RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in children and adolescents with congenital heart disease: a cross-sectional survey from South India JF BMJ Paediatrics Open JO BMJ Paediatrics Open FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP e000377 DO 10.1136/bmjpo-2018-000377 VO 3 IS 1 A1 Manu Raj A1 Abish Sudhakar A1 Rinku Roy A1 Bhavik Champaneri A1 Remya Sudevan A1 Conrad Kabali A1 Raman Krishna Kumar YR 2019 UL http://bmjpaedsopen.bmj.com/content/3/1/e000377.abstract AB Objective There are limited data on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) for children and adolescents with uncorrected congenital heart disease (CHD) from low-income and middle-income countries where late presentation is common. We sought to compare HRQOL of children and adolescents with uncorrected CHD to that of controls using the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL 4.0).Methods The study design is a cross-sectional analytical survey. The study setting was (1) Hospital-based survey of patients with CHD and their parents. (2) Community survey of controls and their parents. Subjects included (1) Children/adolescents with CHD between the ages of 2 years and 18 years and their parents enrolled in a previous study (n=308). (2) Unmatched community controls (719 children/adolescents, aged 2–18 years) and their parents. Participants were given PedsQL 4.0 to fill out details. Parents assisted children 5–7 years of age in filling the questionnaires. Children younger than 5 years had only parent-reported HRQOL and those above 5 years had both self-reported and parent-reported HRQOL.Results The median (IQR) total generic HRQOL from self-reports for CHD subjects and controls were 71.7 (62.0, 84.8) and 91.3 (82.6, 95.7), respectively. The corresponding figures for parent-reports were 78.3 (63.0, 90.5) and 92.4 (87.0, 95.7) respectively. The adjusted median difference was −20.6 (99% CI −24.9 to −16.3, p<0.001) for self-reported and −14.1 (99% CI −16.7 to −11.6, p<0.001) for parent-reported total HRQOL between patients with CHD and controls. Cardiac-specific HRQOL by self-reports was 75.0 (53.6, 92.9) for heart problems, 95.0 (73.8, 100.0) for treatment barriers, 83.3 (66.7, 100.0) for physical appearance, 87.5 (62.5, 100.0) for treatment-related anxiety, 91.7 (68.8, 100.0) for cognitive problems and 83.3 (66.7, 100.0) for communication. The values for parent-reports were 71.4 (53.6, 85.7), 100.0 (75.0, 100.0), 100.0 (75.0, 100.0), 81.3 (50.0, 100.0), 100.0 (81.2, 100.0) and 83.3 (50.0, 100.0), respectively.Conclusions Children and adolescents with uncorrected CHD reported significant reductions in overall quality of life compared with controls.