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Long-term follow-up of self-reported mental health and health-related quality of life in adults born extremely preterm

Merete Røineland Benestad, Jorunn Drageset, Karl Ove Hufthammer, Maria Vollsæter, Thomas Halvorsen, Bente Johanne Vederhus

2022Early Human Development13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Survival of extremely preterm (EP) birth is increasing, but long-term consequences are still largely unknown as their high survival rates are recent achievements. AIMS: To examine self-reported mental health, and health related quality of life (HRQoL) in a cohort of adults born EP in the early 1990s and individually matched term-born controls, and to describe development through the transition from teenager to adults. METHODS: Thirty-five eligible subjects were born at gestational age ≤ 28 weeks or with birth weight ≤ 1000 g during 1991-1992 in this population-based cohort from Western Norway. We assessed mental health using Youth Self-Report (YSR) at 18 years of age, and Adult Self-Report (ASR) at 27 years, and HRQoL by RAND-36 at 27 years. Data were analysed by unadjusted and adjusted mixed effects models with time by group as interaction term. RESULTS: At 27 years, 24 (69 %) EP-born and 26 (74 %) term-born controls participated. Scores for internalising problems, and syndrome scale anxious/depressed and withdrawn were higher among EP-born compared to term-born controls. For HRQoL, scores were similar in EP-born and term-born groups, except the domain physical functioning where EP-born scored lower. Development over time from 18 to 27 years showed increasing (i.e. deteriorating) scores for internalising, anxious/depressed, somatic complaints, and attention problems in the EP born group. For the term-born, scores for anxious/depression increased over time. CONCLUSIONS: At 27 years of age, EP-born adults reported more internalising problems than term-born controls, while HRQoL was relatively similar except physical functioning. Mental health problems in the EP-born increased from adolescence to adulthood.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCohortQuality of life (healthcare)Mental healthPopulationPediatricsBirth weightDepression (economics)Gestational ageCohort studyAnxietyDemographyPregnancyPsychiatryInternal medicineMacroeconomicsSociologyEnvironmental healthEconomicsGeneticsBiologyNursingInfant Development and Preterm CarePreterm Birth and ChorioamnionitisMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum
Long-term follow-up of self-reported mental health and health-related quality of life in adults born extremely preterm | Litcius