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Burden of pilonidal disease and improvement in quality of life after treatment in adolescents

Authors :
Fereshteh Salimi-Jazi
Claire Abrajano
Deanna Garza
Talha Rafeeqi
Razie Yousefi
Emi Hartman
Kira Hah
Melissa Wilcox
Modupeola Diyaolu
Stephanie Chao
Wendy Su
Thomas Hui
Claudia Mueller
Julie Fuchs
Bill Chiu
Source :
Pediatric surgery international. 38(10)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Pilonidal Disease (PD) affects adolescents in different aspects. We hypothesized that patients with different gender, ethnicity, and age have different quality of life (QOL) measurements which could improve with minimally invasive treatment (MIT).131 PD patients underwent MIT (laser epilation ± trephination) from 2019 to 2021. Patients' demographics were recorded. Before and after MIT, patients received QOL questionnaire consisting of four categories: daily activities, sports participation, school/work attendance, and socializing. Data were analyzed using Student and multivariate t test. P 0.05 was considered statistically significant.101 (51 male, 50 female) patients were included. 30 patients with incomplete data were excluded. 54% of patients were 18 years old. 47.5% were Hispanic. Median symptom duration prior to presentation was 5.4 (1.3-15) months. Prior to MIT, patients' ability to perform daily activities, participate in sports, attend school/work, and socialize was moderately or severely impacted in 66%, 57%, 45%, and 23% of respondents, respectively; after MIT, only 7%, 8%, 2%, and 4% were affected (p 0.01). Recurrence rate was 6%. Pre-MIT, older patients and non-Hispanics reported worse impact on their QOL. Symptom duration or PD recurrence did not correlate with patient's pre- or post-MIT QOL.Patients' ethnicity and age impacted QOL in PD. All patients' QOL significantly improved with MIT. Considering the importance of socializing, playing sports, and school/work attendance in adolescents, our study highlights importance of early treatment of PD.

Details

ISSN :
14379813
Volume :
38
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric surgery international
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5d2ede2150a192e920c26e88a95d8c7a