Background: Primary nocturnal enuresis (PNE) affects a relevant proportion of children (10-15% at school entrance). While a significant impact on psychological well-being and self-esteem of children has been reported, the consequences for Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) have been less addressed. The aim of this investigation is the analysis of HRQoL of PNE under therapy with an established questionnaire.
Methods: The KINDL‑R questionnaire for HRQoL with 24 items in 6 dimensions was sent to all patients of the enuresis outpatient clinic (ages 7-17 years, minimum 3 months of therapy, no achieved dryness). Actual number of wet nights and eventual comorbidities were extracted from the clinical data.
Results: Of 57 questionnaires sent by mail, 47 were returned from patients and parents (82.5%). The patient results did not show a correlation between HRQoL and age, but there was a negative correlation of physical well-being and increasing age (r = -0.259, p < 0.05). A marked negative correlation was seen between bed-wetting frequency and HRQoL (r = -0.372, p < 0.05), especially in the dimensions "self-worthiness" (r = -0.399, p < 0.005) and "chronic-generic" (r = -0.383, p < 0.05).
Discussion: During enuresis treatment without achieved dryness, the patients did not show systematic limitation in HRQoL compared to reference populations. This is in contrast to limitations in HRQoL and self-esteem before therapy, but may possibly be explained by the correlation of this dimension with bed-wetting frequency in this study and the reported improvement through treatment in other studies. Both factors support the need and importance of adequate PNE therapy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00120-021-01549-x | DOI Listing |
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