Cancers (Dec 2021)

Sociodemographic and Medical Determinants of Quality of Life in Long-Term Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Survivors Enrolled in EORTC CLG Studies

  • Charlotte Sleurs,
  • Jammbe Musoro,
  • Ali Rowsell,
  • Michal Kicinski,
  • Stefan Suciu,
  • Sofia Chantziara,
  • Corneel Coens,
  • Madeline Pe,
  • Pierre Missotten,
  • Els Vandecruys,
  • Anne Uyttebroeck,
  • Marie-Françoise Dresse,
  • Claire Pluchart,
  • Alina Ferster,
  • Claire Freycon,
  • Jutte van der Werff ten Bosch,
  • Pierre-Simon Rohrlich,
  • Yves Benoit,
  • Anne-Sophie Darlington,
  • Caroline Piette

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14010152
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 152

Abstract

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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). 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.

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