Back to Search Start Over

Establishment of a condition-specific quality-of-life questionnaire for children born with esophageal atresia aged 2–7 across 14 countries

Authors :
The International EA-QOL Group
Michaela Dellenmark Blom
Stefanie Witt
Benjamin Zendejas
Ivana Sabolić
Juan Domingo Porras-Hernandez
Natalie Durkin
Simon Eaton
Kjersti Birketvedt
Alba Sánchez Galán
Katalin Eszter Müller
Anna Rozensztrauch
Tutku Soyer
Siqi Li
Anastasia Fourtaka
Corne de Vos
Graham Slater
Ana Špoljarić
John Bennett
Ragnhild Emblem
Zita Andrásdi
Robert Smigiel
Dariusz Patkowski
Çiğdem Ulukaya Durakbaşa
Marina Stilinović
Frederic Gottrand
Dora Škrljak Šoša
Tomislav Luetić
Sylwester Gerus
Shen Yang
Yong Zhao
Yichao Gu
Shuangshuang Li
Diego Rodriguez-Alvirde
Orsolya Kadenczki
Miram Pasini
Vuokko Wallace
Anke Widenmann
Feliciana Milagres Sikwete
Jinshi Huang
Leopoldo Martínez Martínez
Kate Abrahamsson
Shawn Izadi
Benno M Ure
Daniel Sidler
Julia H Quitmann
Jens Dingemann
Source :
Frontiers in Pediatrics, Vol 11 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2023.

Abstract

BackgroundEsophageal atresia (EA) is a rare congenital anomaly characterized by a discontinuity of the esophagus. Following surgical repair, survival rates have improved dramatically the past decenniums and today exceed 90%, but the children commonly present with esophageal and respiratory morbidity. In 2018, a condition-specific quality-of-life questionnaire for children with esophageal atresia (EA) aged 2–7 in Sweden-Germany was finalized (The EA-QOL questionnaire). The study aim was to describe the evaluation of the new translations across 12 new countries in Europe, Asia, Africa, Central-and North America.MethodsFollowing forward-backward translation into the new languages, the 17-item EA-QOL questionnaire was tested in cognitive debriefing interviews with parents of children with EA aged 2–7. Parents rated if each item was easy to understand (clarity) and sensitive to answer (interference with personal integrity). They could skip responding to a non-applicable/problematic item and give open comments. Predefined psychometric criteria were used; item clarity ≥80%/item sensitive to answer ≤20%/item feasibility ≤5% missing item responses. The decision to modify the translation was based on native expert, patient stakeholder, and instrument developer review, and the need for harmonization between translations.ResultsSimilar to findings in the Swedish-German cognitive debriefing, the cross-cultural analysis of input from 116 parents from 12 new countries (4–14 parents, median 9 parents/country) showed that all items in the EA-QOL questionnaire fulfilled the criteria for item clarity ≥80% and sensitive to answer (ranging from 1%-4.5%), although results varied between countries. Four items had missing responses between 5.2% and 13.4%, three within the same domain and were in line with parents’ explanations. Poor translations and feasibility were improved.ConclusionsBased on parent input, the collaboration between native experts, patient stakeholders, and instrument developers, a linguistic version of the EA-QOL questionnaire for children aged 2–7 for use in and across 14 countries has been established. These efforts have set the conditions for a cross-cultural field test of the EA-QOL questionnaire and will open the doors for a new chapter in outcome research, registries, and clinical practice concerning children with EA. In the long-term, this will help increase knowledge of the disease's burden, promote patient-centeredness, exchange of information between nations, and strengthen evidence-based treatments for children born with EA.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22962360
Volume :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Pediatrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4829ecacbcbb4ffebab6b964fbec1314
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2023.1253892