Montse Ferrer ◽  
Fernando Rivera‐Mendoza ◽  
Gerardo Espinoza‐Espinoza ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. i34-i36
Author(s):  
F E Martin ◽  
T Kalsi ◽  
J K Dhesi ◽  
J S L Partridge

Abstract Introduction Older women are increasingly undergoing surgery for gynaecological malignancies. Although survival data is available other outcomes such as functional recovery are less well described. However older people are both more vulnerable to changes in function and often prioritise function over survival. There is limited published research examining function outside of context of sexual or urodynamic function following gynaeoncology surgery but a large body or research exists examining health-related quality of life (HrQOL) both as a pre-operative risk factor for survival and as a post-treatment outcome measure in its own right. HRQOL tools may report on physical function as a subcomponent within composite tools. This systematic review and narrative synthesis describes functional recovery after gynae-oncology surgery with respect to baseline characteristics which - if identified – could enable pre- or post-operative risk reduction. Methods Systematic search of MEDLINE and EMBASE databases and Cochrane Library between 1974-2018. Two reviewers independently reviewed abstracts/papers for inclusion against the following criteria:Mean/median age >60Gynaeoncological treatment includes surgery (RCTs, observational or mixed methods studies).Any measure of functional ability as defined by WHO ICF classification section D1–D7 inclusive, D855, D860-79 and D9 using validated tool.Minimum pre-operative and one post-operative measure. Results analysed and presented using narrative synthesis. Results Sixteen studies identified (7 Endometrial, 2 Ovarian, 2 Vulval, 6 mixed cancer types). 1/16 used a standalone functional assessment tool, 15/16 used Health-Related Quality of Life tools (EORTC QLQ C30 (10), FACT-G (3), SF-36 (3)) comprising items describing function. More studies showed full recovery to baseline (n=11) than incomplete recovery (n=5 including 2 reporting age as a negative association). Recovery was more likely and occurred faster in minimally-invasive surgery. 1 study demonstrated failure to recover baseline functional independence by 12 months.


Author(s):  
Jessica K. Knorst ◽  
Camila S. Sfreddo ◽  
Gabriela F. Meira ◽  
Fabrício B. Zanatta ◽  
Mario V. Vettore ◽  
...  

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