1,323 results on '"Varni James W"'
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2. Children's Environments and Health-Related Quality of Life: Evidence Informing Pediatric Healthcare Environmental Design
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Sherman, Sandra A., Shepley, Mardelle McCuskey, and Varni, James W.
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- 2023
3. Development of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ Eosinophilic Esophagitis Module items: qualitative methods
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Franciosi James P, Hommel Kevin A, Greenberg Allison B, DeBrosse Charles W, Greenler Alexandria J, Abonia J Pablo, Rothenberg Marc E, and Varni James W
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Quality of life ,Eosinophilic Esophagitis ,Children ,PedsQL™ ,Pediatrics ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
Abstract Background Currently there is no disease-specific outcome measure to assess the health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of pediatric patients with Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE). Therefore, the objective of this qualitative study was to further develop and finalize the items and support the content validity for the new Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) Eosinophilic Esophagitis Module. Methods Multiphase qualitative methodology was utilized in the development of the PedsQL™ EoE Module conceptual model. Focus interview transcripts of pediatric patients with EoE and their parents and expert review were previously used to develop the initial items and domains for the PedsQL™ EoE Module. In the current investigation, utilizing the respondent debriefing methodology, cognitive interviewing was conducted individually with pediatric patients with EoE and their parents on each newly developed item. Results Information from a total of 86 participants was obtained in combination from the previous investigation and the current study. From the previous 42 focus interviews, items were developed around the domain themes of symptoms, difficulties with eating food, treatment adherence, worry about symptoms and illness, feelings of being different than family and peers, and problems discussing EoE with others. In the current study’s cognitive interviewing phase, a separate cohort of 44 participants systematically reviewed and provided feedback on each item. Items were added, modified or deleted based on this feedback. Items were finalized after this feedback from patients and parents. Conclusions Using well-established qualitative methods, the content validity of the new PedsQL™ Eosinophilic Esophagitis Module items was supported in the current investigation. In the next iterative instrument development phase, the PedsQL™ Eosinophilic Esophagitis Module is now undergoing multisite national field testing.
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- 2012
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4. The PedsQL™ Oral Health Scale: feasibility, reliability and validity of the Brazilian Portuguese version
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Bendo Cristiane B, Paiva Saul M, Viegas Claudia M, Vale Miriam P, and Varni James W
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Oral health ,PedsQL ,Quality of life ,Validation ,Child ,Adolescent ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Oral and orofacial problems may cause a profound impact on children’s oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) because of symptoms associated with these conditions that may influence the physical, psychological and social aspects of their daily life. The OHRQoL questionnaires found in the literature are very specific and are not able to measure the impact of oral health on general health domains. Consequently, the objective of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the Portuguese version for Brazilian translation of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) Oral Health Scale in combination with the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales. Methods The PedsQL™ Oral Health Scale was forward-backward translated and cross-culturally adapted for the Brazilian Portuguese language. In order to assess the feasibility, reliability and validity of the Brazilian version of the instrument, a study was carried out in Belo Horizonte with 208 children and adolescents between 2 and 18 years-of-age and their parents. Clinical evaluation of dental caries, socioeconomic information and the Brazilian versions of the PedsQL™ Oral Health Scale, PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales, Child Perceptions Questionnaire (CPQ11-14 and CPQ8-10) and Parental-Caregiver Perception Questionnaire (P-CPQ) were administered. Statistical analysis included feasibility (missing values), confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), internal consistency reliability, and test-retest intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) of the PedsQL™ Oral Health Scale. Results There were no missing data for both child self-report and parent proxy-report on the Brazilian version of the PedsQL™ Oral Health Scale. The CFA showed that the five items of child self-report and parent proxy-report loaded on a single construct. The Cronbach's alpha coefficients for child/adolescent and parent oral health instruments were 0.65 and 0.59, respectively. The test-retest reliability (ICC) for child self-report and parent proxy-report were 0.90 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.86-0.93] and 0.86 (95%CI = 0.81-0.90), respectively. The PedsQL™ Oral Health Scale demonstrated acceptable construct validity, convergent validity and discriminant validity. Conclusions These results supported the feasibility, reliability and validity of the Brazilian version of the PedsQL™ Oral Health Scale for child self-report for ages 5–18 years-old and parent proxy-report for ages 2–18 years-old children.
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- 2012
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5. Development of six PROMIS pediatrics proxy-report item banks
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Irwin Debra E, Gross Heather E, Stucky Brian D, Thissen David, DeWitt Esi, Lai Jin, Amtmann Dagmar, Khastou Leyla, Varni James W, and DeWalt Darren A
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PROMIS ,HRQOL ,PRO ,Scale development ,Parent Proxy ,Pediatrics ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Pediatric self-report should be considered the standard for measuring patient reported outcomes (PRO) among children. However, circumstances exist when the child is too young, cognitively impaired, or too ill to complete a PRO instrument and a proxy-report is needed. This paper describes the development process including the proxy cognitive interviews and large-field-test survey methods and sample characteristics employed to produce item parameters for the Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) pediatric proxy-report item banks. Methods The PROMIS pediatric self-report items were converted into proxy-report items before undergoing cognitive interviews. These items covered six domains (physical function, emotional distress, social peer relationships, fatigue, pain interference, and asthma impact). Caregivers (n = 25) of children ages of 5 and 17 years provided qualitative feedback on proxy-report items to assess any major issues with these items. From May 2008 to March 2009, the large-scale survey enrolled children ages 8-17 years to complete the self-report version and caregivers to complete the proxy-report version of the survey (n = 1548 dyads). Caregivers of children ages 5 to 7 years completed the proxy report survey (n = 432). In addition, caregivers completed other proxy instruments, PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales Parent Proxy-Report version, PedsQL™ Asthma Module Parent Proxy-Report version, and KIDSCREEN Parent-Proxy-52. Results Item content was well understood by proxies and did not require item revisions but some proxies clearly noted that determining an answer on behalf of their child was difficult for some items. Dyads and caregivers of children ages 5-17 years old were enrolled in the large-scale testing. The majority were female (85%), married (70%), Caucasian (64%) and had at least a high school education (94%). Approximately 50% had children with a chronic health condition, primarily asthma, which was diagnosed or treated within 6 months prior to the interview. The PROMIS proxy sample scored similar or better on the other proxy instruments compared to normative samples. Conclusions The initial calibration data was provided by a diverse set of caregivers of children with a variety of common chronic illnesses and racial/ethnic backgrounds. The PROMIS pediatric proxy-report item banks include physical function (mobility n = 23; upper extremity n = 29), emotional distress (anxiety n = 15; depressive symptoms n = 14; anger n = 5), social peer relationships (n = 15), fatigue (n = 34), pain interference (n = 13), and asthma impact (n = 17).
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- 2012
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6. Development of a validated patient-reported symptom metric for pediatric Eosinophilic Esophagitis: qualitative methods
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Franciosi James P, Hommel Kevin A, DeBrosse Charles W, Greenberg Allison B, Greenler Alexandria J, Abonia J Pablo, Rothenberg Marc E, and Varni James W
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Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
Abstract Background Previous attempts to measure symptoms in pediatric Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE) have not fully included patients and parents in the item development process. We sought to identify and validate key patient self-reported and parent proxy-reported outcomes (PROs) specific to EoE. Methods We developed methodology for focus and cognitive interviews based on the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidelines for PROs, the validated generic PedsQL™ guidelines, and the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ). Both child (ages 8-12 and 13-18) and parent-proxy (ages 2-4, 5-7, 8-12, and 13-18) interviews were conducted. Results We conducted 75 interviews to construct the new instrument. Items were identified and developed from individual focus interviews, followed by cognitive interviews for face and content validation. Initial domains of symptom frequency and severity were developed, and open-ended questions were used to generate specific items during the focus interviews. Once developed, the instrument construct, instructions, timeframe, scoring, and specific items were systematically reviewed with a separate group of patients and their parents during the cognitive interviews. Conclusions To capture the full impact of pediatric EoE, both histologic findings and PROs need to be included as equally important outcome measures. We have developed the face and content validated Pediatric Eosinophilic Esophagitis Symptom Score (PEESS™ v2.0). The PEESS™ v2.0 metric is now undergoing multisite national field testing as the next iterative instrument development phase.
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- 2011
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7. Measuring health-related quality of life in Hungarian children with heart disease: psychometric properties of the Hungarian version of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales and the Cardiac Module
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Kardos László, Varni James W, Kemény Csilla, Kiss Mariann, Pataki István, Berkes Andrea, and Mogyorósy Gábor
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Objectives The aim of the study was to investigate the psychometric properties of the Hungarian version of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) Generic Core Scales and Cardiac Module. Methods The PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales and the PedsQL™ 3.0 Cardiac Module was administered to 254 caregivers of children (aged 2-18 years) and to 195 children (aged 5-18 years) at a pediatric cardiology outpatient unit. A postal survey on a demographically group-matched sample of the general population with 525 caregivers of children (aged 2-18 years) and 373 children (aged 5-18 years) was conducted with the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scale. Responses were described, compared over subgroups of subjects, and were used to assess practical utility, distributional coverage, construct validity, internal consistency, and inter-reporter agreement of the instrument. Results The moderate scale-level mean percentage of missing item responses (range 1.8-2.3%) supported the feasibility of the Generic Core Scales for general Hungarian children. Minimal to moderate ceiling effects and no floor effects were found on the Generic Core Scales. We observed stronger ceiling than floor effects in the Cardiac Module. Most of the scales showed satisfactory reliability with Cronbach's α estimates exceeding 0.70. Generally, moderate to good agreement was found between self- and parent proxy-reports in the patient and in the comparison group (intraclass correlation coefficient range 0.52-0.77), but remarkably low agreement in the perceived physical appearance subscale in the age group 5-7 years (0.18) and for the treatment II scale (problems on taking heart medicine) scale of the Cardiac Module in children aged 8-12 years (0.39). Assessing the construct validity of the questionnaires, statistically significant difference was found between the patient group and the comparison group only in the Physical Functioning Scale scores (p = 0.003) of the child self-report component, and in Physical (p = 0.022), Emotional, (p = 0.017), Psychosocial Summary (p = 0.019) scores and in the total HRQoL (health-related quality of life) scale score (p = 0.034) for parent proxy-report. Conclusion The findings generally support the feasibility, reliability and validity of the Hungarian translation of the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales and the PedsQL™ 3.0 Cardiac Module in Hungarian children with heart disease.
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- 2010
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8. Cognitive interviewing methodology in the development of a pediatric item bank: a patient reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS) study
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DeWalt Darren A, Yeatts Karin, Varni James W, and Irwin Debra E
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The evaluation of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in health care has seen greater use in recent years, and methods to improve the reliability and validity of PRO instruments are advancing. This paper discusses the cognitive interviewing procedures employed by the Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) pediatrics group for the purpose of developing a dynamic, electronic item bank for field testing with children and adolescents using novel computer technology. The primary objective of this study was to conduct cognitive interviews with children and adolescents to gain feedback on items measuring physical functioning, emotional health, social health, fatigue, pain, and asthma-specific symptoms. Methods A total of 88 cognitive interviews were conducted with 77 children and adolescents across two sites on 318 items. From this initial item bank, 25 items were deleted and 35 were revised and underwent a second round of cognitive interviews. A total of 293 items were retained for field testing. Results Children as young as 8 years of age were able to comprehend the majority of items, response options, directions, recall period, and identify problems with language that was difficult for them to understand. Cognitive interviews indicated issues with item comprehension on several items which led to alternative wording for these items. Conclusion Children ages 8–17 years were able to comprehend most item stems and response options in the present study. Field testing with the resulting items and response options is presently being conducted as part of the PROMIS Pediatric Item Bank development process.
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- 2009
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9. Initial validation of the Argentinean Spanish version of the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales in children and adolescents with chronic diseases: acceptability and comprehensibility in low-income settings
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Bauer Gabriela, Rodríguez Susana, Roizen Mariana, Medin Gabriela, Bevilacqua Silvina, Varni James W, and Dussel Veronica
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background To validate the Argentinean Spanish version of the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales in Argentinean children and adolescents with chronic conditions and to assess the impact of socio-demographic characteristics on the instrument's comprehensibility and acceptability. Reliability, and known-groups, and convergent validity were tested. Methods Consecutive sample of 287 children with chronic conditions and 105 healthy children, ages 2–18, and their parents. Chronically ill children were: (1) attending outpatient clinics and (2) had one of the following diagnoses: stem cell transplant, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, HIV/AIDS, cancer, end stage renal disease, complex congenital cardiopathy. Patients and adult proxies completed the PedsQL™ 4.0 and an overall health status assessment. Physicians were asked to rate degree of health status impairment. Results The PedsQL™ 4.0 was feasible (only 9 children, all 5 to 7 year-olds, could not complete the instrument), easy to administer, completed without, or with minimal, help by most children and parents, and required a brief administration time (average 5–6 minutes). People living below the poverty line and/or low literacy needed more help to complete the instrument. Cronbach Alpha's internal consistency values for the total and subscale scores exceeded 0.70 for self-reports of children over 8 years-old and parent-reports of children over 5 years of age. Reliability of proxy-reports of 2–4 year-olds was low but improved when school items were excluded. Internal consistency for 5–7 year-olds was low (α range = 0.28–0.76). Construct validity was good. Child self-report and parent proxy-report PedsQL™ 4.0 scores were moderately but significantly correlated (ρ = 0.39, p < 0.0001) and both significantly correlated with physician's assessment of health impairment and with child self-reported overall health status. The PedsQL™ 4.0 discriminated between healthy and chronically ill children (72.72 and 66.87, for healthy and ill children, respectively, p = 0.01), between different chronic health conditions, and children from lower socioeconomic status. Conclusion Results suggest that the Argentinean Spanish PedsQL™ 4.0 is suitable for research purposes in the public health setting for children over 8 years old and parents of children over 5 years old. People with low income and low literacy need help to complete the instrument. Steps to expand the use of the Argentinean Spanish PedsQL™ 4.0 include an alternative approach to scoring for the 2–4 year-olds, further understanding of how to increase reliability for the 5–7 year-olds self-report, and confirmation of other aspects of validity.
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- 2008
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10. Validation of the Korean version of the pediatric quality of life inventory™ 4.0 (PedsQL™) generic core scales in school children and adolescents using the rasch model
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Varni James W and Kook Seung Hee
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) is a child self-report and parent proxy-report instrument designed to assess health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in healthy and ill children and adolescents. It has been translated into over 70 international languages and proposed as a valid and reliable pediatric HRQOL measure. This study aimed to assess the psychometric properties of the Korean translation of the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales. Methods Following the guidelines for linguistic validation, the original US English scales were translated into Korean and cognitive interviews were administered. The field testing responses of 1425 school children and adolescents and 1431 parents to the Korean version of PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales were analyzed utilizing confirmatory factor analysis and the Rasch model. Results Consistent with studies using the US English instrument and other translation studies, score distributions were skewed toward higher HRQOL in a predominantly healthy population. Confirmatory factor analysis supported a four-factor and a second order-factor model. The analysis using the Rasch model showed that person reliabilities are low, item reliabilities are high, and the majority of items fit the model's expectation. The Rasch rating scale diagnostics showed that PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales in general have the optimal number of response categories, but category 4 (almost always a problem) is somewhat problematic for the healthy school sample. The agreements between child self-report and parent proxy-report were moderate. Conclusion The results demonstrate the feasibility, validity, item reliability, item fit, and agreement between child self-report and parent proxy-report of the Korean version of PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales for school population health research in Korea. However, the utilization of the Korean version of the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales for healthy school populations needs to consider low person reliability, ceiling effects and cultural differences, and further validation studies on Korean clinical samples are required.
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- 2008
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11. The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) family impact module: reliability and validity of the Brazilian version
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Viegas Cláudia M, Varni James W, Pordeus Isabela A, Paiva Saul M, Scarpelli Ana C, and Allison Paul J
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Pediatric health-related quality of life (HRQOL) has emerged as an important health outcome in clinical trials and healthcare research, for which HRQOL assessment instruments have played an important role. However, these instruments are not available in all countries or all languages. The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) Family Impact Module is a multidimensional instrument developed to assess the impact of chronic medical conditions on the HRQOL of parents and family functioning. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the PedsQL™ Family Impact Module cross-culturally adapted for use in Brazil. Methods The PedsQL™ Family Impact Module was administered to 95 parents/guardians of children with cancer in active therapy from 2 to 18 years of age of both genders. Subjects were recruited by means of convenience samples from the Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Centers at two public hospitals. The 'in-patient' sample was defined as individuals who were hospitalized for the administration of chemotherapy. The 'out-patient' sample was defined as individuals who were receiving chemotherapy and were not hospitalized. Results Test-retest reliability exhibited correlation values ranging from 0.81 to 0.96 for all subscales. Internal consistency reliability was demonstrated for the PedsQL™ Family Impact Module: Total Scale Score (α = 0.89), Parent Health-Related Quality of Life Summary Score (α = 0.83) and Family Summary Score (α = 0.73). The Total Impact Score for the in-patient and out-patient samples was 67.60 and 56.43, respectively (p < 0.01). The construct validity demonstrated that the PedsQL™ Family Impact Module proved capable of distinguishing between families whose children/adolescents were hospitalized and families of children/adolescents who are being taken care of at home. Conclusion The Brazilian version of the PedsQL™ Family Impact Module was considered reliable and valid for assessing the impact of a chronic pediatric health condition on the HRQOL of parents and family functioning. The instrument should be field tested on other chronic pediatric illnesses.
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- 2008
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12. Measurement properties of the Brazilian version of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL™) cancer module scale
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Varni James W, Ramos-Jorge Maria L, Pordeus Isabela A, Paiva Saul M, Scarpelli Ana C, and Allison Paul J
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The use of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measurements has been increased progressively in health surveys. These measurements document the functional and psychosocial outcomes of health conditions and complement clinical indicators to provide a comprehensive description of individuals and populations' health. The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) is a promising instrument with age-appropriate versions. The objective of the current paper was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the PedsQL™ 3.0 Cancer Module cross-culturally adapted for use in Brazil. Methods A cross-sectional study was developed with 190 Brazilian families of individuals from 2 to 18 years of age, of both genders, with cancer in various phases of treatment or control. Subjects were recruited by means of convenience samples from the Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Centers at two public hospitals. 'In-treatment' status was defined as individuals who were receiving medical care to induce remission. 'Off-treatment' status was defined as individuals for whom all therapy was completed for a period of at least one month. Reliability was determined through test-retest reliability and internal consistency. The validity of the Cancer Module was determined through discriminant and convergent validity. Correlations between the scores obtained by the children/adolescents with cancer and their guardians were assessed. Results Test-retest reliability demonstrated good correlation (0.69–0.90 for children/adolescents; 0.71–0.93 for guardians) and adequate agreement of the items (0.26–0.85 for children/adolescents; 0.25–0.87 for guardians). Internal consistency demonstrated adequate indices in comparisons between groups (α = 0.78–0.80 for children and adolescents; 0.68–0.88 for guardians). The 'pain and hurt', 'nausea', 'procedural anxiety' and 'treatment anxiety' subscales proved capable of distinguishing the groups of children in treatment and off treatment (p < 0.05). Positive significant correlations were observed between the scores of the PedsQL™ 3.0 Cancer Module and the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core scales. Weak correlations were found between the reports of the children and those of the guardians. Conclusion The Brazilian version of the PedsQL™ 3.0 Cancer Module exhibited good measurement properties regarding reproducibility and construct validity.
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- 2008
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13. Impaired health-related quality of life in children and adolescents with chronic conditions: a comparative analysis of 10 disease clusters and 33 disease categories/severities utilizing the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales
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Burwinkle Tasha M, Limbers Christine A, and Varni James W
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Advances in biomedical science and technology have resulted in dramatic improvements in the healthcare of pediatric chronic conditions. With enhanced survival, health-related quality of life (HRQOL) issues have become more salient. The objectives of this study were to compare generic HRQOL across ten chronic disease clusters and 33 disease categories/severities from the perspectives of patients and parents. Comparisons were also benchmarked with healthy children data. Methods The analyses were based on over 2,500 pediatric patients from 10 physician-diagnosed disease clusters and 33 disease categories/severities and over 9,500 healthy children utilizing the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales. Patients were recruited from general pediatric clinics, subspecialty clinics, and hospitals. Results Pediatric patients with diabetes, gastrointestinal conditions, cardiac conditions, asthma, obesity, end stage renal disease, psychiatric disorders, cancer, rheumatologic conditions, and cerebral palsy self-reported progressively more impaired overall HRQOL than healthy children, respectively, with medium to large effect sizes. Patients with cerebral palsy self-reported the most impaired HRQOL, while patients with diabetes self-reported the best HRQOL. Parent proxy-reports generally paralleled patient self-report, with several notable differences. Conclusion The results demonstrate differential effects of pediatric chronic conditions on patient HRQOL across diseases clusters, categories, and severities utilizing the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales from the perspectives of pediatric patients and parents. The data contained within this study represents a larger and more diverse population of pediatric patients with chronic conditions than previously reported in the extant literature. The findings contribute important information on the differential effects of pediatric chronic conditions on generic HRQOL from the perspectives of children and parents utilizing the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales. These findings with the PedsQL™ have clinical implications for the healthcare services provided for children with chronic health conditions. Given the degree of reported impairment based on PedsQL™ scores across different pediatric chronic conditions, the need for more efficacious targeted treatments for those pediatric patients with more severely impaired HRQOL is clearly and urgently indicated.
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- 2007
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14. The PedsQL™ as a patient-reported outcome in children and adolescents with fibromyalgia: an analysis of OMERACT domains
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Limbers Christine A, Szer Ilona S, Burwinkle Tasha M, and Varni James W
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Fibromyalgia is a chronic health condition characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain, multiple tender points on physical examination, generalized muscular aching, stiffness, fatigue, nonrestorative sleep pattern, cognitive dysfunction, and mood disturbance. Recently, the Outcome Measures in Rheumatoid Arthritis Clinical Trials (OMERACT) Fibromyalgia Syndrome Workshop ranked and prioritized the domains that should be consistently measured in fibromyalgia clinical trials, specifically, pain, generic health-related quality of life, fatigue, sleep quality, and physical function. The focus of these deliberations was exclusively on adult patients, and to our knowledge, these domains have not been previously tested within a multidimensional framework in children and adolescents with fibromyalgia. Methods An analysis to determine the feasibility, reliability, and validity of the PedsQL™ 4.0 (Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™) Generic Core Scales, PedsQL™ Multidimensional Fatigue Scale, and PedsQL™ Rheumatology Module Pain and Hurt Scale as patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures for pediatric patients with fibromyalgia. The PedsQL™ Scales were completed by 59 families in a pediatric rheumatology clinic in a large children's hospital. Results The PedsQL™ evidenced minimal missing responses (0.53% patient self-report, 0.70% parent proxy-report), achieved excellent reliability for the Generic Core Scales Total Scale Score (α = 0.88 patient self-report, 0.87 parent proxy-report), the Multidimensional Fatigue Scale Total Scale Score (α = 0.94 patient self-report, 0.94 parent proxy-report), and acceptable reliability for the 4-item Rheumatology Module Pain and Hurt Scale (α = 0.68 patient self-report, 0.75 parent proxy-report). The PedsQL™ Generic Core Scales and Multidimensional Fatigue Scale significantly distinguished between pediatric patients with fibromyalgia and healthy children. Pediatric patients with fibromyalgia self-reported severely impaired physical and psychosocial functioning, significantly lower on most dimensions when compared to pediatric cancer patients receiving cancer treatment, and significantly lower on all dimensions than pediatric patients with other rheumatologic diseases. Patients with fibromyalgia self-reported significantly greater pain and fatigue than pediatric patients with other rheumatologic conditions, and generally more fatigue than pediatric patients receiving treatment for cancer. Conclusion The results demonstrate the excellent measurement properties of the PedsQL™ Scales in fibromyalgia. These PedsQL™ Scales measure constructs consistent with the recommended OMERACT Fibromyalgia Syndrome Workshop domains. The findings highlight the severely impaired HRQOL of pediatric patients with fibromyalgia. Regular monitoring of pediatric patients with fibromyalgia will help identify children and adolescents at risk for severely impaired HRQOL. These PedsQL™ Scales are appropriate outcome measures for clinical trials and health services research for pediatric patients with fibromyalgia.
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- 2007
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15. How young can children reliably and validly self-report their health-related quality of life?: An analysis of 8,591 children across age subgroups with the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales
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Burwinkle Tasha M, Limbers Christine A, and Varni James W
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The last decade has evidenced a dramatic increase in the development and utilization of pediatric health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measures in an effort to improve pediatric patient health and well-being and determine the value of healthcare services. The emerging paradigm shift toward patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in clinical trials has provided the opportunity to further emphasize the value and essential need for pediatric patient self-reported outcomes measurement. Data from the PedsQL™ DatabaseSM were utilized to test the hypothesis that children as young as 5 years of age can reliably and validly report their HRQOL. Methods The sample analyzed represented child self-report age data on 8,591 children ages 5 to 16 years from the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales DatabaseSM. Participants were recruited from general pediatric clinics, subspecialty clinics, and hospitals in which children were being seen for well-child checks, mild acute illness, or chronic illness care (n = 2,603, 30.3%), and from a State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) in California (n = 5,988, 69.7%). Results Items on the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales had minimal missing responses for children as young as 5 years old, supporting feasibility. The majority of the child self-report scales across the age subgroups, including for children as young as 5 years, exceeded the minimum internal consistency reliability standard of 0.70 required for group comparisons, while the Total Scale Scores across the age subgroups approached or exceeded the reliability criterion of 0.90 recommended for analyzing individual patient scale scores. Construct validity was demonstrated utilizing the known groups approach. For each PedsQL™ scale and summary score, across age subgroups, including children as young as 5 years, healthy children demonstrated a statistically significant difference in HRQOL (better HRQOL) than children with a known chronic health condition, with most effect sizes in the medium to large effect size range. Conclusion The results demonstrate that children as young as the 5 year old age subgroup can reliably and validly self-report their HRQOL when given the opportunity to do so with an age-appropriate instrument. These analyses are consistent with recent FDA guidelines which require instrument development and validation testing for children and adolescents within fairly narrow age groupings and which determine the lower age limit at which children can provide reliable and valid responses across age categories.
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- 2007
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16. Parent proxy-report of their children's health-related quality of life: an analysis of 13,878 parents' reliability and validity across age subgroups using the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales
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Burwinkle Tasha M, Limbers Christine A, and Varni James W
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measurement has emerged as an important health outcome in clinical trials, clinical practice improvement strategies, and healthcare services research and evaluation. While pediatric patient self-report should be considered the standard for measuring perceived HRQOL, there are circumstances when children are too young, too cognitively impaired, too ill or fatigued to complete a HRQOL instrument, and reliable and valid parent proxy-report instruments are needed in such cases. Further, it is typically parents' perceptions of their children's HRQOL that influences healthcare utilization. Data from the PedsQL™ DatabaseSM were utilized to test the reliability and validity of parent proxy-report at the individual age subgroup level for ages 2–16 years as recommended by recent FDA guidelines. Methods The sample analyzed represents parent proxy-report age data on 13,878 children ages 2 to 16 years from the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales DatabaseSM. Parents were recruited from general pediatric clinics, subspecialty clinics, and hospitals in which their children were being seen for well-child checks, mild acute illness, or chronic illness care (n = 3,718, 26.8%), and from a State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) in California (n = 10,160, 73.2%). Results The percentage of missing item responses for the parent proxy-report sample as a whole was 2.1%, supporting feasibility. The majority of the parent proxy-report scales across the age subgroups exceeded the minimum internal consistency reliability standard of 0.70 required for group comparisons, while the Total Scale Scores across the age subgroups approached or exceeded the reliability criterion of 0.90 recommended for analyzing individual patient scale scores. Construct validity was demonstrated utilizing the known groups approach. For each PedsQL™ scale and summary score, across age subgroups, healthy children demonstrated a statistically significant difference in HRQOL (better HRQOL) than children with a known chronic health condition, with most effect sizes in the medium to large effect size range. Conclusion The results demonstrate the feasibility, reliability, and validity of parent proxy-report at the individual age subgroup for ages 2–16 years. These analyses are consistent with recent FDA guidelines which require instrument development and validation testing for children and adolescents within fairly narrow age groupings and which determine the lower age limit at which reliable and valid responses across age categories are achievable. Even as pediatric patient self-report is advocated, there remains a fundamental role for parent proxy-report in pediatric clinical trials and health services research.
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- 2007
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17. The PedsQL™ Present Functioning Visual Analogue Scales: preliminary reliability and validity
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Varni James W, Burwinkle Tasha M, Eisen Sarajane, and Sherman Sandra A
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The PedsQL™ Present Functioning Visual Analogue Scales (PedsQL™ VAS) were designed as an ecological momentary assessment (EMA) instrument to rapidly measure present or at-the-moment functioning in children and adolescents. The PedsQL™ VAS assess child self-report and parent-proxy report of anxiety, sadness, anger, worry, fatigue, and pain utilizing six developmentally appropriate visual analogue scales based on the well-established Varni/Thompson Pediatric Pain Questionnaire (PPQ) Pain Intensity VAS format. Methods The six-item PedsQL™ VAS was administered to 70 pediatric patients ages 5–17 and their parents upon admittance to the hospital environment (Time 1: T1) and again two hours later (Time 2: T2). It was hypothesized that the PedsQL™ VAS Emotional Distress Summary Score (anxiety, sadness, anger, worry) and the fatigue VAS would demonstrate moderate to large effect size correlations with the PPQ Pain Intensity VAS, and that patient" parent concordance would increase over time. Results Test-retest reliability was demonstrated from T1 to T2 in the large effect size range. Internal consistency reliability was demonstrated for the PedsQL™ VAS Total Symptom Score (patient self-report: T1 alpha = .72, T2 alpha = .80; parent proxy-report: T1 alpha = .80, T2 alpha = .84) and Emotional Distress Summary Score (patient self-report: T1 alpha = .74, T2 alpha = .73; parent proxy-report: T1 alpha = .76, T2 alpha = .81). As hypothesized, the Emotional Distress Summary Score and Fatigue VAS were significantly correlated with the PPQ Pain VAS in the medium to large effect size range, and patient and parent concordance increased from T1 to T2. Conclusion The results demonstrate preliminary test-retest and internal consistency reliability and construct validity of the PedsQL™ Present Functioning VAS instrument for both pediatric patient self-report and parent proxy-report. Further field testing is required to extend these initial findings to other ecologically relevant pediatric environments.
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- 2006
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18. The PedsQL™ as a patient-reported outcome in children and adolescents with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: a population-based study
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Burwinkle Tasha M and Varni James W
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is the most common chronic mental health condition in children and adolescents. The application of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) as a pediatric population health measure may facilitate risk assessment and resource allocation, the identification of health disparities, and the determination of health outcomes from interventions and policy decisions for children and adolescents with ADHD at the local community, state, and national health level. Methods An analysis from an existing statewide database to determine the feasibility, reliability, and validity of the 23-item PedsQL™ 4.0 (Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™) Generic Core Scales as a patient-reported outcome (PRO) measure of pediatric population health for children and adolescents with ADHD. The PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales (Physical, Emotional, Social, School Functioning) were completed by families through a statewide mail survey to evaluate the HRQOL of new enrollees in the State of California State's Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). Seventy-two children ages 5–16 self-reported their HRQOL. Results The PedsQL™ 4.0 evidenced minimal missing responses, achieved excellent reliability for the Total Scale Score (α = 0.92 child self-report, 0.92 parent proxy-report), and distinguished between healthy children and children with ADHD. Children with ADHD self-reported severely impaired psychosocial functioning, comparable to children with newly-diagnosed cancer and children with cerebral palsy. Conclusion The results suggest that population health monitoring may identify children with ADHD at risk for adverse HRQOL. The implications of measuring pediatric HRQOL for evaluating the population health outcomes of children with ADHD internationally are discussed.
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- 2006
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19. Health-related quality of life measurement in pediatric clinical practice: An appraisal and precept for future research and application
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Lane Mariella M, Burwinkle Tasha M, and Varni James W
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health-related quality of life ,clinical practice ,pediatrics ,children ,healthcare services ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measurement has emerged as an important health outcome in clinical trials, clinical practice improvement strategies, and healthcare services research and evaluation. HRQOL measures are also increasingly proposed for use in clinical practice settings to inform treatment decisions. In settings where HRQOL measures have been utilized with adults, physicians report such measures as useful, some physicians alter their treatment based on patient reports on such instruments, and patients themselves generally feel the instruments to be helpful. However, there is a dearth of studies evaluating the clinical utility of HRQOL measurement in pediatric clinical practice. This paper provides an updated review of the literature and proposes a precept governing the application of pediatric HRQOL measurement in pediatric clinical practice. Utilizing HRQOL measurement in pediatric healthcare settings can facilitate patient-physician communication, improve patient/parent satisfaction, identify hidden morbidities, and assist in clinical decision-making. Demonstrating the utility of pediatric HRQOL measurement in identifying children with the greatest needs, while simultaneously demonstrating the cost advantages of providing timely, targeted interventions to address those needs, may ultimately provide the driving force for incorporating HRQOL measurement in pediatric clinical practice.
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- 2005
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20. Pain and health-related quality of life in Duchenne muscular dystrophy: A multiple mediator analysis
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Varni, James W. and Uzark, Karen
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- 2023
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21. PedsQL™ Applied to Healthy and Ill Infants
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Varni, James W., Tognetti, Mara, Section editor, and Maggino, Filomena, editor
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- 2023
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22. The PedsQL™ Family Impact Module: Preliminary reliability and validity
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Dickinson Paige E, Burwinkle Tasha M, Sherman Sandra A, Varni James W, and Dixon Pamela
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health-related quality of life ,family ,pediatrics ,children ,PedsQL™ ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The PedsQL™ Measurement Model was designed to measure health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in children and adolescents. The PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales were developed to be integrated with the PedsQL™ Disease-Specific Modules. The newly developed PedsQL™ Family Impact Module was designed to measure the impact of pediatric chronic health conditions on parents and the family. The PedsQL™ Family Impact Module measures parent self-reported physical, emotional, social, and cognitive functioning, communication, and worry. The Module also measures parent-reported family daily activities and family relationships. Methods The 36-item PedsQL™ Family Impact Module was administered to 23 families of medically fragile children with complex chronic health conditions who either resided in a long-term care convalescent hospital or resided at home with their families. Results Internal consistency reliability was demonstrated for the PedsQL™ Family Impact Module Total Scale Score (α = 0.97), Parent HRQOL Summary Score (α = 0.96), Family Functioning Summary Score (α = 0.90), and Module Scales (average α = 0.90, range = 0.82 – 0.97). The PedsQL™ Family Impact Module distinguished between families with children in a long-term care facility and families whose children resided at home. Conclusions The results demonstrate the preliminary reliability and validity of the PedsQL™ Family Impact Module in families with children with complex chronic health conditions. The PedsQL™ Family Impact Module will be further field tested to determine the measurement properties of this new instrument with other pediatric chronic health conditions.
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- 2004
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23. Health-related quality of life as a predictor of pediatric healthcare costs: A two-year prospective cohort analysis
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Seid Michael, Varni James W, Segall Darron, and Kurtin Paul S
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Health-related quality of life ,PedsQL™ ,prediction ,healthcare costs ,managed care. ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The objective of this study was to test the primary hypothesis that parent proxy-report of pediatric health-related quality of life (HRQL) would prospectively predict pediatric healthcare costs over a two-year period. The exploratory hypothesis tested anticipated that a relatively small group of children would account for a disproportionately large percent of healthcare costs. Methods 317 children (157 girls) ages 2 to 18 years, members of a managed care health plan with prospective payment participated in a two-year prospective longitudinal study. At Time 1, parents reported child HRQL using the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™ 4.0) Generic Core Scales, and chronic health condition status. Costs, based on health plan utilization claims and encounters, were derived for 6, 12, and 24 months. Results In multiple linear regression equations, Time 1 parent proxy-reported HRQL prospectively accounted for significant variance in healthcare costs at 6, 12, and 24 months. Adjusted regression models that included both HRQL scores and chronic health condition status accounted for 10.1%, 14.4%, and 21.2% of the variance in healthcare costs at 6, 12, and 24 months. Parent proxy-reported HRQL and chronic health condition status together defined a 'high risk' group, constituting 8.7% of the sample and accounting for 37.4%, 59.2%, and 62% of healthcare costs at 6, 12, and 24 months. The high risk group's per member per month healthcare costs were, on average, 12 times that of other enrollees' at 24 months. Conclusions While these findings should be further tested in a larger sample, our data suggest that parent proxy-reported HRQL can be used to prospectively predict healthcare costs. When combined with chronic health condition status, parent proxy-reported HRQL can identify an at risk group of children as candidates for proactive care coordination.
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- 2004
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24. Higher Risks of Toxicity and Incomplete Recovery in 13- to 17-Year-Old Females after Marrow Donation: RDSafe Peds Results.
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Pulsipher, Michael A, Logan, Brent R, Kiefer, Deidre M, Chitphakdithai, Pintip, Riches, Marcie L, Rizzo, J Douglas, Anderlini, Paolo, Leitman, Susan F, Varni, James W, Kobusingye, Hati, Besser, RaeAnne M, Miller, John P, Drexler, Rebecca J, Abdel-Mageed, Aly, Ahmed, Ibrahim A, Ball, Edward D, Bolwell, Brian J, Bunin, Nancy J, Cheerva, Alexandra, Delgado, David C, Dvorak, Christopher C, Gillio, Alfred P, Hahn, Theresa E, Hale, Gregory A, Haight, Ann E, Hayes-Lattin, Brandon M, Kasow, Kimberly A, Linenberger, Michael, Magalhaes-Silverman, Margarida, Mori, Shahram, Prasad, Vinod K, Quigg, Troy C, Sahdev, Indira, Schriber, Jeffrey R, Shenoy, Shalini, Tse, William T, Yanik, Gregory A, Navarro, Willis H, Horowitz, Mary M, Confer, Dennis L, Shaw, Bronwen E, and Switzer, Galen E
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Humans ,Pain ,Tissue and Organ Harvesting ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,Transplantation ,Homologous ,Age Factors ,Sex Factors ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Tissue Donors ,Female ,Male ,BM collection toxicities ,Donor safety ,PBSC collection toxicities ,Stem cell transplantation ,Transplantation ,Chronic Pain ,Neurosciences ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Stem Cell Research ,Pain Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,Immunology ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
Although donation of bone marrow (BM) or peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs) from children to family members undergoing allogeneic transplantation are well-established procedures, studies detailing levels of pain, symptoms, and long-term recovery are lacking. To address this lack, we prospectively enrolled 294 donors age 20% of females and males age 13 to 17 years do not return to baseline pain levels by 1 year after BM donation. Studies aimed at decreasing symptoms and improving recovery in older children are warranted.
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- 2019
25. Effect of Aging and Predonation Comorbidities on the Related Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Donor Experience: Report from the Related Donor Safety Study.
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Pulsipher, Michael A, Logan, Brent R, Chitphakdithai, Pintip, Kiefer, Deidre M, Riches, Marcie L, Rizzo, J Douglas, Anderlini, Paolo, Leitman, Susan F, Varni, James W, Kobusingye, Hati, Besser, RaeAnne M, Miller, John P, Drexler, Rebecca J, Abdel-Mageed, Aly, Ahmed, Ibrahim A, Akard, Luke P, Artz, Andrew S, Ball, Edward D, Bayer, Ruthee-Lu, Bigelow, Carolyn, Bolwell, Brian J, Broun, E Randolph, Bunin, Nancy J, Delgado, David C, Duckworth, Katharine, Dvorak, Christopher C, Hahn, Theresa E, Haight, Ann E, Hari, Parameswaran N, Hayes-Lattin, Brandon M, Jacobsohn, David A, Jakubowski, Ann A, Kasow, Kimberly A, Lazarus, Hillard M, Liesveld, Jane L, Linenberger, Michael, Litzow, Mark R, Longo, Walter, Magalhaes-Silverman, Margarida, McCarty, John M, McGuirk, Joseph P, Mori, Shahram, Prasad, Vinod K, Rowley, Scott D, Rybka, Witold B, Sahdev, Indira, Schriber, Jeffrey R, Selby, George B, Shaughnessy, Paul J, Shenoy, Shalini, Spitzer, Thomas, Tse, William T, Uberti, Joseph P, Vusirikala, Madhuri, Waller, Edmund K, Weisdorf, Daniel J, Yanik, Gregory A, Navarro, Willis H, Horowitz, Mary M, Switzer, Galen E, Shaw, Bronwen E, and Confer, Dennis L
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Humans ,Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Transplantation ,Comorbidity ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Blood Donors ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Peripheral Blood Stem Cells ,BM collection toxicities ,Donor safety ,PBSC collection toxicities ,Stem cell transplantation ,Transplantation ,Pain Research ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Pain ,Stem Cell Research ,Aging ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology - Abstract
The development of reduced-intensity approaches for allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation has resulted in growing numbers of older related donors (RDs) of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs). The effects of age on donation efficacy, toxicity, and long-term recovery in RDs are poorly understood. To address this we analyzed hematologic variables, pain, donation-related symptoms, and recovery in 1211 PBSC RDs aged 18 to 79 enrolled in the Related Donor Safety Study. RDs aged > 60 had a lower median CD34+ level before apheresis compared with younger RDs (age > 60, 59 × 106/L; age 41 to 60, 81 × 106/L; age 18 to 40, 121 × 106/L; P < .001). This resulted in older donors undergoing more apheresis procedures (49% versus 30% ≥ 2 collections, P < .001) and higher collection volumes (52% versus 32% > 24 L, P < .001), leading to high percentages of donors aged > 60 with postcollection thrombocytopenia
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- 2019
26. Diabetes management mediating effects between diabetes symptoms and health‐related quality of life in adolescents and young adults with type 1 diabetes
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Varni, James W, Delamater, Alan M, Hood, Korey K, Driscoll, Kimberly A, Wong, Jenise C, Adi, Saleh, Yi‐Frazier, Joyce P, Grishman, Ellen K, Faith, Melissa A, Corathers, Sarah D, Kichler, Jessica C, Miller, Jennifer L, Raymond, Jennifer K, Doskey, Elena M, Aguirre, Vincent, Heffer, Robert W, Wilson, Don P, and Consortium, on behalf of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 32 Diabetes Module Testing Study
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Services ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Diabetes ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Disease Management ,Factor Analysis ,Statistical ,Female ,Health Communication ,Humans ,Male ,Quality of Life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Treatment Adherence and Compliance ,Young Adult ,health-related quality of life ,patient-reported outcomes ,pediatrics ,PedsQL ,self-management ,symptoms ,type 1 diabetes ,Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 3.2 Diabetes Module Testing Study Consortium ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThe primary objective was to investigate the mediating effects of diabetes management in the relationship between diabetes symptoms and generic health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with type 1 diabetes. The secondary objective explored patient health communication and perceived treatment adherence barriers as mediators in a serial multiple mediator model.MethodsThe PedsQL 3.2 Diabetes Module 15-item diabetes symptoms summary score, 18-item diabetes management summary score, and PedsQL 4.0 generic core scales were completed in a 10-site national field test study by 418 AYA aged 13 to 25 years with type 1 diabetes. Diabetes symptoms and diabetes management were tested for bivariate and multivariate linear associations with overall generic HRQOL. Mediational analyses were conducted to test the hypothesized mediating effects of diabetes management as an intervening variable between diabetes symptoms and generic HRQOL.ResultsThe predictive effects of diabetes symptoms on HRQOL were mediated in part by diabetes management. In predictive analytics models utilizing multiple regression analyses, demographic and clinical covariates, diabetes symptoms, and diabetes management significantly accounted for 53% of the variance in generic HRQOL (P
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- 2018
27. PedsQL 3.2 Diabetes Module for Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults: Reliability and Validity in Type 1 Diabetes
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Varni, James W, Delamater, Alan M, Hood, Korey K, Raymond, Jennifer K, Chang, Nancy T, Driscoll, Kimberly A, Wong, Jenise C, Yi-Frazier, Joyce P, Grishman, Ellen K, Faith, Melissa A, Corathers, Sarah D, Kichler, Jessica C, Miller, Jennifer L, Doskey, Elena M, Heffer, Robert W, and Wilson, Don P
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Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Diabetes ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Parents ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Psychometrics ,Quality of Life ,Reproducibility of Results ,Self Report ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Young Adult ,Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 3.2 Diabetes Module Testing Study Consortium ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveThe objective of the study was to report on the measurement properties of the revised and updated Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) 3.2 Diabetes Module for children, adolescents, and young adults with type 1 diabetes.Research design and methodsThe 33-item PedsQL 3.2 Diabetes Module and PedsQL Generic Core Scales were completed in a 10-site national field test study by 656 families of patients ages 2-25 years with type 1 diabetes.ResultsThe 15-item Diabetes Symptoms Summary Score and 18-item Diabetes Management Summary Score were derived from the factor analysis of the items. The Diabetes Symptoms and Diabetes Management Summary Scores evidenced excellent reliability (patient self-report α = 0.88-0.90; parent proxy report α = 0.89-0.90). The Diabetes Symptoms and Diabetes Management Summary Scores demonstrated construct validity through medium to large effect size correlations with the Generic Core Scales Total Scale Score (r = 0.43-0.67, P < 0.001). HbA1c was significantly correlated with the Diabetes Symptoms and Diabetes Management Summary Scores (r = -0.21 to -0.29, P < 0.001). Minimal clinically important difference scores ranged from 5.05 to 5.55.ConclusionsThe PedsQL 3.2 Diabetes Module Diabetes Symptoms and Diabetes Management Summary Scores demonstrated excellent measurement properties and may be useful as standardized patient-reported outcomes of diabetes symptoms and diabetes management in clinical research, clinical trials, and practice in children, adolescents, and young adults with type 1 diabetes.
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- 2018
28. Prevalence of Gastrointestinal Symptoms and Impact on Quality of Life at 1-Year Follow-Up of Initial Attack of Acute Pancreatitis
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Nasr, Alexander, Hornung, Lindsey, Thompson, Tyler, Lin, Tom K., Vitale, David S., Nathan, Jaimie D., Varni, James W., and Abu-El-Haija, Maisam
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- 2022
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29. Association of Pathogen Type With Outcomes of Children Encountering Community-Acquired Pediatric Septic Shock
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Salud, Derek, Reeder, Ron W., Banks, Russell K., Meert, Kathleen L., Berg, Robert A., Zuppa, Athena, Newth, Christopher J., Hall, Mark W., Quasney, Michael, Sapru, Anil, Carcillo, Joseph A., McQuillen, Patrick S., Mourani, Peter M., Varni, James W., and Zimmerman, Jerry J.
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- 2022
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30. Cognitive functioning and pain interference mediate pain predictive effects on health-related quality of life in pediatric patients with Neurofibromatosis Type 1
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Varni, James W., Nutakki, Kavitha, and Swigonski, Nancy L.
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- 2020
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31. The Association of Early Corticosteroid Therapy With Clinical and Health-Related Quality of Life Outcomes in Children With Septic Shock*
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Kamps, Nicole N., Banks, Russell, Reeder, Ron W., Berg, Robert A., Newth, Christopher J., Pollack, Murray M., Meert, Kathleen L., Carcillo, Joseph A., Mourani, Peter M., Sorenson, Samuel, Varni, James W., Cengiz, Pelin, Zimmerman, Jerry J., Meert, Kathleen L., Heidemann, Sabrina, Pawluszka, Ann, Lulic, Melanie, Berg, Robert A., Zuppa, Athena, Twelves, Carolann, Ann DiLiberto, Mary, Pollack, Murray, Wessel, David, Berger, John, Tomanio, Elyse, Hession, Diane, Wolfe, Ashley, Mourani, Peter, Carpenter, Todd, Ladell, Diane, Sierra, Yamila, Rutebemberwa, Alle, Hall, Mark, Yates, Andy, Steele, Lisa, Flowers, Maggie, Hensley, Josey, Sapru, Anil, Harrison, Rick, Ashtari, Neda, Ratiu, Anna, Carcillo, Joe, Bell, Michael, Koch, Leighann, Abraham, Alan, McQuillen, Patrick, McKenzie, Anne, Zetino, Yensy, Newth, Christopher, Kwok, Jeni, Yamakawa, Amy, Quasney, Michael, Shanley, Thomas, Jayachandran, C.J., Chima, Ranjit, Wong, Hector, Krallman, Kelli, Stoneman, Erin, Benken, Laura, Yunger, Toni, Zimmerman, Jerry J., Chen, Catherine, Sullivan, Erin, Merritt, Courtney, Rich, Deana, McGalliard, Julie, Haaland, Wren, Whitlock, Kathryn, Salud, Derek, Dean, J. Michael, Holubkov, Richard, Coleman, Whit, Sorenson, Samuel, Reeder, Ron, Banks, Russell, Webster, Angie, Burr, Jeri, Bisping, Stephanie, Liu, Teresa, Stock, Emily, Flick, Kristi, and Varni, James
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- 2022
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32. Pain, skin sensations symptoms, and cognitive functioning predictors of health-related quality of life in pediatric patients with Neurofibromatosis Type 1
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Varni, James W., Nutakki, Kavitha, and Swigonski, Nancy L.
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- 2019
33. PedsQL™ Cognitive Functioning Scale in youth with epilepsy: Reliability and validity
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Varni, James W., Junger, Katherine F., Kellermann, Tanja, Grossman, Lauren Barrett, Wagner, Janelle, Mucci, Grace A., Guilfoyle, Shanna M., Smith, Gigi, Zupanc, Mary L., and Modi, Avani C.
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- 2020
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34. Development of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ Spinal Cord Injury (PedsQL™ SCI) module: qualitative methods
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Hwang, Miriam, Zebracki, Kathy, Vogel, Lawrence C., Mulcahey, Mary Jane, and Varni, James W.
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- 2020
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35. Pain, pain interference, social and school/work functioning in youth with spinal cord injury: A mediation analysis.
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Varni, James W., Zebracki, Kathy, Hwang, Miriam, Mulcahey, M.J., and Vogel, Lawrence C.
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- 2024
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36. Heart disease symptoms and health‐related quality of life in pediatric heart transplant recipients: A serial multiple mediator analysis
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Varni, James W., primary and Uzark, Karen, additional
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- 2023
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37. Diabetes symptoms predictors of health-related quality of life in adolescents and young adults with type 1 or type 2 diabetes
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Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory, Diabetes Module Testing Study Consortium, Varni, James W., Delamater, Alan M., Hood, Korey K., Raymond, Jennifer K., Driscoll, Kimberly A., Wong, Jenise C., Adi, Saleh, Yi-Frazier, Joyce P., Grishman, Ellen K., Faith, Melissa A., Corathers, Sarah D., Kichler, Jessica C., Miller, Jennifer L., Doskey, Elena M., Aguirre, Vincent P., Heffer, Robert W., and Wilson, Don P.
- Published
- 2018
38. Health Related Quality of Life and Neurocognitive Outcomes in the First Year after Pediatric Acute Liver Failure
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Bukauskas, Kathryn, Schulte, Madeline, Narkewicz, Michael R., Hite, Michelle, Rand, Elizabeth B., Piccoli, David, Kawchak, Deborah, Seidman, Christa, Romero, Rene, Karpen, Saul, de la Cruz-Tracy, Liezl, Hunt, Kelsey, Subbarao, Girish C., Klipsch, Ann, Munson, Sarah, Kelly, Susan, Rosenthal, Philip J., Fleck, Shannon, Leonis, Mike A., Bucuvalas, John, Horning, Tracie, Baez, Norberto Rodriguez, Montanye, Shirley, Cowie, Margaret, Horslen, Simon P., Murray, Karen, Young, Melissa, Nielson, Heather, Klein, Jani, Rudnick, David A., Shepherd, Ross W., Harris, Kathy, Karpen, Saul J., De La Torre, Alejandro, Dell Olio, Dominic, Kelly, Deirdre, Lloyd, Carla, Lobritto, Steven J., Bakhsh, Sumerah, Jonas, Maureen, Elifoson, Scott A., Raza, Roshan, Schwarz, Kathleen B., Karnsakul, Wikrom W., Alford, Mary Kay, Dhawan, Anil, Fitzpatrick, Emer, Kerkar, Nanda N., Haydel, Brandy, Narayanappa, Sreevidya, Lopez, M. James, Shieck, Victoria, Sorensen, Lisa G., Neighbors, Katie, Hardison, Regina M., Loomes, Kathleen M., Varni, James W., Ng, Vicky L., Squires, Robert H., and Alonso, Estella M.
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- 2018
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39. Associations of Abdominal Pain and Psychosocial Distress Measures With Health-Related Quality-of-Life in Pediatric Healthy Controls and Irritable Bowel Syndrome
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Hollier, John M., Czyzewski, Danita I., Self, Mariella M., Liu, Yan, Weidler, Erica M., van Tilburg, Miranda A.L., Varni, James W., and Shulman, Robert J.
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- 2020
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40. Health Related Quality of Life in Patients with Biliary Atresia Surviving with their Native Liver
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Sundaram, Shikha S, Alonso, Estella M, Haber, Barbara, Magee, John C, Fredericks, Emily, Kamath, Binita, Kerkar, Nanda, Rosenthal, Philip, Shepherd, Ross, Limbers, Christine, Varni, James W, Robuck, Patricia, Sokol, Ronald J, and Network, Childhood Liver Disease Research and Education
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Congenital Structural Anomalies ,Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis ,Liver Disease ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Minority Health ,Digestive Diseases ,Transplantation ,Rare Diseases ,Organ Transplantation ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Biliary Atresia ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Liver ,Liver Transplantation ,Male ,Models ,Statistical ,Multivariate Analysis ,Pediatrics ,Quality of Life ,Regression Analysis ,Young Adult ,Childhood Liver Disease Research and Education Network ,ALT ,Alanine aminotransferase ,GI ,Gastrointestinal ,HPE ,HRQOL ,Health related quality of life ,Hepatic portoenterostomy ,ICC ,Intra-class correlation coefficient ,LT ,Liver transplant ,Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory ,PedsQL ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
ObjectivesTo quantify health related quality of life (HRQOL) of patients with biliary atresia with their native livers and compare them with healthy children and patients with biliary atresia post-liver transplant (LT) and to examine the relationship between HRQOL and medical variables.Study designA cross-sectional HRQOL study of patients with biliary atresia with their native livers (ages 2-25 years) was conducted and compared with healthy and post-LT biliary atresia samples using Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 child self and parent proxy reports, a validated measure of physical/psychosocial functioning.Results221 patients with biliary atresia with native livers (54% female, 67% white) were studied. Patient self and parent proxy reports showed significantly poorer HRQOL than healthy children across all domains (P < .001), particularly in emotional and psychosocial functioning. Child self and parent proxy HRQOL scores from patients with biliary atresia with their native livers and post-LT biliary atresia were similar across all domains (P = not significant). Child self and parent proxy reports showed moderate agreement across all scales, except social functioning (poor to fair agreement). On multivariate regression analysis, black race and elevated total bilirubin were associated with lower Total and Psychosocial HRQOL summary scores.ConclusionsHRQOL in patients with biliary atresia with their native livers is significantly poorer than healthy children and similar to children with post-LT biliary atresia. These findings identify significant opportunities to optimize the overall health of patients with biliary atresia.
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- 2013
41. The Relationship between Health-Related Quality of Life, Pain, and Coping Strategies in Juvenile Arthritis: A One Year Prospective Study
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Varni, James W. and Baghurst, Peter A.
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- 2005
42. The PedsQL™: Reliability and Validity of the Short-Form Generic Core Scales and Asthma Module
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Chan, Kitty S., Mangione-Smith, Rita, Burwinkle, Tasha M., Rosen, Mayde, and Varni, James W.
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- 2005
43. Perceived medication adherence barriers mediating effects between gastrointestinal symptoms and health-related quality of life in pediatric inflammatory bowel disease
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Varni, James W., Shulman, Robert J., Self, Mariella M., Saeed, Shehzad A., Zacur, George M., Patel, Ashish S., Nurko, Samuel, Neigut, Deborah A., Franciosi, James P., Saps, Miguel, Denham, Jolanda M., Dark, Chelsea Vaughan, Bendo, Cristiane B., and Pohl, John F.
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- 2018
44. Gastrointestinal symptoms predictors of health-related quality of life in pediatrie patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders
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Varni, James W., Shulman, Robert J., Self, Mariella M., Nurko, Samuel, Saps, Miguel, Saeed, Shehzad A., Patel, Ashish S., Dark, Chelsea Vaughan, Bendo, Cristiane B., and Pohl, John F.
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- 2017
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45. Noise and autism spectrum disorder in children: An exploratory survey
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Kanakri, Shireen M., Shepley, Mardelle, Varni, James W., and Tassinary, Louis G.
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- 2017
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46. PedsQL™ 4.0: Reliability and Validity of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ Version 4.0 Generic Core Scales in Healthy and Patient Populations
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Varni, James W., Seid, Michael, and Kurtin, Paul S.
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- 2001
47. Biomarkers for Estimating Risk of Hospital Mortality and Long-Term Quality-of-Life Morbidity After Surviving Pediatric Septic Shock: A Secondary Analysis of the Life After Pediatric Sepsis Evaluation Investigation*
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Wong, Hector R., Reeder, Ron W., Banks, Russell, Berg, Robert A., Meert, Kathleen L., Hall, Mark W., McQuillen, Patrick S., Mourani, Peter M., Chima, Ranjit S., Sorenson, Samuel, Varni, James W., McGalliard, Julie, and Zimmerman, Jerry J.
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- 2021
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48. Severe Acute Kidney Injury Is Associated With Increased Risk of Death and New Morbidity After Pediatric Septic Shock*
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Starr, Michelle C., Banks, Russell, Reeder, Ron W., Fitzgerald, Julie C., Pollack, Murray M., Meert, Kathleen L., McQuillen, Patrick S., Mourani, Peter M., Chima, Ranjit S., Sorenson, Samuel, Varni, James W., Hingorani, Sangeeta, and Zimmerman, Jerry J.
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- 2020
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49. Longitudinal Trajectories of Caregiver Distress and Family Functioning After Community-Acquired Pediatric Septic Shock
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Murphy, Lexa K., Palermo, Tonya M., Meert, Kathleen L., Reeder, Ron, Dean, J. Michael, Banks, Russell, Berg, Robert A., Carcillo, Joseph A., Chima, Ranjit, McGalliard, Julie, Haaland, Wren, Holubkov, Richard, Mourani, Peter M., Pollack, Murray M., Sapru, Anil, Sorenson, Samuel, Varni, James W., and Zimmerman, Jerry
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- 2020
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50. Critical Illness Factors Associated With Long-Term Mortality and Health-Related Quality of Life Morbidity Following Community-Acquired Pediatric Septic Shock*
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Zimmerman, Jerry J., Banks, Russell, Berg, Robert A., Zuppa, Athena, Newth, Christopher J., Wessel, David, Pollack, Murray M., Meert, Kathleen L., Hall, Mark W., Quasney, Michael, Sapru, Anil, Carcillo, Joseph A., McQuillen, Patrick S., Mourani, Peter M., Wong, Hector, Chima, Ranjit S., Holubkov, Richard, Coleman, Whitney, Sorenson, Samuel, Varni, James W., McGalliard, Julie, Haaland, Wren, Whitlock, Kathryn, Dean, J. Michael, and Reeder, Ron W.
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- 2020
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