Abstract

PurposeResearch demonstrates that children and adolescents with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) are impacted in multiple ways beyond their short stature; however, there are no disease-specific measures to assess these impacts. The purpose of this study was to examine the burden of GHD on children and adolescents, and to conduct concept elicitation to develop a model of the impact of GHD to support a disease-specific outcome measure.MethodsFour focus groups and 52 telephone interviews were conducted with children with GHD and parents/guardians of children with GHD to understand the experience and impacts from the child’s perspective, reported by children or parent-observers about the impact on the child. The interviews and focus groups were conducted in Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Interview transcripts were analyzed thematically based on modified grounded theory principles.ResultsThere were 73 descriptions of patient’s experiences elicited from 70 respondents, as three respondents spoke for two children each. A majority of GHD descriptive narratives refer to boy children (n = 51, 69.9%) and a majority of children had taken GHD treatment (n = 64, 89%). Analysis identified four major areas of GHD impact: Signs and Symptoms (beyond short stature), Physical Aspects of Daily Life, Social Well-Being, and Emotional Well-Being.ConclusionsThe burden of GHD in children and adolescents is considerable and not limited to short stature. The severity of GHD impact on children and adolescents appears to be variable and individualized, but these data indicate that early identification and growth hormone treatment may lead to fewer impacts.

Highlights

  • Growth hormone deficiency (GHD) results when the pituitary gland does not produce enough growth hormone to stimulate the body to grow and manifest as a slow or flat rate of growth in both early and later childhood [1]

  • The severity of GHD impact on children and adolescents appears to be variable and individualized, but these data indicate that early identification and growth hormone treatment may lead to fewer impacts

  • The purpose of this study was to examine the burden of GHD on children and adolescents and to conduct concept elicitation to develop a model of the impact of GHD with adequate conceptual validity to support the development of diseasespecific patient-reported outcome (PRO) and observerreported outcome (ObsRO) measures

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Growth hormone deficiency (GHD) results when the pituitary gland does not produce enough growth hormone to stimulate the body to grow and manifest as a slow or flat rate of growth in both early and later childhood [1]. The prevalence of childhood GHD reported in published studies is within the range 1.8–2.9 per 10,000 in Europe and US [4,5,6]. A recent study reported the incidence of childhood onset GHD to be 2.58 for males and 1.70 for females per 100,000 [7]. Children with GHD may exhibit psychological and behavioral impacts. Some of these impacts may be directly related to short stature, there are additional proximal impacts which are not directly related to short stature such as academic underachievement due to poor concentration [8].

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call