Eye‐related quality of life and activities of daily living in pediatric retinoblastoma patients: A single‐center, non‐controlled, cross‐sectional analysis

Author:

Wise Jacob1,Hayashi Robert1ORCID,Wu Tiffany1ORCID,Malone Sara1,Badawi Amer Al1,King Allison1ORCID,Gordon Mae1,Kimera Lawrencia1,Lueder Gregg1,Reynolds Margaret1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Washington University Saint Louis/Saint Louis Children's Hospital Saint Louis Missouri USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionChildhood retinoblastoma (RB) survivors are known to experience long‐term morbidity; however, eye‐related quality of life (QoL), which may significantly impact activities of daily living (ADL), has not been extensively studied in this population. The purpose of this cross‐sectional study was to assess QoL and ADL morbidity among school‐age RB survivors.MethodsThe Pediatric Eye Questionnaire (PedEyeQ) and Roll Evaluation Activities of Life (REAL) were administered to childhood RB survivors between ages 5 and 17 followed at St. Louis Children's Hospital. Visual outcomes and demographic predictors of ADL and QoL were examined.ResultsTotal 23 patients (mean age 9.6 years) consented for participation in this study. All children experienced at least one domain on the PedEyeQ ≤ 80%. Subjects and parents marked functional vision to be the most impacted domain with a median score of 82.5 and 83.4, respectively. Only 10.5% of participants scored above 75% on the ADL percentile rank. On multivariable analysis, decreased visual acuity (VA) was associated with worse “Child Functional” (odds ratio [OR] −59.2, p = .004) and “Parent Worry Function” (OR −66.5, p = .03) metrics. Decreased contrast sensitivity was associated with worse “Parent Impact” (OR 21.0, p = .02) and “Parent Worry Function” (OR 3.70, p = .04) metrics. Longer saccade horizontal latency was associated with a worse “Parent Worry Function” metric (OR 43.0, p = .009). On multivariable analysis, no variable was significantly associated with ADL.ConclusionRB survivors have impaired QoL and ADL. Screening for such difficulties should strongly be considered for all RB patients. Additional studies may help predict morbidity based on visual metrics and demographic data.

Funder

Research to Prevent Blindness

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Oncology,Hematology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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