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Effects of Cancer Treatment on the Education and Cognition of South Florida Pediatric Cancer Survivors

Purpose As pediatric cancer survival rates have exponentially increased in the past decade, with the vast majority surviving five years or more, the long-term impacts of treatment on the quality of survivorship must be explored. This study examines the effects of pediatric cancer treatment regimens...

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Autores principales: Fine, Jessica R, Bafna, Tanvi, Griffith, Sarah C, Ransdell, Justine M, Barredo, Julio C, Isrow, Derek M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10150617/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37139042
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37001
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author Fine, Jessica R
Bafna, Tanvi
Griffith, Sarah C
Ransdell, Justine M
Barredo, Julio C
Isrow, Derek M
author_facet Fine, Jessica R
Bafna, Tanvi
Griffith, Sarah C
Ransdell, Justine M
Barredo, Julio C
Isrow, Derek M
author_sort Fine, Jessica R
collection PubMed
description Purpose As pediatric cancer survival rates have exponentially increased in the past decade, with the vast majority surviving five years or more, the long-term impacts of treatment on the quality of survivorship must be explored. This study examines the effects of pediatric cancer treatment regimens on education outcomes among a demographically diverse regional population. The primary objective is to identify potential factors that may impact the educational and cognitive quality of life in this population.  Methods Four hundred sixty-eight pediatric oncology patients diagnosed at age <20 between January 1990 - August 2019 and treated for cancer with radiation therapy at a large public or a multi-center private hospital in South Florida were identified. A novel survey available in English and Spanish was electronically distributed at least three times to each patient from August 2020 - July 2021 via email, phone call, and text message. Variables relating to demographics, treatment, cognitive impairment, and school re-entry were collected through the survey and electronic medical record review. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed.  Results Of the patients, 10.5% responded to the survey (26 male, 21 female, two unidentified sex). The mean age was 8.9 years old (range 0-20) at diagnosis, 24.0 years old (range 8-39) at the time of survey completion, and 55.1% self-identified as Hispanic. Nearly one-quarter of respondents (22.4%) were unable to correctly identify the treatment modalities they received; Hispanic self-identifying patients were 1.75 times more likely than non-Hispanic patients to incorrectly report the treatment modalities received. One-quarter (26.5%) of respondents reported long-term cognitive deficits post-treatment, of which, over three-quarters (76.9%) identified as Hispanic.  Conclusion This study illuminates patients' perspectives on their long-term cognitive impacts after pediatric cancer treatment. Given the diverse study population, ethnic disparities in post-treatment survivorship were explored. A substantial subset of Hispanic participants was unable to correctly identify their treatment regimen, and a disproportionately large group of Hispanic patients experienced cognitive long-term cognitive deficits, suggesting that ethnic disparities play a critical role in post-treatment survivorship. Further research on prioritizing educational intervention during and after treatment is essential to improving both the quality and equity of survivorship among pediatric oncology patients.
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spelling pubmed-101506172023-05-02 Effects of Cancer Treatment on the Education and Cognition of South Florida Pediatric Cancer Survivors Fine, Jessica R Bafna, Tanvi Griffith, Sarah C Ransdell, Justine M Barredo, Julio C Isrow, Derek M Cureus Pediatrics Purpose As pediatric cancer survival rates have exponentially increased in the past decade, with the vast majority surviving five years or more, the long-term impacts of treatment on the quality of survivorship must be explored. This study examines the effects of pediatric cancer treatment regimens on education outcomes among a demographically diverse regional population. The primary objective is to identify potential factors that may impact the educational and cognitive quality of life in this population.  Methods Four hundred sixty-eight pediatric oncology patients diagnosed at age <20 between January 1990 - August 2019 and treated for cancer with radiation therapy at a large public or a multi-center private hospital in South Florida were identified. A novel survey available in English and Spanish was electronically distributed at least three times to each patient from August 2020 - July 2021 via email, phone call, and text message. Variables relating to demographics, treatment, cognitive impairment, and school re-entry were collected through the survey and electronic medical record review. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed.  Results Of the patients, 10.5% responded to the survey (26 male, 21 female, two unidentified sex). The mean age was 8.9 years old (range 0-20) at diagnosis, 24.0 years old (range 8-39) at the time of survey completion, and 55.1% self-identified as Hispanic. Nearly one-quarter of respondents (22.4%) were unable to correctly identify the treatment modalities they received; Hispanic self-identifying patients were 1.75 times more likely than non-Hispanic patients to incorrectly report the treatment modalities received. One-quarter (26.5%) of respondents reported long-term cognitive deficits post-treatment, of which, over three-quarters (76.9%) identified as Hispanic.  Conclusion This study illuminates patients' perspectives on their long-term cognitive impacts after pediatric cancer treatment. Given the diverse study population, ethnic disparities in post-treatment survivorship were explored. A substantial subset of Hispanic participants was unable to correctly identify their treatment regimen, and a disproportionately large group of Hispanic patients experienced cognitive long-term cognitive deficits, suggesting that ethnic disparities play a critical role in post-treatment survivorship. Further research on prioritizing educational intervention during and after treatment is essential to improving both the quality and equity of survivorship among pediatric oncology patients. Cureus 2023-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10150617/ /pubmed/37139042 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37001 Text en Copyright © 2023, Fine et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Pediatrics
Fine, Jessica R
Bafna, Tanvi
Griffith, Sarah C
Ransdell, Justine M
Barredo, Julio C
Isrow, Derek M
Effects of Cancer Treatment on the Education and Cognition of South Florida Pediatric Cancer Survivors
title Effects of Cancer Treatment on the Education and Cognition of South Florida Pediatric Cancer Survivors
title_full Effects of Cancer Treatment on the Education and Cognition of South Florida Pediatric Cancer Survivors
title_fullStr Effects of Cancer Treatment on the Education and Cognition of South Florida Pediatric Cancer Survivors
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Cancer Treatment on the Education and Cognition of South Florida Pediatric Cancer Survivors
title_short Effects of Cancer Treatment on the Education and Cognition of South Florida Pediatric Cancer Survivors
title_sort effects of cancer treatment on the education and cognition of south florida pediatric cancer survivors
topic Pediatrics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10150617/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37139042
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37001
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