University of Leicester
Browse

Developmental motor problems and health-related quality of life in 5-year-old children born extremely preterm: A European cohort study

Download (1.15 MB)
Version 2 2023-12-05, 16:25
Version 1 2023-04-28, 15:08
journal contribution
posted on 2023-12-05, 16:25 authored by Adrien Aubert, Raquel Costa, Samantha Johnson, Ulrika Aden, Veronique Pierrat, Marina Cuttiniq, Mairi Männamaa, Iemka Sarrechia, Jo LeBeer, Arno van Heijst, Rolf Maier, Mariane Sentenac, Jennifer Zeitlin

Aim

To measure the association between cerebral palsy (CP) and non-CP-related movement difficulties and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) among 5-year-old children born extremely preterm (<28 weeks gestational age).


Method

We included 5-year-old children from a multi-country, population-based cohort of children born extremely preterm in 2011 to 2012 in 11 European countries (n = 1021). Children without CP were classified using the Movement Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition as having significant movement difficulties (≤5th centile of standardized norms) or being at risk of movement difficulties (6th–15th centile). Parents reported on a clinical CP diagnosis and HRQoL using the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory. Associations were assessed using linear and quantile regressions.


Results

Compared to children without movement difficulties, children at risk of movement difficulties, with significant movement difficulties, and CP had lower adjusted HRQoL total scores (β [95% confidence interval] = −5.0 [−7.7 to −2.3], −9.1 [−12.0 to −6.1], and − 26.1 [−31.0 to −21.2]). Quantile regression analyses showed similar decreases in HRQoL for all children with CP, whereas for children with non-CP-related movement difficulties, reductions in HRQoL were more pronounced at lower centiles.


Interpretation

CP and non-CP-related movement difficulties were associated with lower HRQoL, even for children with less severe difficulties. Heterogeneous associations for non-CP-related movement difficulties raise questions for research about mitigating and protective factors.

Funding

Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia, Universidade Nova de Lisboa. Grant Number: SFRH/BPD/117597/2016

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme. Grant Number: No 633724 and No 733280

Seventh Framework Programme. Grant Number: No 259882

History

Author affiliation

Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology

Volume

65

Issue

12

Pagination

1617-1628

Publisher

Wiley

issn

1469-8749

Copyright date

2033

Available date

2023-12-05

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC