Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda
University of Bristol
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Featured researches published by Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda.
BMJ Open | 2017
Jon Heron; Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; Alexander von Gontard; Anne Wright; Carol Joinson
Objectives To identify different patterns (trajectories) of childhood urinary incontinence and examine which patterns are associated with bladder and bowel symptoms in adolescence. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting General community. Participants The starting sample included 8751 children (4507 men and 4244 women) with parent-reported data on frequency of bedwetting and daytime wetting for at least three of five time points (4½, 5½, 6½, 7½ and 9½ years—hereafter referred to as 4–9 years). Study children provided data on a range of bladder and bowel symptoms at age 14 (data available for 5899 participants). Outcome measures Self-reported bladder and bowel symptoms at 14 years including daytime wetting, bedwetting, nocturia, urgency, frequent urination, low voided volume, voiding postponement, passing hard stools and low stool frequency. Results We extracted 5 trajectories of urinary incontinence from 4 to 9 years using longitudinal latent class analysis: (1) normative development of daytime and night-time bladder control (63.0% of the sample), (2) delayed attainment of bladder control (8.6%), (3) bedwetting alone (no daytime wetting) (15.6%), (4) daytime wetting alone (no bedwetting) (5.8%) and (5) persistent wetting (bedwetting with daytime wetting to age 9) (7.0%). The persistent wetting class generally showed the strongest associations with the adolescent bladder and bowel symptoms: OR for bedwetting at 14 years=23.5, 95% CI (15.1 to 36.5), daytime wetting (6.98 (4.50 to 10.8)), nocturia (2.39 (1.79 to 3.20)), urgency (2.10 (1.44 to 3.07)) and passing hard stools (2.64 (1.63 to 4.27)) (reference category=normative development). The association with adolescent bedwetting was weaker for children with bedwetting alone (3.69 (2.21 to 6.17)). Conclusions Trajectories of childhood urinary incontinence are differentially associated with adolescent bladder and bowel symptoms. Children exhibiting persistent bedwetting with daytime wetting had the poorest outcomes in adolescence.
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2016
Carol J Joinson; Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; A. von Gontard; Anne Wright; Jon Heron
Aims This is the first prospective cohort study to examine the association between developmental trajectories of childhood incontinence and adolescent incontinence and lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS). Methods We used longitudinal latent class analysis to identify developmental trajectories of bladder control using maternal reports of their child’s incontinence from 4–9 years in 8,751 participants from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children. We then used logistic regression to examine the association between the trajectories and self-reported bedwetting, daytime wetting, nocturia, urgency, high voiding frequency and voiding postponement at 14 years. Results We identified five trajectories: (i) Normative development of daytime and nighttime bladder control (63.1% of the sample), (ii) Delayed attainment of bladder control (8.6%), (iii) Bedwetting alone (no daytime wetting) (15.6%), (iv) Daytime wetting alone (no bedwetting) (5.8%), (v) Persistent wetting (bedwetting with daytime wetting to age 9) (7.0%). There were increased odds of bedwetting at 14 years among those with persistent wetting in childhood (odds ratio=23.5, 95% confidence interval=15.1–36.4) and bedwetting alone (3.69 [2.21–6.17]) (reference category: normative development). Odds of daytime wetting at 14 years were increased among those with daytime wetting alone (odds ratio=10.1 [6.70–15.3]) and persistent wetting (6.98 [4.50–10.8]). There were increased odds of nocturia (2.39 [1.79–3.20]) and urgency (2.10 [1.44–3.07]) in adolescence among those with persistent wetting in childhood and increased odds of voiding postponement (1.94 [1.48–2.54]) in those with daytime wetting alone. Conclusions We find evidence that trajectories of incontinence in childhood are differentially associated with adolescent incontinence. Bedwetting in adolescence was more likely in those who experienced persistent wetting in childhood compared with bedwetting alone. Daytime wetting in adolescence was associated with childhood daytime wetting and persistent wetting. LUTS were more common among adolescents who experienced childhood incontinence than those who had normal development of continence. The awareness of particular patterns of incontinence is important in clinical practice because children exhibiting incontinence trajectories associated with poor outcomes in adolescence should be prioritised for investigations and treatment.
BMJ Paediatrics Open | 2018
Jon Heron; Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; David Tappin; Alexander von Gontard; Carol Joinson
Objective Constipation and soiling are common in childhood. This study examines the comorbidity between childhood constipation and soiling and early childhood risk factors for these problems. Design The sample comprised 8435 participants from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children with maternally reported measures of constipation (six time points between 4 and 10 years) and soiling (five time points between 4 and 9 years). We used latent class analysis to extract longitudinal patterns of constipation and soiling. We examined whether the latent classes are differentially associated with maternally reported risk factors in early childhood (stool consistency, breast feeding, socioeconomic background, gestation, birth weight, developmental level and age at initiation of toilet training) using multinomial logistic regression models. Results We extracted four latent classes: ‘normative’ (74.5%: very low probability of constipation or soiling), ‘constipation alone’ (13.2%), ‘soiling alone’ (7.5%) and ‘constipation with soiling’ (4.8%). Hard stools at 2½ years were associated with increased odds of constipation alone. Developmental delay at 18 months was associated soiling alone and constipation with soiling, but not constipation alone. We found limited evidence of associations with socioeconomic background and no evidence of associations with age at initiation of toilet training, breast feeding, gestational age or birth weight. Conclusion Constipation alone was the most prevalent pattern in this cohort. Treatment for hard stools in early childhood is needed to prevent chronic constipation at school age. Constipation with soiling was less common than soiling alone. Further research is needed into the causes of non-retentive soiling.
Eye | 2018
J M Sparrow; Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; N A Frost; Robert L. Johnston; Christopher Liu; L Edwards; A Loose; Jenny Donovan
PurposeTo develop a short, psychometrically robust and responsive cataract patient reported outcome measure suitable for use in high-volume surgical environments.MethodsA prospective study in which participants completed development versions of questionnaires exploring the quality of their eyesight using items harvested from two existing United Kingdom developed parent questionnaires. Participants were 822 patients awaiting cataract surgery recruited from 4 cataract surgical centres based in the UK. Exclusion criteria were other visually significant comorbidities and age <50 years. An iterative multi-stage process of evaluation using Rasch and factor analyses with sequential item reduction was undertaken.ResultsA definitive item set of just five items delivered performance in accordance with the requirements of the Rasch model: no threshold disordering, no misfitting items, Rasch-based reliability 0.90, person separation 2.98, Cronbach’s α 0.89, good targeting of questions to patients with cataract with pre-operative item mean −0.41 logits and absence of significant floor or ceiling effects, minor deviations of item invariance, and confirmed unidimensionality. The test–re-test repeatability intra-class correlation coefficient was 0.89 with excellent responsiveness to surgery, Cohen’s d −1.45 SD. Rasch calibration values are provided for Cat-PROM5 users.ConclusionsA psychometrically robust and highly responsive five-item cataract surgery patient reported outcome measure has been developed, which is suitable for use in high-volume cataract surgical services.
Eye | 2018
J M Sparrow; Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; N A Frost; Robert L. Johnston; Christopher Liu; Lara Edwards; Abi Loose; Daisy Elliott; Jenny Donovan
Background Cataract surgery is the most frequently undertaken NHS surgical procedure. Visual acuity (VA) provides a poor indication of visual difficulty in a complex visual world. In the absence of a suitable outcome metric, recent efforts have been directed towards the development of a cataract patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) of sufficient brevity, precision, and responsiveness to be implementable in routine high volume clinical services.Aim To compare and contrast the two most promising candidate PROMs for routine cataract surgery.Method The psychometric performance and patient acceptability of the recently UK developed five-item Cat-PROM5 questionnaire was compared with the English translation of the Swedish nine-item Catquest-9SF using Rasch-based performance metrics and qualitative semistructured interviews.Results Rasch-based performance was assessed in 822 typical NHS cataract surgery patients across four centres in England. Both questionnaires demonstrated good to excellent performance for all metrics assessed, including Person Reliability Indices of 0.90 (Cat-PROM5) and 0.88 (Catquest-9SF), responsiveness to surgery (Cohen’s standardized effect size) of 1.45 SD (Cat-PROM5) and 1.47 SD (Catquest-9SF) and they were highly correlated with each other (R=0.85). Qualitative assessments confirmed that both questionnaires were acceptable to patients, including in the presence of ocular comorbidities. Preferences were expressed for the shorter Cat-PROM5, which allowed patients to map their own issues to the questions as opposed to the more restrictive specific scenarios of Catquest-9SF.Conclusion The recently UK developed Cat-PROM5 cataract surgery questionnaire is shorter, with performance and patient acceptability at least as good or better than the previous ‘best of class’ Catquest-9SF instrument.
BMJ Open | 2017
Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; Jon Heron; Kate Tilling; Anne Wright; Carol Joinson
Objective To examine whether a range of common strategies used by parents to overcome bedwetting in 7½-year-old children (including lifting, restricting drinks before bedtime, regular daytime toilet trips, rewards, showing displeasure and using protection pants) are effective in reducing the risk of bedwetting at 9½ years. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting General community. Participants The starting sample included 1258 children (66.7% boys and 33.2% girls) who were still bedwetting at 7½ years. Outcome measure Risk of bedwetting at 9½ years. Results Using propensity score-based methods, we found that two of the parental strategies used at 7½ years were associated with an increased risk of bedwetting at 9½ years, after adjusting the model for child and family variables and other parental strategies: lifting (risk difference=0.106 (95% CI 0.009 to 0.202), ie, there is a 10.6% (0.9% to 20.2%) increase in risk of bedwetting at 9½ years among children whose parents used lifting compared with children whose parents did not use this strategy) and restricting drinks before bedtime (0.123 (0.021 to 0.226)). The effect of using the other parental strategies was in either direction (an increase or decrease in the risk of bedwetting at 9½ years), for example, showing displeasure (−0.052 (−0.214 to 0.110)). When we re-analysed the data using multivariable regression analysis, the results were mostly consistent with the propensity score-based methods. Conclusion These findings provide evidence that common strategies used to overcome bedwetting in 7½-year-olds are not effective in reducing the risk of bedwetting at 9½ years. Parents should be encouraged to seek professional advice for their child’s bedwetting rather than persisting with strategies that may be ineffective.
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2017
Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; Jon Heron; Alexander von Gontard; Carol Joinson
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2018
Carol Joinson; Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; Alexander von Gontard; Jon Heron
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2018
Carol Joinson; Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; Alexander von Gontard; Jon Heron
Archive | 2017
J M Sparrow; Mariusz Tadeusz Grzeda; N A Frost; Robert L. Johnston; Cc Liu; L Edwards; A Loose; P Craggs; Jenny Donovan