Outcomes at five to eight years of age for children with Hirschsprung’s disease

Author:

Allin Benjamin Saul RaywoodORCID,Opondo Charles,Bradnock Timothy JohnORCID,Kenny Simon Edward,Kurinczuk Jennifer J,Walker Gregor M,Knight MarianORCID,

Abstract

ObjectiveThis study describes core outcomes of Hirschsprung’s disease (HD) in a UK-wide cohort of primary school-aged children.DesignA prospective cohort study conducted from 1 October 2010 to 30 September 2012. Outcomes data were collected from parents and clinicians when children were 5–8 years of age, and combined with data collected at birth, and 28 days and 1 year post diagnosis.SettingAll 28 UK and Irish paediatric surgical centres.ParticipantsChildren with histologically proven HD diagnosed at <6 months of age.Main outcome measuresNETS1HD core outcomes.ResultsData were returned for 239 (78%) of 305 children. Twelve children (5%) died prior to 5 years of age.Of the 227 surviving children, 30 (13%) had a stoma and 21 (9%) were incontinent of urine. Of the 197 children without a stoma, 155 (79%) maintained bowel movements without enemas/washouts, while 124 (63%) reported faecal incontinence. Of the 214 surviving children who had undergone a pull-through operation, 95 (44%) underwent ≥1 unplanned reoperation. 89 unplanned reoperations (27%) were major/complex.Of the 83 children with returned PedsQL scores, 37 (49%) had quality of life scores, and 31 (42%) had psychological well-being scores, that were ≥1 SD lower than the reference population mean for children without HD.ConclusionThis study gives a realistic picture of population outcomes of HD in primary school-aged children in the UK/Ireland. The high rates of faecal incontinence, unplanned procedures and low quality of life scores are sobering. Ensuring clinicians address the bladder, bowel and psychological problems experienced by children should be a priority.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research

Newlife - The Charity for Disabled Children

Oxfordshire Health Services Research Committee

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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