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LGG-11. COGNITIVE, ACADEMIC, AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES IN SURVIVORS OF PEDIATRIC LOW-GRADE GLIOMA: CHALLENGING THE ‘BENIGN TUMOR’ PERCEPTION

High survival rates in pediatric low-grade gliomas (pLGG) may overshadow potentially significant long-term toxicities and functional impact. Chemo-radiation sequelae are well documented, in contrast to those who undergo surgical resection or observation alone. We performed a retrospective cohort stu...

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Autores principales: Nagabushan, Sumanth, Hamayun, Mashaal, Fardell, Joanna E, Donoghoe, Mark, Bland, Elizabeth, Bye, Ann, Jacobson, Erica, Manoharan, Neevika, Ziegler, David S, McLoone, Jordana K, Johnson, Alexandra M, Cohn, Richard J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10260123/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noad073.221
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author Nagabushan, Sumanth
Hamayun, Mashaal
Fardell, Joanna E
Donoghoe, Mark
Bland, Elizabeth
Bye, Ann
Jacobson, Erica
Manoharan, Neevika
Ziegler, David S
McLoone, Jordana K
Johnson, Alexandra M
Cohn, Richard J
author_facet Nagabushan, Sumanth
Hamayun, Mashaal
Fardell, Joanna E
Donoghoe, Mark
Bland, Elizabeth
Bye, Ann
Jacobson, Erica
Manoharan, Neevika
Ziegler, David S
McLoone, Jordana K
Johnson, Alexandra M
Cohn, Richard J
author_sort Nagabushan, Sumanth
collection PubMed
description High survival rates in pediatric low-grade gliomas (pLGG) may overshadow potentially significant long-term toxicities and functional impact. Chemo-radiation sequelae are well documented, in contrast to those who undergo surgical resection or observation alone. We performed a retrospective cohort study from 2000-2015, assessing cognitive, academic, and quality of life (QoL) impact on 45 eligible pLGG survivors aged 0-16 years at diagnosis, at a median 7.4 years post-treatment. A multidisciplinary panel oversaw proxy questionnaires for young children (<7 years), proxy and self-reported for adolescents (8-15 years) and self-reported for young adults (>15 years). Data included demographics; tumor and treatment; early school (young child) progress; academic and occupation achievement (adolescents and young adults); health; and lifestyle issues. The incidence of abnormalities in the domains studied were compared to published population statistics. 16% of survivors underwent observation alone, and 84% surgery (58% complete resection). 57% of survivors experienced cognitive deficits. Young children (50%) and adolescents (42%) had low cognitive functioning scores, correlating with poor academic (p < 0.01) and standardised school educational tests’ performance. 42% of mainstream school attendees required learning support; 33% examination assistance; 50% completed secondary education and 22% a tertiary degree, but had attention (young child and adolescent), and memory (young adult) issues. 65.9% of survivors had at least one neurological concern, highest in adolescents (70%). Language deficits (42.9%), pain, fatigue, and hearing loss (28.6 %) in young children; and vision/sleep difficulties (35%); fatigue (30%) and mobility (25%) in adolescents were reported. Young adults suffered headaches (47.1%) and fatigue (29.4%). Young children (57%) suffered more emotional disturbance than adolescents (16%). Anxiety (23%) and depression (14%) reflected poor QoL on Emotion Thermometer scales in all survivors. These findings challenge the ‘benign’ label of pLGG and highlights the importance of close psychosocial surveillance in helping survivors achieve their best emotional and educational potential.
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spelling pubmed-102601232023-06-13 LGG-11. COGNITIVE, ACADEMIC, AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES IN SURVIVORS OF PEDIATRIC LOW-GRADE GLIOMA: CHALLENGING THE ‘BENIGN TUMOR’ PERCEPTION Nagabushan, Sumanth Hamayun, Mashaal Fardell, Joanna E Donoghoe, Mark Bland, Elizabeth Bye, Ann Jacobson, Erica Manoharan, Neevika Ziegler, David S McLoone, Jordana K Johnson, Alexandra M Cohn, Richard J Neuro Oncol Final Category: Low Grade Gliomas - LGG High survival rates in pediatric low-grade gliomas (pLGG) may overshadow potentially significant long-term toxicities and functional impact. Chemo-radiation sequelae are well documented, in contrast to those who undergo surgical resection or observation alone. We performed a retrospective cohort study from 2000-2015, assessing cognitive, academic, and quality of life (QoL) impact on 45 eligible pLGG survivors aged 0-16 years at diagnosis, at a median 7.4 years post-treatment. A multidisciplinary panel oversaw proxy questionnaires for young children (<7 years), proxy and self-reported for adolescents (8-15 years) and self-reported for young adults (>15 years). Data included demographics; tumor and treatment; early school (young child) progress; academic and occupation achievement (adolescents and young adults); health; and lifestyle issues. The incidence of abnormalities in the domains studied were compared to published population statistics. 16% of survivors underwent observation alone, and 84% surgery (58% complete resection). 57% of survivors experienced cognitive deficits. Young children (50%) and adolescents (42%) had low cognitive functioning scores, correlating with poor academic (p < 0.01) and standardised school educational tests’ performance. 42% of mainstream school attendees required learning support; 33% examination assistance; 50% completed secondary education and 22% a tertiary degree, but had attention (young child and adolescent), and memory (young adult) issues. 65.9% of survivors had at least one neurological concern, highest in adolescents (70%). Language deficits (42.9%), pain, fatigue, and hearing loss (28.6 %) in young children; and vision/sleep difficulties (35%); fatigue (30%) and mobility (25%) in adolescents were reported. Young adults suffered headaches (47.1%) and fatigue (29.4%). Young children (57%) suffered more emotional disturbance than adolescents (16%). Anxiety (23%) and depression (14%) reflected poor QoL on Emotion Thermometer scales in all survivors. These findings challenge the ‘benign’ label of pLGG and highlights the importance of close psychosocial surveillance in helping survivors achieve their best emotional and educational potential. Oxford University Press 2023-06-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10260123/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noad073.221 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Final Category: Low Grade Gliomas - LGG
Nagabushan, Sumanth
Hamayun, Mashaal
Fardell, Joanna E
Donoghoe, Mark
Bland, Elizabeth
Bye, Ann
Jacobson, Erica
Manoharan, Neevika
Ziegler, David S
McLoone, Jordana K
Johnson, Alexandra M
Cohn, Richard J
LGG-11. COGNITIVE, ACADEMIC, AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES IN SURVIVORS OF PEDIATRIC LOW-GRADE GLIOMA: CHALLENGING THE ‘BENIGN TUMOR’ PERCEPTION
title LGG-11. COGNITIVE, ACADEMIC, AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES IN SURVIVORS OF PEDIATRIC LOW-GRADE GLIOMA: CHALLENGING THE ‘BENIGN TUMOR’ PERCEPTION
title_full LGG-11. COGNITIVE, ACADEMIC, AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES IN SURVIVORS OF PEDIATRIC LOW-GRADE GLIOMA: CHALLENGING THE ‘BENIGN TUMOR’ PERCEPTION
title_fullStr LGG-11. COGNITIVE, ACADEMIC, AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES IN SURVIVORS OF PEDIATRIC LOW-GRADE GLIOMA: CHALLENGING THE ‘BENIGN TUMOR’ PERCEPTION
title_full_unstemmed LGG-11. COGNITIVE, ACADEMIC, AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES IN SURVIVORS OF PEDIATRIC LOW-GRADE GLIOMA: CHALLENGING THE ‘BENIGN TUMOR’ PERCEPTION
title_short LGG-11. COGNITIVE, ACADEMIC, AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES IN SURVIVORS OF PEDIATRIC LOW-GRADE GLIOMA: CHALLENGING THE ‘BENIGN TUMOR’ PERCEPTION
title_sort lgg-11. cognitive, academic, and quality of life outcomes in survivors of pediatric low-grade glioma: challenging the ‘benign tumor’ perception
topic Final Category: Low Grade Gliomas - LGG
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10260123/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noad073.221
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