Abstract
Introduction
Spina bifida is a potentially disabling congenital condition and affects the quality of life (QOL). We aimed to assess clinical outcomes and QOL in children who underwent spina bifida repair at our hospital.
Methods
This was a retrospective cohort study on children who underwent spina bifida repair at our hospital over 10 years. Phone calls were made to parents of the children, and the Health Utility Index Mark 3 (HUI 3) score was used to assess QoL, and degree of disability. Demographics and clinical data were obtained from the medical chart review. Statistical analysis was done using SPSS (version 21).
Results
Eighty children with a median age of 1.1 months (IQR 0.03–2.0) at the time of presentation, were included in this study. The mean follow-up period was 6.04 ± 2.54 years and the median HUI-3 score was 0.64 (IQR: 0.40 – 0.96) on a scale of 0 (dead) to 1 (perfectly healthy). Based on the severity of disability, 12 (23.1%) children had mild disability, 4 (7.7%) had moderate disability, and 23 (44.2%) had severe disability. Factors including a leaking spina bifida and paraplegia at presentation; radiological findings of hydrocephalus and Chiari malformation, were associated with a significantly low QOL. Children who required CSF diversion (EVD/ VP shunt) during the repair or at a later stage also had significantly low QOL.
Conclusion
In LMIC, children with myelomeningocele (MMC) born with lower limb weakness, hydrocephalus, Chiari malformation, and those presenting with leaking MMC, have a significantly low QoL at a mean follow-up of 6 years.
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Introduction
During the last few decades, the global incidence of spina bifida has considerably decreased due to folic acid supplementation in diet [1]. However, it is still one of the most common causes of childhood disability and can affect the quality of life (QOL), particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Early surgical intervention does not warrant complete neurological recovery, even though it is crucial to prevent long-term problems, most children would remain dependent on caregivers [2]. More than half of these children have additional associated neurological conditions, as well as non-neurological congenital anomalies, which further hinder their efforts to live a normal life [3].
QOL is an individual’s perception of life, in the context of value systems, culture, expectations, concerns, and standards, within the confines of his or her environment [4]. Any medical condition that causes temporary or permanent disability can affect the health related QOL. In the United States, first-year survival rate of infants with spina bifida has increased to 92%, and 75% reach adulthood [1]. As life expectancy has improved, more patients with spina bifida experience social, emotional, cognitive, and psychological distress [5, 6]. Limited resources, financial constraints, absence of support groups, and lack of access to rehabilitation centers result in a greater negative impact of spina bifida on the health related QOL in LMICs [2]. The true incidence of spina bifida in Pakistan is not known, however, available data estimate the incidence of neural tube defects (NTDs) between 38.6 and 124.1 per 10,000 births, which is significantly higher than the global average of 10 per 10,000 births [7]. Pakistan is the 5th most populous country in the world, and the incidence of myelomeningocele (MMC) is high due to the limited access to prenatal screening, lack of folate-fortified food, unavailability of folate supplements, and consanguineous marriages.
While surgical outcomes for spina bifida have been widely reported, there is a dearth of data from LMICs on the long-term health related QOL in these patients [2]. Considering the high prevalence of spina bifida in the country, and a nearly non-existent disability support system in the country, we aimed to study the operative outcomes and QOL in patients who were operated on for spina bifida at our hospital during the last ten years, and to seek predictors diminished QOL.
Methods
This was a retrospective cohort study. The study population comprised patients who were operated on for spina bifida at the Aga Khan University, from January 2011 to December 2020. These patients included those who were diagnosed with meningocele and myelomeningocele. Cases were identified using the ICD-10 codes. Ethical approval was obtained from the Ethical Review Committee at the University before initiating the study. We identified 80 patients who fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Medical records of these patients were reviewed for collecting information about their birth history, demographics, neurological status, details of the surgery, and clinical outcomes. Contact information of parents was obtained from the hospital record, and phone calls were made to collect the information on the QoL of these patients at the time of data collection. Two subsequent attempts were made to contact parents who did not respond to the first phone call. Verbal consent was obtained over the phone.
We used the Health Utility Index Mark 3 (HUI-3) for calculating the QOL of these patients [8]. HUI-3 is a comprehensive validated tool consisting of 8 components for measuring health-related QOL and has been used extensively in both healthy and chronically ill pediatric and adult populations to describe health states. The questionnaire is designed for both self- and proxy administration. It gives a quantitative score on a scale of 0 (dead) to 1 (perfect health) after taking patients’ vision, hearing, speech, ambulation, dexterity, emotion, cognition, and pain into account. A score for each attribute is assessed based on the participant’s choice of 4–5 responses, and normative scores are based on population preferences for levels of optimal health across the 8 domains. Using the HUI3-defined scoring algorithms, single-attribute scores can then be compiled to determine an overall multi-attribute score. Multi-attribute scores, which encompass all domains concurrently and account for the interaction between attributes, are calculated to derive an estimation of the participant’s overall HRQOL.
Statistical analysis was done using SPSS version 22. For categorical variables frequencies and proportions were calculated, whereas means and standard deviation or median and interquartile ranges were calculated for continuous variables. The data was not normally distributed so non-parametric tests were applied. Mann-Whitney U-test was used for the comparison of HUI-3 scores. For comparison of QOL scores between more than 2 categories, the Kruskal–Wallis test was used. Correlation between continuous variables was assessed using the Spearman rho correlation coefficient. When a continuous variable, such as age, was a potential confounder for a categorical variable, we performed the ANOVA test. A cutoff of p < 0.05 was taken as significant.
Linear regression was used to determine the factors associated with a poor QoL, and unadjusted and adjusted beta coefficients, standard error (SE), and 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated. All plausible interactions were considered, and independent variables with a p‐value < 0.25 on univariate analysis were included in the multivariable model. A p‐value < 0.05 was considered significant.
Results
The median age of the patients at the time of presentation was 1.1 months, whereas the median age at the time of data collection was 6 years, with a slight male predominance (n = 50; 62.5%). Most children were born at full term (48; 60%). Only 15 (18.8%) mothers had regularly taken folate supplements during pregnancy, but we could not confirm whether they had started the supplements before conception or after confirmation of pregnancy. MMC was the most common subtype of spina bifida in our cohort (65; 81.2%), and 36 (43.8%) patients had CSF leakage at presentation. Hydrocephalus was the most commonly associated condition seen in 40 (51.3%) patients. Parents of 52 patients responded to phone calls. Table 1 contains further details of presenting features.
Fifty-one patients (63.8%) had CSF diversion, out of which 26 (32.5%) patients had permanent diversion in the form of a VP shunt. Placement of EVD at the time of repair (p = 0.012) or the need for a CSF diversion at a later stage (p = 0.029) were associated with a significant decrease in QOL (Table 2). Post-operative CSF leak from the wound was the most common surgical complication (9; 11.3%). Table 2 mentions details of surgical procedures and clinical outcomes.
The mean follow-up period was 6.04 ± 2.54 years and the median HUI-3 score was [0.64 (IQR: 0.40 – 0.96)]. Furthermore, based on the severity of disability 13 (25%) children had no disability (HUI-3 score: 1), 12 (23.1%) children had a mild disability (HUI-3 score: 0.99- 0.89), 4 (7.7%) children had moderate disability (HUI-3 score: 0.88- 0.70), and 23 (44.2%) children had a severe disability (HUI-3 score: < 0.70).
At the time of presentation, a leaking spina bifida (p < 0.001), motor weakness in lower limbs (p = 0.004), and incontinence (p = 0.042) were associated with a significant decrease in QOL. On imaging hydrocephalus (p < 0.001) and Chiari malformation (p = 0.007) were associated with significantly lower QOL (Table 1). At subsequent follow-ups lower limb motor weakness (p = 0.019), incontinence (p = 0.044), and a need for a new procedure (0.022) were associated with significantly lower QOL (Table 2).
Linear regression analysis
On univariate linear regression with QoL as the dependent variable, children presented with hydrocephalus (Beta Coefficient: -0.352), Chiari malformation (-0.261), a leaking spina bifida (-0.401) were negatively associated with QoL. Folate intake during pregnancy (0.057) and power in lower limbs (0.178) were positively associated with QOL. An intraoperative need for EVD (-0.358) and any subsequent need for a CSF diversion procedure was negatively associated with QOL. Postoperative development of hydrocephalus (-0.457), meningitis (-0.362), and seizures (-0.448) were negatively associated with QOL.
On multivariable linear regression, power in lower limbs on presentation (0.205) and discharge (0.270) were positively associated with QOL. Whereas a leaking spina bifida (-0.304) at presentation was negatively associated with QOL (Table 3).
Discussion
This is one of the very few studies from LMICs that report health-related QOL in children with spina bifida. We included 114 children, with a median age of 1.5 months and assessed pre-surgical and post-surgical factors which could significantly correlate with a low HIU 3 score, representing poor quality of life. Pre-surgically, the presence of CSF leak, weakness in lower limbs, presence of hydrocephalus, and Chiari malformation were factors that were significantly associated with a low mean HIU 3 score. Among the operative and post-surgical outcomes, the development of hydrocephalus during the hospital stay and CSF diversion either during the time of MMC repair or at a later stage were significantly related to poor QOL.
MMC is one of the most common congenital malformations of the CNS causing a spectrum of morbidity [9]. The condition has both physical and psychological consequences that last throughout the patient’s lifetime. Surgical management should be followed by regular and comprehensive specialist evaluations to detect complications followed by prompt management to improve the negative impact of the condition [10]. North et al. compared two 10-year cohorts of MMC patients in Canada; the first cohort from 1971–1981 included 101 patients, and the second cohort from 1996 to 2006 included 46 patients. The factors that had significantly improved in the second cohort were MMC incidence, mortality, and the proportion of cases operated within 48 h of birth. However, the long-term functional outcomes did not improve between the two groups [11].
Although the true incidence of MMC in Pakistan is unknown, current literature suggests that the incidence of NTDs is between 38.6 and 124.1 per 10,000 births [7]. Developing countries like Pakistan where there is suboptimal health resource utilization, and literacy is low, have a higher number of cases of NTDs [12]. Khan et al. conducted a cross-sectional study on 67 patients born with spina bifida at a large public sector hospital. They reported that a majority of mothers of MMC patients belonged to a low socio-economic background and had not had a prenatal evaluation during the first trimester, indicating a higher probability of these mothers missing folate supplementation and antenatal screening [13]. In our study only 18.8% of the mothers recalled taking regular folate supplementation before conception, highlighting inadequate maternal folic acid supplementation as a risk factor in MMC patients which is comparable with previous research conducted in Pakistan [13,14,15,16,17]. Mandatory food fortification laws have been passed since 2021 in two provinces of Pakistan. Similar interventions focused on reducing barriers to folic acid supplementation such as providing adequate awareness, excellent quality counseling, and availability of free supplements throughout pregnancy should be implemented to reduce the incidence of NTDs [18].
The Health Utilities Index (HUI) is a classification system that provides a compact but comprehensive framework to describe health status [19]. With a mean follow-up of 6.04 ± 2.54 years, 52 caregivers of MMC patients responded to phone calls in our study, and the mean HUI-3 score was measured as 0.64 ± 0.37 [8]. Young et al. measured the health outcomes in Canadian spina bifida patients (40 children and 13 young adults) and reported the mean HUI3 score as 0.52 [20]. Their results are similar to another Canadian study on MMC patients by Karmur et al., which included 131 patients with shunted hydrocephalus, and reported the mean HIU3 score as 0.51 [21]. A study on the QOL of Ugandan children with MMC reports the mean HUI3 score by 66 caregivers as 0.549 (95% CI 0.465 to 0.633) [2]. Our mean HUI 3 score falls in the severe disability category similar to the results from other high-income countries and LMIC.
Preoperative motor weakness in lower limbs in our patients was significantly correlated to a lower HIU3 score. A study from Turkey reported QOL in 50 children with MMC and used CHQ-PF-50 (Child Health Questionnaire Parent Form 50) to assess QOL. They found that non-ambulatory MMC patients had a significantly lower QOL compared to ambulatory patients [22]. We investigated the co-morbidities present on initial imaging and found that the presence of hydrocephalus and Chiari malformation was significantly correlated to a lower QOL. Rozensztrauch et al. in a recent study interviewed 52 parents of children with MMC and reported a similar correlation between hydrocephalus and the QOL, as patients with no hydrocephalus functioned significantly better than patients who had this defect in the physical, social, and school areas [10]. A significant proportion of MMC patients develop hydrocephalus and require some form of CSF diversion, with shunt rates varying from 52 to 92% [23]. Several studies have reported a significant negative impact of shunted hydrocephalus on QOL ranging from neuropsychological to sports and physical functioning [1, 24,25,26,27]. There have been concerns about the simultaneous repair of MMC and shunt insertion related to an increased rate of post-surgical complications [28]. However, in our cohort, both early and late CSF diversion was negatively associated with QOL.
There were some limitations of this study. We report patients from a single tertiary care private medical center. There is a high probability of the patients belonging to middle and high socio-economic backgrounds which means better health and social determinants which led to relatively better health outcomes. Hence, our results might not represent MMC patients from across the country. This was a retrospective study which creates a possibility of recall bias as caregivers were contacted over the telephone about patients initially presenting many years ago for example 35% of the mothers could not recall whether they had taken regular folic acid supplementation. Additionally, we noticed that a high number of children in our study underwent an EVD as a form of temporary CSF diversion, and none of the children underwent either an ETV (endoscopic third ventriculostomy), insertion of a VAD (ventricular access device), or an intrauterine repair. This represents the practice preferences of some of our neurosurgeons. Our hydrocephalus and shunt insertion rates were much lower than that reported in the literature, which may be due to underdiagnosis, and losing patients to follow-up. We also had a much lower rate of multiple surgeries in our patients, which may be attributed to a shorter mean follow-up rate, and a significant loss to follow-up rate in our patients. The loss to follow-up is an often reported problem in most studies coming out from LMIC, and unless a registry is maintained and these children are actively followed up for the late sequel of MMC, the problem will tend to stay.
Conclusion
Spina bifida is a potentially disabling condition that significantly impacts QOL in children. Children presenting with weakness in lower limbs, hydrocephalus, Chiari malformation, and leaking MMC have a significantly low QoL. Preventive strategies including better antenatal care and folate supplementation should be encouraged.
Availability of data and material
The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Abbreviations
- QoL:
-
Quality of Life
- LMIC:
-
Low- and middle-income countries
- HUI 3:
-
Health Utility Index Mark 3
- NTDs:
-
Neural tube defects
- MMC:
-
Myelomeningocele
- SE:
-
Standard error
- CI:
-
Confidence interval
- HUI:
-
Health Utilities Index
- CHQ-PF-50:
-
Child Health Questionnaire Parent form 50
- ETV:
-
Endoscopic third ventriculostomy
- VAD:
-
Ventricular access device
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Mujtaba Khalil, Saqib Kamran Bakhshi and Zara Shah conceived and designed the project, and wrote the manuscript. Shilpa Golani and Hassaan Musood collected data. Faiza Urooj and Nida Zahid performed the analysis. Michael Christopher Dewan and Muhammad Shahzad Shamim reviewed the manuscript.
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The study has been approved by the institutional ethics research committee at Aga Khan University Hospital.
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Khalil, M., Bakhshi, S.K., Shah, Z. et al. Quality of life in children operated for spina bifida; low- and middle-income country perspective. Childs Nerv Syst 39, 3155–3161 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-023-05993-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-023-05993-2