Navigating pediatric advanced cancer is challenging for children and parents, resulting in increased risk for psychological distress. While research has explored parent worries/concerns, few studies have included children's perspectives. To explore worries/concerns in children with advanced cancer and their parents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Although pediatric cancer often causes significant stress for families, most childhood cancer survivors are resilient and do not exhibit severe or lasting psychopathology. Research demonstrates some survivors may report benefit-finding or positive outcomes following this stressful life event. However, considerably less research has included families of children who are unlikely to survive their illness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To characterize caregiver experiences in the context of advanced pediatric cancer by identifying individual (i.e., demographic factors, stress) and family context factors (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Adolescents with cancer often experience significant symptom burden and aggressive treatment near end-of-life. Increased adolescent involvement in care and decision-making may benefit health outcomes. Limited research has examined factors associated with adolescents' involvement in care in the context of advanced disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRetinoblastoma is an ocular cancer associated with genomic variation in the gene. In individuals with bilateral retinoblastoma, a germline variant in is identified in virtually all cases. We describe herein an individual with bilateral retinoblastoma for whom multiple clinical lab assays performed by outside commercial laboratories failed to identify a germline variant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: This qualitative study examined how families share information and feelings about advanced pediatric cancer from the perspective of both parents and children, as well as how these perspectives vary by child developmental stage.
Methods: Participants (24 mothers, 20 fathers, 23 youth [children and adolescents]) were from a larger longitudinal study at an academic pediatric hospital. Eligible youth had advanced cancer (physician-estimated prognosis of <60%, relapse, or refractory disease), were aged 5-19 years (>8 years old to participate independently), had an English-speaking parent, and lived within 140 miles of the hospital.
Background: Establishing and achieving learning goals (LGs) are important lifelong learning skills for residents. Faculty are critical in facilitation and achievement of residents' LGs, yet many have difficulty with this role in the busy inpatient setting.
Objectives: Our primary aim was to improve faculty engagement in resident LGs, targeting ≥80% of faculty achieving a mean score ≥goal, over a period of 1 year by setting prerotation expectations and stressing team-based faculty accountability during the rotation in the current inpatient learning environment.
This pilot study examined the associations among functional connectivity in the salience, central executive, and default mode networks, and neurocognition in pediatric brain tumor survivors and healthy children. Thirteen pediatric brain tumor survivors (9 boys, M = 12.76 years) and 10 healthy children (6 boys, M = 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Pediatric cancer survivors may have lower quality of life (QoL), but most research has assessed outcomes either in treatment or long-term survivorship. We focused on early survivorship (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Central nervous system (CNS)-directed treatments can cause long-term academic, social, and emotional difficulties for children with cancer. However, limited research has examined the emergence of problems longitudinally and has often stratified risk by diagnosis alone. Therefore, this study compared competence and adjustment in children, who did and did not receive CNS-directed treatment, over the first 3 years following a cancer diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Meaning-making may assist individuals in adaptation to stressful life events, particularly bereavement. However, few studies have examined meaning-making among pediatric populations with advanced illness to understand how this process unfolds before the child's death. This study explores meaning-making pre-bereavement among children with advanced cancer and their parents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: "Head Start" III, was a prospective clinical trial using intensive induction followed by myeloablative chemotherapy and autologous hematopoietic cell rescue (AuHCR) to either avoid or reduce the dose/volume of irradiation in young children with medulloblastoma.
Methods: Following surgery, patients received 5 cycles of induction followed by myeloablative chemotherapy using carboplatin, thiotepa, and etoposide with AuHCR. Irradiation was reserved for children >6 years old at diagnosis or with residual tumor post-induction.
J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol
June 2020
Childhood cancer survivors are at risk for impaired psychosocial functioning, but limited research has focused on psychosexual outcomes in young adulthood. This qualitative study examined the perceived impact of childhood cancer on adult survivors' romantic relationships and sexual/physical intimacy. Phone interviews were completed with adult survivors of childhood cancer, exploring the impact of cancer on (1) romantic relationships and (2) sexual/physical intimacy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Survivors of childhood cancer are at increased risk of treatment-related cardiovascular disease, the severity of which is impacted by the level of regular exercise. Exercise assessments (EAs) are not a routine component of follow-up care.
Methods: We incorporated a quantitative EA tool into the clinic triage during follow-up visits for survivors of acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Background: We report a patient with primary central nervous system mixed malignant germ cell tumor (GCT) who presented with recurrent malignant germinomatous infiltration of the retina.
Case Description: A 10-year-old girl initially presented with a large suprasellar mixed malignant GCT with a near-complete response after initial induction of chemotherapy and irradiation. Three and a half years after initial therapy, she presented with progressively worsening vision in her left eye.
Background: Surgical resection is the treatment of choice for pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma, while chemotherapy and radiation therapy are typically used in patients with anaplasia, metastasis, or sometimes in subtotally resected cases, especially upon recurrence. Extracranial dissemination has been only rarely reported. We describe a five year old boy with the rare occurrence multiply recurrent and extracranially disseminated anaplastic pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To extend the limited research on psychosexual development among childhood cancer survivors, by not only focusing on the prevalence and age of milestone attainment, but also survivors' attitudes toward the timing of reaching such milestones.
Methods: Adult survivors of childhood cancer (N = 90; M = 29.8, SD = 5.