Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences (Jun 2019)

A cross‐sectional follow‐up study of physical morbidities, neurocognitive function, and attention problems in post‐treatment childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia survivors

  • Shyh‐Shin Chiou,
  • Pei‐Chin Lin,
  • Yu‐Mei Liao,
  • Pinchen Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/kjm2.12061
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 6
pp. 373 – 378

Abstract

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Abstract Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common childhood cancer. While ALL therapies are highly effective, western studies have shown excesses late life effects of therapies in survivors. In this survey, we recruited subjects being diagnosed as ALL before the age of 18‐year‐old and had been in complete continuous remission for at least 3 years. Subjects were arranged to receive three cognitive tests (Wechsler intelligence test, Conners' continuous performance test, and Wisconsin card sorting test). Standardized questionnaires were used to inquiry about attention problem in real life context. Treatment outcome were compared between the standard risk and high/very high risk groups. Final survivors were 42 subjects (26 males, 16 females) with median current age of 17.8 years. Subjects were diagnosed to be with ALL at a median age of 4.8 years. The median survival time (from discontinuation of ALL treatment to the study date) was 8.4 years. Results indicated that 17 subjects (40.5%) had chronic physical conditions in need of clinical management and six subjects (14.3%) had mental condition. For the performance‐based cognitive outcome, the average full scale intelligence quotient was 91.7 ± 13.8. Ten percent of the subjects had problem in test of attention, 20% had problem in test of impulsivity and 42.8% of the subject had problems in executive function. When judged from real life contexts, 19 subjects (42%) were with obvious attention problems. Group comparison between standard risk vs high/very high risk patients revealed no difference in neurocognitive outcomes. We hope that this information may benefit the implementation of follow‐up program for Taiwanese pediatric leukemia survivors.

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