Cancer Medicine (Sep 2023)

Disparities in pediatric cancer survivorship care: A systematic review

  • Erin M. Mobley,
  • Diana J. Moke,
  • Joel Milam,
  • Carol Y. Ochoa‐Dominguez,
  • Julia Stal,
  • Halle Mitchell,
  • Naghmeh Aminzadeh,
  • Maria Bolshakova,
  • Raymond B. Mailhot Vega,
  • Jennifer Dinalo,
  • Aneesa Motala,
  • Susanne Hempel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.6426
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 17
pp. 18281 – 18305

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Childhood cancer survivors (CCS) experience many long‐term health problems that can be mitigated with recommended survivorship care. However, many CCS do not have access to survivorship care nor receive recommended survivorship care. We reviewed the empirical evidence of disparities in survivorship care for CCS. Methods This systematic review searched PubMed, CINAHL, and PsycINFO for studies on survivorship care for CCS (PROSPERO: CRD42021227965) and abstracted the reported presence or absence of disparities in care. We screened 7945 citations, and of those, we reviewed 2760 publications at full text. Results A total of 22 studies reported in 61 publications met inclusion criteria. Potential disparities by cancer treatment (N = 14), diagnosis (N = 13), sex (N = 13), and current age (N = 13) were frequently studied. There was high quality of evidence (QOE) of survivorship care disparities associated with non‐White race, Hispanic ethnicity, and being uninsured. Moderate QOE demonstrated disparities among CCS who were unemployed and older. Lower QOE was found for disparities based on cancer diagnosis, cancer treatment, age at diagnosis, time since diagnosis, sex, insurance type, income, educational attainment, and geographic area. Conclusions We found strong empirical evidence of disparities in survivorship care for CCS associated with race, ethnicity, and insurance status. Multiple other disparate groups, such as those by employment, income, insurance type, education, cancer diagnosis, age at diagnosis, time since diagnosis, cancer treatment, geographic area, sex, and self‐identified gender warrant further investigation. Prospective, multilevel research is needed to examine the role of other patient characteristics as potential disparities hindering adequate survivorship care in CCS.

Keywords