AI Article Synopsis

  • Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are utilized to gather feedback from patients, particularly focusing on adolescents after gynecomastia surgery to understand their quality of life.
  • The study involved adolescent patients at British Columbia Children's Hospital, analyzing their responses to the Body Contouring Questionnaire (BODY-Q) and comparing their scores to normative data.
  • Results showed that patients who had surgery had significantly higher satisfaction with chest appearance and psychological well-being than their peers, highlighting the positive impact of gynecomastia surgery and its potential to reduce stigma.

Article Abstract

Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are increasingly used to seek feedback from patients. Knowledge gaps exist regarding outcomes in adolescents postgynecomastia surgery. This study assesses adolescent patients' quality of life postgynecomastia surgery using a PROM specific for body contouring procedures, and identifies patient and treatment factors associated with quality of life scores. Adolescent patients undergoing surgical treatment for Simon grades I, IIa, or IIb gynecomastia from May 2009 to November 2022 at British Columbia Children's Hospital were invited to complete the Body Contouring Questionnaire (BODY-Q) and scales. Raw scores were Rasch transformed (scale 0-100), averaged, and compared to normative scores. Body mass index (BMI), Simon grade, postoperative complication, and revision procedure information were collected from medical charts and analyzed for associations with BODY-Q scores. Thirty-seven of 76 patients (48.7%) completed the BODY-Q. At the time of survey completion, the median age of participants was 23.3 years, and the median BMI was 26.5. The median time from surgery to survey completion was 7 years. Median scores on the and scales were 70 and 71, respectively, which were significantly higher than normative scores of unaffected males on the same scales ( = .0004 and  = .0014, respectively). Undergoing a revision procedure was associated with significantly worse satisfaction with chest appearance (= .045). Patients who underwent gynecomastia surgery report better satisfaction with chest appearance and psychological function, as measured by the BODY-Q, compared to unaffected males of similar age and BMI. These results may play an important role in destigmatizing gynecomastia surgery for adolescents.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11561927PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/22925503241249753DOI Listing

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