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OR05-2 Development and Validation of a Short Version of the Quality of Life DSD Questionnaire (QoL-DSD) for Parents of Young Children with Disorders/Differences of Sex Development

BACKGROUND: Disorders/Differences of sex development (DSD) may be associated with adverse psychosocial and psychosexual outcomes in adults. However, there is a paucity of information on health-related quality of life (QoL) outcomes in parents and children with DSD and a lack of instruments available...

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Autores principales: Ahmed, S Faisal, Flett, Martyn, Gardner, Melissa, Lee, Boma, O’Toole, Stuart, Sandberg, David, Steven, Mairi, Xin, Yiqiao, Ali, Salma Rashid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9625707/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.1266
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author Ahmed, S Faisal
Flett, Martyn
Gardner, Melissa
Lee, Boma
O’Toole, Stuart
Sandberg, David
Steven, Mairi
Xin, Yiqiao
Ali, Salma Rashid
author_facet Ahmed, S Faisal
Flett, Martyn
Gardner, Melissa
Lee, Boma
O’Toole, Stuart
Sandberg, David
Steven, Mairi
Xin, Yiqiao
Ali, Salma Rashid
author_sort Ahmed, S Faisal
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Disorders/Differences of sex development (DSD) may be associated with adverse psychosocial and psychosexual outcomes in adults. However, there is a paucity of information on health-related quality of life (QoL) outcomes in parents and children with DSD and a lack of instruments available for evaluating these outcomes. Recently, this has led to the development of Parent Self-Report and Proxy-Report QoL questionnaires (QoL-DSD), validated measures for parents of young children with DSD, comprising 63 items within 13 domains and 25 items within 5 domains, respectively. OBJECTIVE: While retaining the original domain structure of the QoL-DSD questionnaires, we aimed to develop short forms of the QoL-DSD, optimizing their use in routine clinic settings. METHODS: Short forms of the DSD-QoL Parent Self-Report (QoL-DSD Short PSR) and Parent Proxy-Report (QoL-DSD Short PPR) questionnaires were developed following exploratory factor analysis with maximum likelihood and varimax rotation, using previous QoL-DSD data from 132 parents. Long and resulting short form questionnaires were completed online by 18 parents of children with DSD, under 7 years of age, attending endocrine and urology clinics at one tertiary hospital in Scotland. RESULTS: Item selection for the short forms — QoL-DSD Short PSR and QoL-DSD Short PPR — based on item factor loadings of >0.8, produced questionnaires containing 16 and 7 items, respectively. Eighteen parents completed both long and short forms of the Parent Self-Report for children aged <7 years, and a subset of these (n=13) also completed long and short forms of the Parent Proxy-Report for children aged 2 to 7 years. Of the 18 target children, all were boys with a median age of 3.6 years (range 0.4, 6.6) and 10 (59%) had proximal hypospadias. Overall, agreement was achieved between the short and long questionnaires in 9 out of 12 (75%) domains on the Parent Self-Report and 4 out of 5 (80%) domains on the Parent Proxy-Report. Correlations between total scores on the short and long forms were 0.508 to 0.897 in 9 of 12 domains in the QoL-DSD Short PSR. Parental feedback (n=18) regarding the acceptability of the short versus long forms was evaluated using a 5-point Likert score: 83% (versus 66%) of parents agreed the length of time (less than 3 minutes) taken to complete short forms was acceptable, 39% preferred the short forms compared with 11% whom preferred the longer version, 45% (versus 22%) stated a preference to complete the short forms should they be implemented routinely at clinic visits in the future. CONCLUSIONS: Short forms of the QoL-DSD for parents of young children with DSD may be more acceptable for use in a routine outpatient setting to evaluate psychosocial distress experienced by young children with DSD and their caregivers. Further psychometric validation in a larger cohort is warranted. Presentation: Saturday, June 11, 2022 11:45 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
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spelling pubmed-96257072022-11-14 OR05-2 Development and Validation of a Short Version of the Quality of Life DSD Questionnaire (QoL-DSD) for Parents of Young Children with Disorders/Differences of Sex Development Ahmed, S Faisal Flett, Martyn Gardner, Melissa Lee, Boma O’Toole, Stuart Sandberg, David Steven, Mairi Xin, Yiqiao Ali, Salma Rashid J Endocr Soc Pediatric Endocrinology BACKGROUND: Disorders/Differences of sex development (DSD) may be associated with adverse psychosocial and psychosexual outcomes in adults. However, there is a paucity of information on health-related quality of life (QoL) outcomes in parents and children with DSD and a lack of instruments available for evaluating these outcomes. Recently, this has led to the development of Parent Self-Report and Proxy-Report QoL questionnaires (QoL-DSD), validated measures for parents of young children with DSD, comprising 63 items within 13 domains and 25 items within 5 domains, respectively. OBJECTIVE: While retaining the original domain structure of the QoL-DSD questionnaires, we aimed to develop short forms of the QoL-DSD, optimizing their use in routine clinic settings. METHODS: Short forms of the DSD-QoL Parent Self-Report (QoL-DSD Short PSR) and Parent Proxy-Report (QoL-DSD Short PPR) questionnaires were developed following exploratory factor analysis with maximum likelihood and varimax rotation, using previous QoL-DSD data from 132 parents. Long and resulting short form questionnaires were completed online by 18 parents of children with DSD, under 7 years of age, attending endocrine and urology clinics at one tertiary hospital in Scotland. RESULTS: Item selection for the short forms — QoL-DSD Short PSR and QoL-DSD Short PPR — based on item factor loadings of >0.8, produced questionnaires containing 16 and 7 items, respectively. Eighteen parents completed both long and short forms of the Parent Self-Report for children aged <7 years, and a subset of these (n=13) also completed long and short forms of the Parent Proxy-Report for children aged 2 to 7 years. Of the 18 target children, all were boys with a median age of 3.6 years (range 0.4, 6.6) and 10 (59%) had proximal hypospadias. Overall, agreement was achieved between the short and long questionnaires in 9 out of 12 (75%) domains on the Parent Self-Report and 4 out of 5 (80%) domains on the Parent Proxy-Report. Correlations between total scores on the short and long forms were 0.508 to 0.897 in 9 of 12 domains in the QoL-DSD Short PSR. Parental feedback (n=18) regarding the acceptability of the short versus long forms was evaluated using a 5-point Likert score: 83% (versus 66%) of parents agreed the length of time (less than 3 minutes) taken to complete short forms was acceptable, 39% preferred the short forms compared with 11% whom preferred the longer version, 45% (versus 22%) stated a preference to complete the short forms should they be implemented routinely at clinic visits in the future. CONCLUSIONS: Short forms of the QoL-DSD for parents of young children with DSD may be more acceptable for use in a routine outpatient setting to evaluate psychosocial distress experienced by young children with DSD and their caregivers. Further psychometric validation in a larger cohort is warranted. Presentation: Saturday, June 11, 2022 11:45 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Oxford University Press 2022-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9625707/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.1266 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Pediatric Endocrinology
Ahmed, S Faisal
Flett, Martyn
Gardner, Melissa
Lee, Boma
O’Toole, Stuart
Sandberg, David
Steven, Mairi
Xin, Yiqiao
Ali, Salma Rashid
OR05-2 Development and Validation of a Short Version of the Quality of Life DSD Questionnaire (QoL-DSD) for Parents of Young Children with Disorders/Differences of Sex Development
title OR05-2 Development and Validation of a Short Version of the Quality of Life DSD Questionnaire (QoL-DSD) for Parents of Young Children with Disorders/Differences of Sex Development
title_full OR05-2 Development and Validation of a Short Version of the Quality of Life DSD Questionnaire (QoL-DSD) for Parents of Young Children with Disorders/Differences of Sex Development
title_fullStr OR05-2 Development and Validation of a Short Version of the Quality of Life DSD Questionnaire (QoL-DSD) for Parents of Young Children with Disorders/Differences of Sex Development
title_full_unstemmed OR05-2 Development and Validation of a Short Version of the Quality of Life DSD Questionnaire (QoL-DSD) for Parents of Young Children with Disorders/Differences of Sex Development
title_short OR05-2 Development and Validation of a Short Version of the Quality of Life DSD Questionnaire (QoL-DSD) for Parents of Young Children with Disorders/Differences of Sex Development
title_sort or05-2 development and validation of a short version of the quality of life dsd questionnaire (qol-dsd) for parents of young children with disorders/differences of sex development
topic Pediatric Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9625707/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.1266
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