Background: To understand what life is like for US children with a diagnosis of Growth Hormone Deficiency or Idiopathic Short Stature, the impact of short stature on Health related Quality of Life (HrQoL) was qualitatively examined and needs for care from the young patients and their parents perspective were identified. Methods: Focus group discussions with 26 American-English speaking and nine American-Spanish speaking children and their parents were conducted, transcribed verbatim and subsequently qualitatively analyzed by two independent raters, using an existing coding guideline, based on the multidimensional HrQoL concept and a special software (VERBI-Software MAXQDA 10). Results: A total of 1313 statements for the English-speaking and 447 statements for the Spanish-speaking families were categorized. In the US, the strongest frequency of mention was found for the HrQoL dimension “Social” across respondents, followed by “Treatment” and “Emotion”. Conclusion: Conducting and analyzing data generated from focus groups ensure that young patients’ experiences of disease are represented in the measure of outcomes for use in clinical trials and patient care.
Health-related Quality of Life (HrQoL) is considered an important health indicator in pediatrics and instruments are increasingly being developed for its assessment [
A literature review identified five pediatric condition-specific instruments available for use in children and adolescents with short stature. None of these measures, however, provide full coverage of HrQoL domains potentially influenced by short stature [
The QoLISSY questionnaire was originally developed in five European countries (UK, Spain, France, Sweden and Germany) and their respective languages (English, Spanish, French, Swedish and German) as a self-report for children and adolescents eight to eighteen years of age, diagnosed with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) or idiopathic short stature (ISS) and for observer-report by parents of children aged four to eighteen [
The objective of this study was to provide evidence for the conceptual appropriateness and practical feasibility of the QoLISSY in US patients diagnosed with GHD and ISS prior to a field test to assess the psychometric performance of the American-English and American-Spanish version of the questionnaire. While information on the development and validation of the US QoLISSY version is available [
Short stature (SS) is defined as a height of 2.0 or more standard deviations (SD) below the population-specific mean height for age, gender, and nationality. [
Assessment of HrQoL can help to identify the multi-dimensional burden of short stature and to better tailor interventions and evaluate treatment effects [
Understanding the experience of living with short stature involves not only the identification of relevant dimensions from the perspective of patients and parents but also an acknowledgement of the cultural background in which respondents live. Some studies found impairments of HrQoL in children and adolescents with short stature [
A patient-reported outcome (PRO) instrument is defined as the report of health status coming directly from the patient without interpretation of the patient’s response by a third party [
Including the patient and caregivers through the conduct of focus groups and interviews is a key feature within the HrQoL questionnaire development process. A qualitative research methodology that focuses on children/adolescents and their parents’ experiences is a necessary first step in developing tools to assess HrQoL outcomes. Qualitative research based on semi-structured interviews is an effective method to elicit experiences, beliefs, points of view, understandings, perceptions, impressions, needs and concerns as well as attitudes from the perspective of the individuals on a specific topic [
Individual interviews and focus groups offer the researcher insight into a wide range of views that people have about a specific issue as well as how they discuss and interact on the issue. Conducting focus group interviews is a useful approach, particularly when the researcher may not have an in-depth understanding or knowledge about how a medical condition affects people and the concerns they have regarding their health [
The overall aim of the US QoLISSY validation study was to provide an American-Eng- lish and an American-Spanish version of the QoLISSY instrument and to evaluate each language version using qualitative and quantitative methods of data collection and analysis. In a first step, focus group discussions for concept elicitation were conducted to examine if the representation of the HrQoL concepts are appropriate for this population. In a second step, a pilot test of the current validated UK English and Spain Spanish questionnaire with a subsequent cognitive interview was performed after a five minute break. Results from the qualitative analysis were used to identify the patient’s as well as the parent’s needs and concerns regarding the child’s short stature and its treatment, based on their own experiences.
Patient recruitment and focus group discussions took place in three pediatric clinical centers across the US between January 2012 and July 2012. Group sessions children with a GHD or ISS diagnosis (age 8 - 12 and 13 - 18 years and height < −2.0 SDS prior to GH treatment) and parents of children (4 - 18 years) were held separately but in parallel for convenience. Each focus group session ranged in size from three to eight participants and was scheduled to take between 60 to 90 minutes to complete. The sample size was predefined, but depending on saturation regarding results. In- and exclusion criteria were defined as follows:
Inclusion Criteria
・ Children with ISS and GHD diagnosis―with no less than −2.25 SD at start of treatment or if currently untreated −2 SD;
・ Age groups―4 - 7 (parent only), 8 - 12, and 13 - 18 years AND at least one parent matched to child;
・ May be treated with growth hormone from any source or untreated―Must have medical data source documentation available for CRF. Treatment with Genotropin is allowed but not required for participation;
・ Attending regular school (i.e., no significant cognitive deficit, have social experience in groups);
・ For US English speaking―English must be the primary language spoken in the home and the first language of the parent―children in the 8 and older groups must be able to read English.
Exclusion Criteria
・ Significant concomitant medical conditions (including physical and mental health) in either child or parent based on the physician’s opinion;
・ Critical life events that make it difficult or impossible to participate (such as death of a close relative);
・ Subjects may have had prior or ongoing growth hormone therapy with Genotropin or other growth hormone. Those in the treated group must have had at least 6 months of prior treatment and treatment must still be ongoing OR have been treated for no less than 36 months and ceased treatment for any reason.
Group discussions were recorded and transcribed using the transcription software “f4” (Version: v4.2―audiotranskription.de). American-Spanish transcriptions were translated into US-English by two independent psychology and linguistic professionals prior to the analysis. The transcripts were sorted according to children/adolescent and parent groups and the names were anonymized so that identification was not possible. Family and individual IDs were assigned to each participant, so that contributions from each participant as well as linked child-parent dyads could be reviewed. The study was approved by an IRB at each site and all participants gave their informed consent and/or assent prior to their participation in the interviews.
Data collected from the focus groups were processed using the “Maximized Qualitative Data Analysis Program” (VERBI-Software MAXQDA 10). A coding guideline was developed that defined the categories, identified the coding rules and provided anchors. The categories were derived from the literature on HrQoL as well as the original QoLISSY project in a deductive fashion. The main function of the qualitative analysis was to code the concepts through the creation of a category system and to allocate individual text elements to a specific category. A category is a main area e.g. “Emotion” with subareas (e.g. worries about height) of the category system. Statements from the focus groups which are allocated (coded) to a specific category are referred to as codings.
The original QoLISSY concept of HrQoL was used to provide a basis for the coding system (see
Under the supervision from members of the original QoLISSY study group, two independent and trained coders allocated each statement to only one single category, using the same labels from the original European QoLISSY study. The inter-rater agreement
(82%) was calculated in a subset of all interviews in which statements were coded.
A total of 76 individuals participated in the study: 26 American-English speaking children/adolescents and 30 parents, and nine American-Spanish speaking children/adolescents and 11 of their parents (
In the American-English sample more than half of the children/adolescents were diagnosed with GHD. Almost three quarters of them were receiving or had received GH treatment. The majority of children and adolescents were boys with a mean age of twelve years (SD 2.89). In total four children had reached a height above the −2.0 height standard deviation due to treatment and 20 children were still below the −2.0 height standard deviation of the US national norm for age and gender (
The American-Spanish speaking sample consisted of only boys and their parents. The majority of them were diagnosed with GHD. More than half of them were currently or had previously received growth hormone therapy (
The transcription of the focus groups yielded 1313 individual statements to be sorted into the pre-defined concept categories identified in the original European QoLISSY
Age group | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | 4 - 7 years | 8 - 12 years | 13 - 18 years | |||||||
Child (N = 35) | Parent (N = 41) | Child** | Parent | Child | Parent | Child | Parent | |||
Gender | Male | English | 18 | 20 | 2 | 10 | 10 | 8 | 8 | |
Spanish | 9 | 11 | 2 | 7 | 7 | 2 | 2 | |||
Female | English | 8 | 10 | 2 | 7 | 7 | 1 | 1 | ||
Spanish | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
Diagnosis | ISS | English | 10 | 12 | 2 | 8 | 8 | 2 | 2 | |
Spanish | 2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | |||
GHD | English | 16 | 18 | 2 | 9 | 9 | 7 | 7 | ||
Spanish | 7 | 8 | 1 | 5 | 5 | 2 | 2 | |||
Treatment | Treated | English | 19 | 21 | 2 | 10 | 10 | 9 | 9 | |
Spanish | 8 | 7 | 1 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 2 | |||
Untreated | English | 7 | 9 | 2 | 7 | 7 | 0 | 0 | ||
Spanish | 1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | |||
SD height* | ≥−1.9 | English | 4 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | |
Spanish | 4 | 5 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 1 | |||
≤−2.0 | English | 20 | 24 | 4 | 13 | 13 | 7 | 7 | ||
Spanish | 5 | 6 | 1 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 1 |
*Data are missing, **Only parents filled out the questionnaire for children aged 4 - 7.
study. Content analysis of the focus groups statements showed that US children and their parents reported similar concerns and concepts irrespective of language group. Saturation was satisfactory and no new concepts were identified from the US cohort.
From the total of 1313 unique statements, 480 were derived from the interviews with children and adolescents and 833 were derived from the parent’s statements. Based on the parent interviews, 249 statements were coded to the special parent category “Effects on the parents” which describes the impact of having a child with short stature on the parents themselves. Passages coded from the perspective of the participants are spread across all dimensions of the QoLISSY concept with varying frequencies.
Forty percent (193 statements) of the codings from the American-English children/adolescents interviews were allocated to the dimension “Social”. Sixteen percent (79 statements) were coded in the dimension “Emotion”, fourteen percent (68 statements)
# | Children | American-English/ American-Spanish | American-English/ American-Spanish | Example Statements/experiences |
---|---|---|---|---|
Domain | Number of codings | % | ||
1 | Physical | 60/8 | 13%/10% | For me, sometimes I want to get me a chewing gum on the top of the refrigerator and it causes me a little trouble. |
2 | Social | 193/36 | 40%/43% | I'm always the shortest among people. |
3 | Emotion | 79/21 | 16%/25% | I was disappointed by myself because I felt different. I felt less. |
4 | Coping | 68/6 | 14%/7% | …and my best friend, she was as short as I was, so I don’t really care. |
5 | Beliefs | 15/1 | 3%/1% | I don’t think I would be happier with being tall. |
6 | Treatment | 65/12 | 14%/14% | The only thing that kind of pushed me back was the needle. I just don’t like taking shots. |
sum/total percentage: | 480/84 | (100%) | ||
# | Parents | American-English/ American-Spanish | American-English/ American-Spanish | Example Statements/experiences |
Domain | Number of codings | % | ||
1 | Physical | 65/21 | 8%/6% | But when he turned ten years old he has worn the same clothes size when he was six years old. |
2 | Social | 209/112 | 25%/31% | …I help my son by supporting him, encouraging him to continue using the injection… |
3 | Emotion | 78/33 | 9%/9% | It is quite painful… as a father… |
4 | Coping | 69/25 | 8%/7% | …the best is being with my family, because they support me with all that I’m doing. |
5 | Beliefs | 34/11 | 4%/3% | My husband us not tall as well. |
6 | Treatment | 112/98 | 13%/27% | Well I think because she’s actually seeing her growth now. Because she’s actually growing I think she’s much happier. |
7 | Future | 17/3 | 2%/1% | I am worried it might be difficult for him to find a girlfriend. |
8 | Effects on parents | 249/60 | 31%/16% | I felt kind of overwhelmed when he was diagnosed with growth hormone deficiency… |
833/363 | (100%) |
in the dimension “Coping”, fourteen percent (65 statements) in the dimension “Treatment” and thirteen percent (60 statements) in the dimension “Physical” (
Analysis of participant statements in the American-Spanish groups yielded a total of 447 codes. Within these, parent’s interviews were categorized with a total of 363 coded passages. Children/adolescents most frequently (43%, 36 statements) referred to social aspects. Likewise, parents attributed most frequently (31%, 112 statements) their statements to the dimension “Social”. The proportion of parent’s codes in the dimension “Social” was considerably higher as compared with the other four dimensions (
All patient and parent comments and remarks are unedited actual verbatim. The most frequently discussed category “Social” addressed topics like social support and acceptance. Other topics summarized in this category were teasing, bullying, victimization, juvenalization and social interactions in general. The HrQoL dimension “Emotion” contains feelings e.g. worries about height, isolation, emotional suffering, negative affect and embarrassment. The dimension “Coping” was an additional category important for children and adolescents. Topics such as seeking and receiving support were discussed thoroughly by the children, whereas parents most frequently stressed topics like acceptance and ignoring/blocking. The “Treatment” topic was especially important for parents. Within this category, children mostly talked about treatment administration. Parents rather talked about benefits of treatment. “Physical” aspects were infrequently mentioned suggesting a low relevance for the participants themselves. Their parents similarly rarely mentioned physical limitations. Within these category topics like limitation in daily activities was predominantly mentioned. Children/adolescents addressed mainly topics like recreational activities and parents mentioned also problems about clothing. In addition to a view of their children’s QoL, the parent interviews were analyzed in terms of parent-specific issues “Effects on Parents”. “Feelings related to growth disorder/height” were mentioned frequently and thus identified as highly relevant for the parents.
Emotional reactions and embarrassment were discussed intensively by the parents and effects of the children’s treatment on parents also appeared to be important. Parents also discussed the issue Treatment, their children’s diagnosis (GHD/ISS) and the question about attributed cause of short stature.
Children diagnosed with short stature as well as their parents focused on the social aspects of short stature followed by the categories “Emotion” and “Treatment”. Discrepancies between the coding frequencies for children/adolescents versus their parents are particularly remarkable in the dimension “Treatment” for the American-English speaking families, with more codes from parents than from their children. This effect was also strong for the American-Spanish speaking families with more than twice as many codes on the parents’ side than on children/adolescents side. This can be explained by the age of participating children. Since they were rather young, when injections were given by parents they clearly focused on their experiences with the treatment process, related expectations, benefits, and reflections on the health care system.
Overall, the qualitative findings and respective conclusions are consistent with the QoLISSY results in Europe [
Nevertheless, the results of this study must be carefully interpreted, since, particularly for the Spanish cohort, the sample is very small. The difficulty to recruit and conduct focus groups in Spanish language was complicated by the limited Spanish reading and writing abilities of the bilingually educated children and adolescents.
Data, however, provide an insight into the perspectives and needs of children with GHD and ISS and their families and are a useful addition to our understanding of quality of life in short stature. A current opportunity to utilize and further define the appropriateness of items for this HrQoL instrument is in upcoming trials of new long acting formulations of GH and in the future, in clinical practice.
This is the first qualitative study involving children with short stature diagnosed with GHD and ISS and their parents in the US, complementing a previous study in Europe [
Studies show that HrQoL in short stature may be enhanced by medical treatments that stimulate growth [
A challenge for further research is to examine the relationship of height, perceived height, and psychosocial adaptation to HrQoL in short statured children and adolescents in further detail. The aim of such investigations is to better understand what life is like for short statured children and their families and to examine the impact of short stature and its treatment on patient-reported well-being and functioning. The QoLISSY instrument is well positioned as a tool to help meet this objective.
The QoLISSY Project would like to thank the children, parents, and staff from Nemours Children’s Clinic, Jacksonville, Fl, Thomas Jefferson Nemours Centre, Philadelphia, PA, Rady Children’s Hospital and the University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA.
QoLISSY is a joint initiative between Pfizer Limited and the University Medical Center Hamburg―Eppendorf. Copyright Pfizer Limited all rights reserved. The European QoLISSY instrument, together with comprehensive information of its development and validation process is published in the QoLISSY’s User’s Manual (Pabst Science Publishers, Lengerich, 2013). The Manual, which is available upon request, includes QoLISSY child and parent forms, as well as scoring information (http://www.pfizerpatientreportedoutcomes.com/therapeutic-areas/cv-metabolic/endocrine).
The study has been approved by the appropriate ethics committee and has therefore been performed in accordance with the ethical standard laid down in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki and its later amendments.
This study was sponsored by Pfizer, Inc. AP and JF are full time employees of Pfizer Inc. MB, RS, NM, RN, JR and JQ received research funding for the conduct of the study. The authors received no financial support for the development of the manuscript. The QoLISSY Project would like to thank the children, parents, and staff from Nemours Children’s Clinic, Jacksonville, FL, Thomas Jefferson Nemours Center, Philadelphia, PA and Rady Children’s Hospital and the University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, and the clinical study staff from Pfizer, particularly Dr. Judith Hey-Hadavi, for their participation and contributions.
Sommer, R., Bullinger, M., Pleil, A., Mauras, N., Ross, J., Newfield, R., Fox, J. and Quitmann, J. (2016) Talking about Height and Quality of Life: A Content-Analysis of Focus Group Discussions with Short-Statured Children and Their Parents in the US. Open Journal of Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases, 6, 229-241. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojemd.2016.611027