1. Quality of life in Klinefelter patients on testosterone replacement therapy compared to healthy controls: an observational study on the impact of psychological distress, personality traits, and coping strategies.
- Author
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Fabrazzo M, Accardo G, Abbondandolo I, Goglia G, Esposito D, Sampogna G, Catapano F, Giugliano D, and Pasquali D
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Mental Health, Mental Status and Dementia Tests, Personality Assessment, Psychological Distress, Sexual Behavior, Adaptation, Psychological physiology, Cognition, Hormone Replacement Therapy methods, Hormone Replacement Therapy psychology, Klinefelter Syndrome epidemiology, Klinefelter Syndrome psychology, Klinefelter Syndrome therapy, Quality of Life, Testosterone therapeutic use
- Abstract
Purpose: We aimed to verify if 1 year-testosterone-replacement therapy could produce a psychopathological recovery and a satisfactory quality of life in Klinefelter syndrome (KS) patients compared to matched healthy controls. Further, we analyzed personality traits and coping strategies, an issue not yet examined in androgen-treated KS patients. We also enquired whether any of the sociodemographic and psychological variables might predict a patient's general and sexual life satisfaction., Methods: The Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire and the Temperament and Character Inventory-Revised were administered to both 23 KS patients and matched healthy subjects. Psychopathology was investigated by the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R) and the Mini-mental State Examination. The COPE Inventory was used to identify cognitive and behavioral strategies to manage disease-related distress., Results: In testosterone-treated KS patients, when compared with controls, SCL-90-R subscales analysis evidenced high psychological distress, mainly presented as obsessive thoughts, hanger-hostility, phobias, and psychoticism. Self-directedness and self-transcendence, along with the prevalent use of emotion-focused coping strategies, outlined the personality of our KS patients. Depression and somatization proved to be predictors of general life dissatisfaction. Depression, anger-hostility, and paranoid ideation, instead, emerged as predictors of sexual life dissatisfaction., Conclusion: Endocrinologists should cooperate with mental health providers to foster a better outcome of the disease in KS patients.
- Published
- 2021
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