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Quality of life of pediatric and adult individuals with osteogenesis imperfecta: a meta-analysis

Journal

ORPHANET JOURNAL OF RARE DISEASES
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13023-023-02728-z

Keywords

Osteogenesis imperfecta; Rare disease; Quality of life; Pediatrics; Adult; Physical health; Mental health; PedsQL (TM); SF-36; SF-12

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This meta-analysis aimed to analyze the quality of life (QoL) in children and adults with osteogenesis imperfecta (OI). The results showed that children with OI had significantly lower QoL in emotional, school, and social functioning compared to controls. Similarly, adults with OI had lower QoL in both physical and mental components. Further research is needed to explore QoL in children and adolescents and to investigate the association between OI phenotype severity and mental health in adults.
Background Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a group of rare inheritable disorders of connective tissue. The cardinal manifestations of OI are low bone mass and reduced bone mineral strength, leading to increased bone fragility and deformity that may lead to significant impairment in daily life. The phenotypic manifestations show a broad range of severity, ranging from mild or moderate to severe and lethal. The here presented meta-analysis aimed to analyze existing findings on quality of life (QoL) in children and adults with OI.Methods Nine databases were searched with predefined key words. The selection process was executed by two independent reviewers and was based on predetermined exclusion and inclusion criteria. The quality of each study was assessed using a risk of bias tool. Effect sizes were calculated as standardized mean differences. Between-study heterogeneity was calculated with the I-2 statistic.Results Among the studies included two featured children and adolescents (N = 189), and four adults (N = 760). Children with OI had significantly lower QoL on the Pediatric quality of life inventory (PedsQL) with regards to the total score, emotional, school, and social functioning compared to controls and norms. The data was not sufficient to calculate differences regarding OI-subtypes. In the adult sample assessed with Short Form Health Survey Questionnaire, 12 (SF-12) and 36 items (SF-36), all OI types showed significantly lower QoL levels across all physical component subscales compared to norms. The same pattern was found for the mental component subscales namely vitality, social functioning, and emotional role functioning. The mental health subscale was significantly lower for OI type I, but not for type III and IV. All of the included studies exhibited a low risk of bias.Conclusions QoL was significantly lower in children and adults with OI compared to norms and controls. Studies in adults comparing OI subtypes showed that the clinical severity of the phenotype is not related to worse mental health QoL. Future research is needed to examine QoL in children and adolescents in more sophisticated ways and to better understand the association between clinical severity of an OI-phenotype/severity and mental health in adults.

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