Purpose To evaluate: (1) clinical and epidemiological characteristics of outpatients transitioned from Pediatrics Endocrine (PED) to Adult Endocrine Department (AED) in a tertiary center; (2) transition process features, and predictors of drop-out. Methods Demographic, clinical, and transition features of 170 consecutive patients with pediatric onset of chronic endo- crine or metabolic disease (excluded type 1 diabetes) who transitioned from PED to AED (2007–2020) were retrospective evaluated. Results The age at transition was 18.4 ± 4 years (F:M = 1.2: 1), and mean follow-up 2.8 years. The population was hetero- geneous; the most (69.4%) was affected by one, 24.1% by two or more endocrine diseases, 6.5% were followed as part of a cancer survivor’s surveillance protocol. The comorbidity burden was high (37, 20.6, and 11.2% of patients had 2, 3, 4, or more diseases). The number of visits was associated with the number of endocrine diseases and the type of them. Adherent subjects had a higher number of comorbidities. Thyroid disorders and more than one comorbidity predicted the adherence to follow-up. Having performed one visit only was predictive of drop-out, regardless of the pathology at diagnosis. Conclusion This is the first study that analyzed a specific transition plan for chronic endocrine diseases on long-term follow- up. The proposed “one-size-fits-all model” is inadequate in responding to the needs of patients. A structured transition plan is an emerging cornerstone.

Transition in endocrinology: predictors of drop‐out of a heterogeneous population on a long‐term follow‐up

LENZI F.R.;
2022-01-01

Abstract

Purpose To evaluate: (1) clinical and epidemiological characteristics of outpatients transitioned from Pediatrics Endocrine (PED) to Adult Endocrine Department (AED) in a tertiary center; (2) transition process features, and predictors of drop-out. Methods Demographic, clinical, and transition features of 170 consecutive patients with pediatric onset of chronic endo- crine or metabolic disease (excluded type 1 diabetes) who transitioned from PED to AED (2007–2020) were retrospective evaluated. Results The age at transition was 18.4 ± 4 years (F:M = 1.2: 1), and mean follow-up 2.8 years. The population was hetero- geneous; the most (69.4%) was affected by one, 24.1% by two or more endocrine diseases, 6.5% were followed as part of a cancer survivor’s surveillance protocol. The comorbidity burden was high (37, 20.6, and 11.2% of patients had 2, 3, 4, or more diseases). The number of visits was associated with the number of endocrine diseases and the type of them. Adherent subjects had a higher number of comorbidities. Thyroid disorders and more than one comorbidity predicted the adherence to follow-up. Having performed one visit only was predictive of drop-out, regardless of the pathology at diagnosis. Conclusion This is the first study that analyzed a specific transition plan for chronic endocrine diseases on long-term follow- up. The proposed “one-size-fits-all model” is inadequate in responding to the needs of patients. A structured transition plan is an emerging cornerstone.
2022
social determinants of health
transition
methodology
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14244/5340
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