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Risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study

Childhood cancer survivors (CCS) experience higher hospitalization rates compared to the general population for neoplasms, circulatory diseases, endocrine/nutritional/metabolic diseases and eye disorders. We studied trends in hospitalization rates and associated patient and treatment‐specific risk f...

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Autores principales: Font‐Gonzalez, Anna, Feijen, Elizabeth (Lieke) A.M., Geskus, Ronald B., Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W., van der Pal, Helena J.H., Heinen, Richard C., Jaspers, Monique W., van Leeuwen, Flora E., Reitsma, J.B. (Johannes), Caron, Hubert N., Sieswerda, Elske, Kremer, Leontien C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5430098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28378525
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.1057
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author Font‐Gonzalez, Anna
Feijen, Elizabeth (Lieke) A.M.
Geskus, Ronald B.
Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W.
van der Pal, Helena J.H.
Heinen, Richard C.
Jaspers, Monique W.
van Leeuwen, Flora E.
Reitsma, J.B. (Johannes)
Caron, Hubert N.
Sieswerda, Elske
Kremer, Leontien C.
author_facet Font‐Gonzalez, Anna
Feijen, Elizabeth (Lieke) A.M.
Geskus, Ronald B.
Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W.
van der Pal, Helena J.H.
Heinen, Richard C.
Jaspers, Monique W.
van Leeuwen, Flora E.
Reitsma, J.B. (Johannes)
Caron, Hubert N.
Sieswerda, Elske
Kremer, Leontien C.
author_sort Font‐Gonzalez, Anna
collection PubMed
description Childhood cancer survivors (CCS) experience higher hospitalization rates compared to the general population for neoplasms, circulatory diseases, endocrine/nutritional/metabolic diseases and eye disorders. We studied trends in hospitalization rates and associated patient and treatment‐specific risk factors for diagnosis subgroups among these four diseases. We performed medical record linkage of a ≥5‐year CCS cohort with national registers, and obtained a random reference sample matched on age, gender and calendar year per CCS. For each diagnosis subgroup we compared hospitalization rates and trends over time in CCS and the reference population. Further, we analyzed risk factors for hospitalizations within the four CCS diagnosis groups. We used multivariate Poisson regression for all models. We retrieved hospitalization data from 1382 CCS and 26,583 reference persons. CCS had increased hospitalization rates for almost all diagnosis subgroups examined. Hospitalization rates for endocrine/nutritional/metabolic diseases appeared to increase with longer time since primary cancer diagnosis up to 30 years after primary cancer diagnosis. Survivors initially treated with radiotherapy had increased hospitalization rates for neoplasms (P < 0.001), those initially treated with anthracyclines (2.5 [1.1–5.5]) and radiotherapy to thorax and/or abdomen (9.3 [2.4–36.6]) had increased hospitalization rates for diseases of the circulatory system, and those initially treated with radiotherapy to head and/or neck had increased hospitalization rates for endocrine/nutritional/metabolic diseases (6.7 [3.5–12.7]) and diseases of the eye (3.6 [1.5–8.9]). Our study highlights that long‐term health problems resulting in hospitalizations are still clinically relevant later in life of CCS. The identified treatment‐related risk factors associated with hospitalizations support targeted follow‐up care for these risk groups of CCS.
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spelling pubmed-54300982017-05-17 Risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study Font‐Gonzalez, Anna Feijen, Elizabeth (Lieke) A.M. Geskus, Ronald B. Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W. van der Pal, Helena J.H. Heinen, Richard C. Jaspers, Monique W. van Leeuwen, Flora E. Reitsma, J.B. (Johannes) Caron, Hubert N. Sieswerda, Elske Kremer, Leontien C. Cancer Med Cancer Prevention Childhood cancer survivors (CCS) experience higher hospitalization rates compared to the general population for neoplasms, circulatory diseases, endocrine/nutritional/metabolic diseases and eye disorders. We studied trends in hospitalization rates and associated patient and treatment‐specific risk factors for diagnosis subgroups among these four diseases. We performed medical record linkage of a ≥5‐year CCS cohort with national registers, and obtained a random reference sample matched on age, gender and calendar year per CCS. For each diagnosis subgroup we compared hospitalization rates and trends over time in CCS and the reference population. Further, we analyzed risk factors for hospitalizations within the four CCS diagnosis groups. We used multivariate Poisson regression for all models. We retrieved hospitalization data from 1382 CCS and 26,583 reference persons. CCS had increased hospitalization rates for almost all diagnosis subgroups examined. Hospitalization rates for endocrine/nutritional/metabolic diseases appeared to increase with longer time since primary cancer diagnosis up to 30 years after primary cancer diagnosis. Survivors initially treated with radiotherapy had increased hospitalization rates for neoplasms (P < 0.001), those initially treated with anthracyclines (2.5 [1.1–5.5]) and radiotherapy to thorax and/or abdomen (9.3 [2.4–36.6]) had increased hospitalization rates for diseases of the circulatory system, and those initially treated with radiotherapy to head and/or neck had increased hospitalization rates for endocrine/nutritional/metabolic diseases (6.7 [3.5–12.7]) and diseases of the eye (3.6 [1.5–8.9]). Our study highlights that long‐term health problems resulting in hospitalizations are still clinically relevant later in life of CCS. The identified treatment‐related risk factors associated with hospitalizations support targeted follow‐up care for these risk groups of CCS. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017-04-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5430098/ /pubmed/28378525 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.1057 Text en © 2017 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Cancer Prevention
Font‐Gonzalez, Anna
Feijen, Elizabeth (Lieke) A.M.
Geskus, Ronald B.
Dijkgraaf, Marcel G.W.
van der Pal, Helena J.H.
Heinen, Richard C.
Jaspers, Monique W.
van Leeuwen, Flora E.
Reitsma, J.B. (Johannes)
Caron, Hubert N.
Sieswerda, Elske
Kremer, Leontien C.
Risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study
title Risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study
title_full Risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study
title_fullStr Risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study
title_full_unstemmed Risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study
title_short Risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study
title_sort risk and associated risk factors of hospitalization for specific health problems over time in childhood cancer survivors: a medical record linkage study
topic Cancer Prevention
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5430098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28378525
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.1057
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