Sociodemographic and medical determinants of quality of life in long-term childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia survivors enrolled in EORTC CLG studies
Sociodemographic and medical determinants of quality of life in long-term childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia survivors enrolled in EORTC CLG studies
Background: due to increasing survival rates in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the number of survivors has been expanding. A significant proportion of these survivors can experience long-term emotional and psychosocial problems. However, the exact risk factors remain inconclusive. We investigated potential risk factors for decreased daily life quality and life challenges in long-term childhood ALL survivors enrolled between 1971 and 1998 in EORTC studies.
Methods: self-report questionnaires were collected from 186 survivors (109 females; mean age at diagnosis 5.62 years, range 0.2–14.7; median time since diagnosis of 20.5 years (12.9–41.6)), including the Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12) and Impact of Cancer-Childhood Survivors (IOC-CS). Multivariable linear regression models were used to assess the impact of gender, age at diagnosis, relapse/second neoplasm, National Cancer Institute (NCI) risk group and cranial radiotherapy on 2 subscales of the SF-12 (physical and mental health) and five subscales of the IOC-CS (life challenges, body and health, personal growth, thinking and memory problems and socializing).
Results: mental component scores of SF-12 were not significantly associated with any risk factor. Physical component scores were lower in relapsed, irradiated and NCI high-risk patients. Regarding IOC-CS negative impact subscales, life challenges was more negatively impacted by cancer in female, younger (i.e., <6 years) and relapsed patients. Regarding the positive impact scales, personal growth was more positively impacted in relapsed patients, whereas body and health, and socializing, were less positively impacted in these patients, compared to non-relapsed patients. Socializing was more positively impacted in older patients (>6 years).
Conclusions: this study demonstrates that long-term outcomes can be both adverse and positive, depending on the patient’s demographic and clinical characteristics. Younger, female, and relapsed patients might encounter more life challenges years after their disease, while physical challenges could occur more often in relapsed and high-risk patients. Finally, the positive effect on socializing in the older patients sheds new light on the importance of peer interactions for this subgroup. Specific individual challenges thus need specialized support for specific subgroups.
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Long-term survivorship, Quality of life
Sleurs, Charlotte
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Musoro, Jammbe
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Rowsell, Ali
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Kicinski, Michal
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Suciu, Stefan
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Chantziara, Sofia
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Coens, Corneel
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Pe, Madeline
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Missotten, Pierre
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Vandecruys, Els
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Uyttebroeck, Anne
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Dresse, Marie-françoise
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Pluchart, Claire
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Ferster, Alina
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Freycon, Claire
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Van Der Werff Ten Bosch, Jutte
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Rohrlich, Pierre-simon
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Benoit, Yves
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Darlington, Anne-sophie
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Piette, Caroline
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29 December 2021
Sleurs, Charlotte
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Musoro, Jammbe
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Rowsell, Ali
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Kicinski, Michal
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Suciu, Stefan
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Chantziara, Sofia
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Coens, Corneel
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Pe, Madeline
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Missotten, Pierre
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Vandecruys, Els
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Uyttebroeck, Anne
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Dresse, Marie-françoise
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Pluchart, Claire
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Ferster, Alina
4492084a-acef-4374-acfe-b1278cde021b
Freycon, Claire
e01043ed-a4f1-4516-b503-b7aac254cb04
Van Der Werff Ten Bosch, Jutte
b48be56d-c840-4a40-9b37-005eb57659a5
Rohrlich, Pierre-simon
08873d62-d260-47a4-9f41-359c267c54bd
Benoit, Yves
c77d10b0-4bc5-4196-a4fd-e85f0b754f52
Darlington, Anne-sophie
472fcfc9-160b-4344-8113-8dd8760ff962
Piette, Caroline
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Sleurs, Charlotte, Musoro, Jammbe, Rowsell, Ali, Kicinski, Michal, Suciu, Stefan, Chantziara, Sofia, Coens, Corneel, Pe, Madeline, Missotten, Pierre, Vandecruys, Els, Uyttebroeck, Anne, Dresse, Marie-françoise, Pluchart, Claire, Ferster, Alina, Freycon, Claire, Van Der Werff Ten Bosch, Jutte, Rohrlich, Pierre-simon, Benoit, Yves, Darlington, Anne-sophie and Piette, Caroline
(2021)
Sociodemographic and medical determinants of quality of life in long-term childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia survivors enrolled in EORTC CLG studies.
Cancers, 14 (1), [152].
(doi:10.3390/cancers14010152).
Abstract
Background: due to increasing survival rates in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the number of survivors has been expanding. A significant proportion of these survivors can experience long-term emotional and psychosocial problems. However, the exact risk factors remain inconclusive. We investigated potential risk factors for decreased daily life quality and life challenges in long-term childhood ALL survivors enrolled between 1971 and 1998 in EORTC studies.
Methods: self-report questionnaires were collected from 186 survivors (109 females; mean age at diagnosis 5.62 years, range 0.2–14.7; median time since diagnosis of 20.5 years (12.9–41.6)), including the Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12) and Impact of Cancer-Childhood Survivors (IOC-CS). Multivariable linear regression models were used to assess the impact of gender, age at diagnosis, relapse/second neoplasm, National Cancer Institute (NCI) risk group and cranial radiotherapy on 2 subscales of the SF-12 (physical and mental health) and five subscales of the IOC-CS (life challenges, body and health, personal growth, thinking and memory problems and socializing).
Results: mental component scores of SF-12 were not significantly associated with any risk factor. Physical component scores were lower in relapsed, irradiated and NCI high-risk patients. Regarding IOC-CS negative impact subscales, life challenges was more negatively impacted by cancer in female, younger (i.e., <6 years) and relapsed patients. Regarding the positive impact scales, personal growth was more positively impacted in relapsed patients, whereas body and health, and socializing, were less positively impacted in these patients, compared to non-relapsed patients. Socializing was more positively impacted in older patients (>6 years).
Conclusions: this study demonstrates that long-term outcomes can be both adverse and positive, depending on the patient’s demographic and clinical characteristics. Younger, female, and relapsed patients might encounter more life challenges years after their disease, while physical challenges could occur more often in relapsed and high-risk patients. Finally, the positive effect on socializing in the older patients sheds new light on the importance of peer interactions for this subgroup. Specific individual challenges thus need specialized support for specific subgroups.
Text
cancers-14-00152
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 22 December 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 December 2021
Published date: 29 December 2021
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
This work was supported by the QOL grant 013/2016, Fonds Cancer (FOCA) from Belgium and the Vzw Kinderkankerfonds from Belgium (a non-profit childhood cancer foundation under Belgian law) and Kom op tegen Kanker (Stand up to Cancer), the Flemish cancer society from Belgium. First: the authors are grateful to the EORTC Children Leukemia Group members and clinicians involved in our study. Second, we thank the EORTC HQ Data Management Department members for their timely and qualitative assistance (Gabriel Solbu, Nicole Duez, S?raphine Rossi, Bart Meulemans and Livia Giurgea). Third, we appreciate the provided support by members of the Belgian Cancer Registry (Nancy van Damme and Linda Thibaut), and of the Registre National des H?mopathies malignes de l?Enfant (Jacqueline Clavel).
Funding Information:
Funding: This work was supported by the QOL grant 013/2016, Fonds Cancer (FOCA) from Belgium and the Vzw Kinderkankerfonds from Belgium (a non-profit childhood cancer foundation under Belgian law) and Kom op tegen Kanker (Stand up to Cancer), the Flemish cancer society from Belgium.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Copyright:
Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords:
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Long-term survivorship, Quality of life
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 454231
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/454231
ISSN: 2072-6694
PURE UUID: 332ba737-c282-4c4e-908b-d1ee9cf5df78
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Date deposited: 03 Feb 2022 17:43
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 15:22
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Contributors
Author:
Charlotte Sleurs
Author:
Jammbe Musoro
Author:
Michal Kicinski
Author:
Stefan Suciu
Author:
Sofia Chantziara
Author:
Corneel Coens
Author:
Madeline Pe
Author:
Pierre Missotten
Author:
Els Vandecruys
Author:
Anne Uyttebroeck
Author:
Marie-françoise Dresse
Author:
Claire Pluchart
Author:
Alina Ferster
Author:
Claire Freycon
Author:
Jutte Van Der Werff Ten Bosch
Author:
Pierre-simon Rohrlich
Author:
Yves Benoit
Author:
Caroline Piette
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