Urinary incontinence and quality of life in children.

OBJECTIVE Urinary incontinence (UI) negatively affects children's quality of life (QOL). It is not known if parents are reliable informants on impact and QOL nor if lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) are related to QOL. We wished to determine the association between LUTS measured by the Dysfunctional Voiding Symptom Score (DVSS) and QOL measured by the Pediatric Urinary Incontinence QOL tool (PIN-Q), and to test the relationship between parent and patient's responses. SUBJECTS AND METHOD Forty children (10 males, 30 females), aged 5-11 years with non-neurogenic daytime wetting, and their parents completed DVSS and PIN-Q as well as responding to open-ended questions about the effect of incontinence. RESULTS Child DVSS: mean 12.6 (3 (very mild) to 21 (severe)); parent DVSS: mean 12.8 (3-20). Child PIN-Q: mean 37.6 (8 (no effect) to 70 (severe effect)); parent PIN-Q: mean 38.7 (15-61). Parents indicated a major effect of UI on family function and dynamics, as well as on the child. CONCLUSIONS UI has a major effect on the child and the family. The PIN-Q and DVSS are complementary and provide a clinically appropriate picture of LUTS and impact on QOL. Parents understood the effect of incontinence and could act as proxy for the child.

[1]  S. Campbell,et al.  Measuring quality of life , 1997 .

[2]  Katsumi Inoue,et al.  The micturition habits and prevalence of daytime urinary incontinence in Japanese primary school children. , 2004, The Journal of urology.

[3]  G. McLorie,et al.  Reliability of the pediatric dysfunctional voiding symptom score in monitoring response to behavioral modification. , 2001, The Canadian journal of urology.

[4]  J. Heron,et al.  Psychological Problems in Children With Daytime Wetting , 2006, Pediatrics.

[5]  P. Hoebeke,et al.  Self-image and performance in children with nocturnal enuresis. , 2002, European urology.

[6]  G. Guyatt,et al.  How well do parents know their children? implications for proxy reporting of child health-related quality of life , 2004, Quality of Life Research.

[7]  E. Canda,et al.  An evaluation of quality of life of mothers of children with enuresis nocturna , 2008, Pediatric Nephrology.

[8]  C. Eiser,et al.  Current approaches to assessing the quality of life in children and adolescents , 2003, BJU international.

[9]  C. Yeung,et al.  PinQ: a valid, reliable and reproducible quality-of-life measure in children with bladder dysfunction. , 2006, Journal of pediatric urology.

[10]  W. Bower Self‐Reported Effect of Childhood Incontinence on Quality of Life , 2008, Journal of wound, ostomy, and continence nursing : official publication of The Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nurses Society.

[11]  A. Leung,et al.  An approach to daytime wetting in children. , 2006, Advances in pediatrics.

[12]  C. Cooper,et al.  Coping, commitment, and attitude: quantifying the everyday burden of enuresis on children and their families. , 2004, Pediatrics.

[13]  R. Kelleher Daytime and nighttime wetting in children: a review of management. , 1997, Journal of the Society of Pediatric Nurses : JSPN.

[14]  J. Craig,et al.  Daytime urinary incontinence in primary school children: a population-based survey. , 2000, The Journal of pediatrics.

[15]  J. Wit,et al.  The proxy problem: child report versus parent report in health-related quality of life research , 2004, Quality of Life Research.

[16]  H. Raat,et al.  Pediatric health-related quality of life questionnaires in clinical trials , 2006, Current opinion in allergy and clinical immunology.

[17]  E. Bergström,et al.  Self-esteem before and after treatment in children with nocturnal enuresis and urinary incontinence. , 1997, Scandinavian journal of urology and nephrology. Supplementum.

[18]  C. Eiser,et al.  Quality-of-life measures in chronic diseases of childhood. , 2001, Health technology assessment.

[19]  B. Starfield,et al.  Parental perceptions of enuresis. A collaborative study. , 1981, American journal of diseases of children.

[20]  D. Lehr,et al.  German version of the Pediatric Incontinence Questionnaire for urinary incontinence health related quality of life. , 2009, The Journal of urology.

[21]  M. Blades,et al.  Characteristics of Health-related Self-report Measures for Children Aged Three to Eight Years: A Review of the Literature , 2006, Quality of Life Research.

[22]  C. Yeung,et al.  Development of a validated quality of life tool specific to children with Bladder dysfunction , 2006, Neurourology and urodynamics.

[23]  P. Merguerian,et al.  The dysfunctional voiding scoring system: quantitative standardization of dysfunctional voiding symptoms in children. , 2000, The Journal of urology.

[24]  S. Bauer,et al.  The standardization of terminology of lower urinary tract function in children and adolescents: Report from the standardization committee of the International Children's Continence Society (ICCS) , 2006, The Journal of urology.