Publication Date
1-1-2025
Journal
The Texas Heart Institute Journal
DOI
10.14503/THIJ-24-8393
PMID
39911490
PMCID
PMC11795281
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
2-4-2025
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Post-print
Published Open-Access
yes
Keywords
Humans, Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome, Coronary Aneurysm, Male, Female, Quality of Life, Retrospective Studies, China, Child, Preschool, Child, Case-Control Studies, Time Factors, Infant, Follow-Up Studies
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The impact of coronary artery aneurysms (CAAs) caused by Kawasaki disease (KD) on long-term health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in children has not been well documented.
METHODS: This study investigated long-term HRQOL in a large sample of children diagnosed with KD-related CAAs. A case-control, retrospective study included 66 patients with KD-related CAAs. A total of 98 hospitalized patients were matched as controls based on age and sex: 49 patients were allocated to a group with pneumonia and 49 patients were allocated to a group with arterio-arterial fistula. Both child-reported and parent-proxy-reported Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory surveys were collected.
RESULTS: The median (IQR) follow-up period was 5.64 (3.81-7.47) years (range, 1.03-10.67 years). The mean (SD) age at diagnosis was 3.73 (1.93) years. At baseline, children and parents as their proxies reported similar HRQOL scores for KD-related CAAs and arterio-arterial fistula that were considerably lower than for pneumonia, respectively. At long-term follow-up, children in the small and medium-sized aneurysms group reported a mean (SD) score of 81.61 (19.50), which was comparable to the arterio-arterial fistula group (83.32 [18.24]), 9.51 points lower than that of the pneumonia group (
CONCLUSION: Despite improvement in HRQOL scores, children with documented KD-related CAAs without complete recovery often encountered issues that disrupted their well-being during long-term follow-up. Routine outpatient HRQOL screening could be instituted to help eliminate the risk of long-term disability following initial clinical improvement.