The determination of health-related quality of life (HRQL) for children with sickle cell disease 1) provides a broader method to assess the impact of sickle cell disease and its treatments on children's health and 2) may improve the care provided to these children. Prior studies of the HRQL of adults and children with sickle cell disease have utilized generic measures of HRQL and shown the poor HRQL of those who suffer from this disease. However, use of such generic measures likely reduce the ability to detect disease-specific health issues as well as the ability to detect changes in clinical status over time. Because there are no pediatric disease-specific HRQL questionnaires for children with sickle cell disease, this prior work may limit our ability to evaluate additional aspects of well being that are specific to these children, such as chronic pain, effect of medications and hospitalizations. Ideally, both a generic and disease-specific instrument should be used to measure HRQL. The PedsQL? is the most widely used generic measure of HRQL in children that has companion disease-specific modules. This proposal seeks to develop and validate a disease-specific HRQL module for use in children with sickle cell disease. The underlying hypothesis of this work is that the PedsQL Sickle Cell Disease module will be an effective tool to measure the impact of sickle cell disease and treatment from the perspective of the child and parent. The project proposed here will lay the foundation for testing this hypothesis.
The specific aims of this proposal encompass the four phases of isntrument development and are as follows: to identify disease-specific HRQL items representing the physical, social, emotional and cognitive well being of children with sickle cell disease, to construct a PedsQL Sickle Cell Disease Module that incorporates those HRQL areas found to be relevant to children with sickle cell disease and to determine pilot standard scores and psychometric properties for the PedsQL Sickle Cell Disease HRQL module. This project will result in a reliable and valid measure of HRQL of children with sickle cell disease that can be utilized to facilitate outcomes research as well as provide an alternative method to measure the effect of therapies in clinical trials for these children. The ultimate goal is to use this tool in clinical practice to improve the health and well being of children with sickle cell disease. This disease-specific questionnaire will be made available without fees for all academic researchers.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Specialized Center--Cooperative Agreements (U54)
Project #
5U54HL090503-02
Application #
7828060
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHL1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2009-04-01
Budget End
2010-03-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$160,120
Indirect Cost
Name
Medical College of Wisconsin
Department
Type
DUNS #
937639060
City
Milwaukee
State
WI
Country
United States
Zip Code
53226
Larson, M C; Karafin, M S; Hillery, C A et al. (2017) Phosphatidylethanolamine is progressively exposed in RBCs during storage. Transfus Med 27:136-141
Brandow, Amanda M; Panepinto, Julie A (2016) Clinical Interpretation of Quantitative Sensory Testing as a Measure of Pain Sensitivity in Patients With Sickle Cell Disease. J Pediatr Hematol Oncol 38:288-93
Larson, Michael C (2015) Free-flow electrophoresis to clean donated blood before transfusion at the point of care: a proof-of-concept study. Blood Transfus 13:342-4
Beverung, Lauren M; Varni, James W; Panepinto, Julie A (2015) Clinically meaningful interpretation of pediatric health-related quality of life in sickle cell disease. J Pediatr Hematol Oncol 37:128-33
Wandersee, Nancy J; Maciaszek, Jamie L; Giger, Katie M et al. (2015) Dietary supplementation with docosahexanoic acid (DHA) increases red blood cell membrane flexibility in mice with sickle cell disease. Blood Cells Mol Dis 54:183-8
Ataga, Kenneth I; Hinderliter, Alan; Brittain, Julia E et al. (2015) Association of pro-inflammatory high-density lipoprotein cholesterol with clinical and laboratory variables in sickle cell disease. Hematology 20:289-96
Yan, Xiaocai; Yan, Mingfei; Guo, Yihe et al. (2015) R-Ras Regulates Murine T Cell Migration and Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 Binding. PLoS One 10:e0145218
Xu, Hao; Wandersee, Nancy J; Guo, YiHe et al. (2014) Sickle cell disease increases high mobility group box 1: a novel mechanism of inflammation. Blood 124:3978-81
Brandow, Amanda M; Farley, Rebecca A; Panepinto, Julie A (2014) Neuropathic pain in patients with sickle cell disease. Pediatr Blood Cancer 61:512-7
Panepinto, Julie A; Torres, Sylvia; Bendo, Cristiane B et al. (2014) PedsQLâ„¢ Multidimensional Fatigue Scale in sickle cell disease: feasibility, reliability, and validity. Pediatr Blood Cancer 61:171-7

Showing the most recent 10 out of 35 publications