Literature DB >> 25245636

Final height and body mass index in adult survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated without cranial radiotherapy: a retrospective longitudinal multicenter Italian study.

Patrizia Bruzzi, Barbara Predieri, Andrea Corrias, Alberto Marsciani, Maria Elisabeth Street, Aurora Rossidivita, Paolo Paolucci, Lorenzo Iughetti1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Young adult survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) treated with protocols including cranial radiotherapy demonstrate a persistent weight gain and reduced final height. Published reports on the effects on growth of different oncologic therapies are conflicting and difficult to interpret because they combined children treated with both cranial irradiation and multi-agent chemotherapy. Our study investigated the effect of chemotherapy alone on body mass index (BMI) and on growth at the achievement of final height in a homogeneous cohort of Italian childhood ALL survivors.
METHODS: We retrospectively studied 162 Caucasian patients treated on the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology protocols without radiotherapy between 1989 and 2000 at five Italian centers with 107 inclusions (58 males). Height- and BMI-standard deviation score (SDS) were collected at diagnosis of ALL, at the end of treatment and at the achievement of final height. Changes in height SDS and BMI SDS with time were analyzed using dependent sample Student's t-test.
RESULTS: A significant reduction of height-SDS was documented during treatment in both genders. This reduction of height-SDS was not followed by an appropriate catch-up growth, despite the achievement of a mean final height within the normal range. At diagnosis females showed a lower mean BMI-SDS than males. During treatment, in the whole population, BMI-SDS increased significantly. After it, while males lost BMI-SDS, females showed its persistent increase.
CONCLUSIONS: Survivors of childhood ALL generally seemed to achieve a normal final height with a BMI within the normal range. These parameters appeared to be only minimally affected by chemotherapy. Nevertheless, height catch-up growth was not completed after chemotherapy in both genders and all patients experienced an increase of BMI-SDS during chemotherapy that only females seemed to conserve until the achievement of final height.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25245636      PMCID: PMC4194356          DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-14-236

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Pediatr        ISSN: 1471-2431            Impact factor:   2.125


Background

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common malignancy in children and represents 80% of all leukemia cases [1]. Recent progress in risk-adapted treatment for childhood ALL has secured eight-year event-free survival rates of approximately 90% [2-4]. Consequently, the late side-effects of the cancer treatment have obtained an increased attention and the long-term monitoring of survivors has become an important part of their overall health care [5]. Treatment of ALL during childhood is associated with final height deficit. Young age at diagnosis and radiotherapy are considered the major risk factors [6]. Moreover, adult survivors of childhood ALL have a four-fold excess risk of mortality from cardiovascular disease. Obesity seems highly prevalent among female and survivors treated with radiotherapy [7]. Nowadays, ALL survivors form the largest group of long-term survivors from childhood cancer, even if they are a heterogeneous group considering therapeutic protocols. In last decades, in most of them, cranial radiotherapy has been replaced by intrathecal chemotherapy, as standard central nervous system prophylaxis and treatment, and a reduced percentage of children have received cranial radiation [8] with a consequent reduction of sequelae related to this treatment modality. However, it has been suggested that also chemotherapy can negatively affect growth and endocrine functions [9, 10]. Published reports on the effects on growth of these therapies are conflicting and difficult to interpret because most studies have analyzed growth in children treated with both cranial irradiation and combination chemotherapy and disentangling the adverse contribution of these two major therapeutic modalities has proved tricky [11-13]. To evaluate the impact on growth, we performed a retrospective multicenter study in a large pediatric ALL population treated without radiotherapy, followed until the achievement of final height.

Methods

Design and setting

This study was a longitudinal, retrospective and multicenter study: we reviewed the clinical notes of patients treated for ALL at five Italian pediatric oncologic centers (Modena, Turin, Rome, Rimini and Parma) on Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology (AIEOP) protocols, without radiotherapy, from 1989 to 2000, and followed until the achievement of adult height. Inclusion criteria comprised the successful completion of the treatment (standard risk protocols) and a continued first remission. Exclusion criteria included: relapse, exposure to radiotherapy and/or bone marrow transplant, the presence of other diseases potentially influencing growth (i.e. Down’s syndrome, neurofibromatosis type 1) and of chronic treatment with any other medication apart from the AIEOP protocols which might affect growth (i.e. growth hormone therapy, sex steroid) and lack of complete auxological data. Details concerning ALL treatment protocols were published elsewhere [14] and summarized in Table  1.
Table 1

Characteristics of treatment protocols

Protocols87880188028805910191029501 – 9502 armA9502 armB2000
PDN 25001830183015020301970197016201910
VCR 20.591291212121518
DNM 180160160-120120-120120
MTX IT ٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧٧
L-ASP 54008000080000-800008000012000012000080000
6-MP 60002992025900-5100289202735067106830
MTX IV 180154015003014881500148815001500
CPM -20003000160010003000100030002500
DESA -189249300249249261297409
6-TG -900900-840840780780780
ARA-C -60060090060018006001600600-1800
IFO ---12000-----
VM-26 ---600-----
ADM -6012015012012012012060-120
Num. patients exposed 21245282576

Legend: Drugs are expressed as cumulative dose (mg/mq). PDN, prednisolone; VCR, vincristine; DNM, daunorubicin; MTX, metotrexate; IT, intrathecal; ٧ included; L-ASP; L-asparaginase (UI/mq); 6-MP, 6-mercatopurine; IV, intravenously; CPM, cyclophosphamide; DESA, dexamethasone; 6-TG, 6-thioguanine; ARA-C, cytosine arabinoside.; IFO, ifosfamide; VM-26,teniposide; ADM, adriamycin.

Characteristics of treatment protocols Legend: Drugs are expressed as cumulative dose (mg/mq). PDN, prednisolone; VCR, vincristine; DNM, daunorubicin; MTX, metotrexate; IT, intrathecal; ٧ included; L-ASP; L-asparaginase (UI/mq); 6-MP, 6-mercatopurine; IV, intravenously; CPM, cyclophosphamide; DESA, dexamethasone; 6-TG, 6-thioguanine; ARA-C, cytosine arabinoside.; IFO, ifosfamide; VM-26,teniposide; ADM, adriamycin. Provincial Ethical Committee approved the protocol study (practice 185/11).

Data collection

Age, height and weight at diagnosis of ALL (sT), at the end of treatment (EoT), and at final height (FH) were extracted from the record of each eligible patient. Uniformly, in every center, height was measured to the nearest 0.1-cm with a wall-mounted stadiometer (Harpenden, Crymych; UK); body weight was measured to the nearest 0.1-kg and body mass index (BMI) was obtained from the weight in kg/height in meters squared and expressed as standard deviation-score (SD-S) with respect to chronological age. The auxological instruments were routinely checked and calibrated. Height- and BMI- SDS were calculated for each value using age- and sex- specific World Health Organization (WHO) growth chart 2007 [15]. Parental height was also collected to estimate target height (TH), calculated according to the formula: [(mother’s height +13) + father’s height]/2 in males and [(mother’s height - 13) + father’s height]/2 in females [16]. Final height (FH) was defined as the standing height achieved when the linear growth velocity during the preceding year was less than 1 cm/year. For each participant, demographic and therapeutic information was obtained, including gender, ethnicity, diagnostic white cell count (WBC) at sT and treatment modalities.

Data analysis

All results, apart from ages expressed by median, were reported as the mean ± SD. Parametric statistical analysis (STATISTICA™ software, StatSoft Inc., Tulsa, OK, USA) was performed using dependent sample Student’s t-test to detect mean changes in height SDS and BMI SDS from diagnosis of ALL to final height. Data were also analyzed according to gender and to groups of age (younger or older than four years at diagnosis). Independent t-test was performed to detect differences between groups. Gender, WBC, age at diagnosis, height at diagnosis and BMI at diagnosis, genetic target height were analyzed in a univariate regression model with final height SDS as dependent variable through Pearson’s correlation. Potential predictors of final height SDS and BMI SDS at FH were analyzed by multivariate regression models. A P value below 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

Of 162 Caucasian patients treated on AIEOP ALL87, 88, 91, 95 and 2000 protocols without radiotherapy from 1989 to 2000, 107 met inclusion criteria. Causes of exclusion enclosed: relapse (7.4% of initial population), exposure to radiotherapy (6.7%) and lack of data (19.7%). None was excluded because of the presence of other diseases or of other chronic treatment potentially influencing growth. Only auxological parameters at sT were available in the 32 non-participants patients excluded because of lacking data. No statistical differences were detected between included and excluded patients among available variables (Table  2).
Table 2

Meadian age (years; range); Height-SDS (media ± SDS); Height-SDS adjusted according to target height (media ± SDS) and BMI-SDS (media ± SDS) in study population and non-participants and according to gender from sT to FH

Total participant populationParticipants males (58 pts)Participant females (49 pts)Non-participans males (17 pts)Non-participans females (15 pts)
Meadian age
sT 5.57 (1.20 – 13.73)5.93 (1.31 – 12.85)5.15 (1.20 – 13.73)5.84 (1.15 – 12.74)5.12 (1.14 – 13.45)
EoT 7.60 (3.0 – 15.98)7.97 (3.23 – 14.97)7.16 (3.0 – 15.98)//
FH 17.52 (14.05 – 23.98)17.68 (14.05 – 23.98)17 · 24 (14.05- 23.7)//
Height-SDS
sT 0.61 ± 1.040.62 ± 1.050.60 ± 1.050.60 ± 1.020.62 ± 1.09
EoT 0.25 ± 1.08 (0.000)0.30 ± 1.09 (0.003)0.19 ± 1.09 (0.000)//
FH 0.18 ± 1.13 (0.000)0.27 ± 1.03 (0.013)0.07 ± 1.25 (0.000)//
Height-SDS adjusted TH
sT 0.45 ± 1.220.51 ± 1.380.38 ± 1.22//
EoT 0.04 ± 1.2 (0.000)0.18 ± 1.36 (0.043)-0.12 ± 1.11 (0.000)//
FH 0.15 ± 1.20 (0.000)0.37 ± 1.23-0.13 ± 1.11 (0.022)//
BMI-SDS
sT 0.15 ± 1.320.39 ± 1.30-0.12 ± 1.31†0.35 ± 1.24-0.09 ± 1.20
EoT 0.58 ± 1.34 (0.000)0.82 ± 1.29 (0.010)0.29 ± 1.36 (0.015) †//
FH 0.51 ± 1.03 (0.010)0.49 ± 1.090.54 ± 0.96 (0.001)//

Only significant p-values versus sT are expressed into brackets. † Significant p-values Males versus Females (BMI-SDS sT: males vs females: p 0.0427; EoT: males vs females: p 0.0431).

Meadian age (years; range); Height-SDS (media ± SDS); Height-SDS adjusted according to target height (media ± SDS) and BMI-SDS (media ± SDS) in study population and non-participants and according to gender from sT to FH Only significant p-values versus sT are expressed into brackets. † Significant p-values Males versus Females (BMI-SDS sT: males vs females: p 0.0427; EoT: males vs females: p 0.0431). Demographic data of participants and non-participants are shown in Table  2. Among participants, there was no significant difference between male and female groups in age. The median time from diagnosis to assessment of FH was 11.90 ± 3.26 years (range 4.23 -18.46). Table  2 lists anthropometric data over time. At every step-time, both males and females had a mean height- and BMI-SDS within the normal range (Figures  1 and 2). At sT, children appeared generally well-nourished, showing a mean SDS of + 0.61 for height and +0.15 for BMI. Only one girl presented a height-SDS less than -2 SD, but appropriate for her TH SDS (corresponding to -2.70 SD). Analyzing BMI SDS distribution at sT, 7 children were thin (BMI SDS less than -2 SD) and the same number were obese (BMI SDS more than +2 SD).
Figure 1

Mean Height-SDS (A) and mean height-SDS adjusted according to TH (B) changes with time in both gender. Legend: Data at diagnosis of ALL (sT) are colored in red. Data at the end of treatment (EoT) are colored in green. Data at final height (FH) are colored in blue.

Figure 2

Mean BMI-SDS changes with time in both gender. Legend: Data at diagnosis of ALL (sT) are colored in red. Data at the end of treatment (EoT) are colored in green. Data at final height (FH) are colored in blue.

Mean Height-SDS (A) and mean height-SDS adjusted according to TH (B) changes with time in both gender. Legend: Data at diagnosis of ALL (sT) are colored in red. Data at the end of treatment (EoT) are colored in green. Data at final height (FH) are colored in blue. Mean BMI-SDS changes with time in both gender. Legend: Data at diagnosis of ALL (sT) are colored in red. Data at the end of treatment (EoT) are colored in green. Data at final height (FH) are colored in blue.

Changes with time in height-SDS

In the whole population, a significant reduction of height-SDS was documented during treatment (from sT to EoT) in both genders (Table  2). This reduction of height-SDS was not followed by an appropriate catch-up growth (Figure  1). In fact, after the end of chemotherapy, height-SDS further decreased both in females and in males. TH-SDS was 0.02 ± 1.10 SDS in the whole group, -0.08 ± 0.79 SDS in males and 0.16 ± 1.40 in females. At sT, height-SDS adjusted according to TH was higher than at EoT and at FH (Table  2). The discrepancy in height-SDS from TH-SDS reduced over time (TH SDS – sT SDS vs TH SDS – FH SDS: -0.59 vs. -0.16; -0.70 vs. -0.35; -0.44 vs. -0.09 in the whole population, males and females; respectively). Only females achieved a FH SDS significantly reduced than data at sT (Table  2). In the whole population FH-SDS correlated with height-SDS at sT (Figure 3A) and TH-SDS (Figure  3B).
Figure 3

Significant correlations between FH and height SDS at diagnosis (A) (r = 0.571, p = 0.018) and between FH and TH (B) (r = 0.410, p = 0.000) in the whole population.

Significant correlations between FH and height SDS at diagnosis (A) (r = 0.571, p = 0.018) and between FH and TH (B) (r = 0.410, p = 0.000) in the whole population.

Changes with time in BMI-SDS

As far as BMI-SDS is concerned, at diagnosis females showed a lower mean BMI-SDS than males (Table  2). During follow-up, in the whole population, BMI-SDS increased significantly both during treatment and after it until the achievement of FH. After the end of chemotherapy the variation in BMI SDS significantly differed between males and females (BMI SDS FH – BMI SDS EoT: -0.32 ± 1.23 vs. 0.24 ± 1.34 SDS, respectively, p 0 · 023): males decreased significantly their BMI-SDS (FH vs. EoT: p 0.047), whereas females demonstrated no improvement in BMI SDS (FH vs. EoT: p 0.210) (Figure  2). Therefore, at FH only females showed a significant increase of BMI-SDS than at sT (Table  2).

Age of exposure to chemotherapy

According to age, 47 children were younger than four years at diagnosis of ALL (median age 3.06; range 1.20 – 3.89 years). Other 60 presented at sT a median age of 7.79 years (range 4.15 – 13.73 years). There was no significant difference between groups in sex distribution. During chemotherapy, a significant reduction of height-SDS was registered in both groups and it still persisted at FH (Table  3). BMI-SDS increased significantly from sT to EoT in both group, but it was still increased in comparison to the previous at sT only among children exposed to chemotherapy at a younger age (Table  3).
Table 3

Variation of anthropometric data in patients according to age (younger or older than 4 years)

< 4 years≥ 4 years
Height SDS
sT 0.54 ± 1.060.67 ± 1.03
EoT 0.14 ± 1.13 (0.000)0.34 ± 1.05 (0.003)
FH 0.08 ± 1.13 (0.001)0.26 ± 1.14 (0.004)
BMI SDS
sT -0.03 ± 1.200.30 ± 1.40
EoT 0.48 ± 1.42 (0.005)0.65 ± 1.29 (0.023)
FH 0.49 ± 0.97 (0.005)0.53 ± 1.08

Only significant p-values versus sT are expressed into brackets.

Variation of anthropometric data in patients according to age (younger or older than 4 years) Only significant p-values versus sT are expressed into brackets.

Multiple regression analysis

Multiple regression analysis identified TH and height SDS at sT as independent predictive factors for FH (coeff. 0.04, SE 0.02; coeff. 0.46, SE 0.12, respectively). Height SDS together with BMI SDS at sT was also identified as independent predictive factors for final BMI SDS (coeff. 0.30, SE 0.11; coeff. 0.41, SE 0.12, respectively).

Discussion

According to our knowledge, this is the first study examining long-term growth outcomes in a wide cohort of un-irradiated Italian survivors from childhood ALL. Growth impairment has already been reported as a frequent complication of the treatment of ALL [17]. Patients treated when younger than four years and who received cranial irradiation seem to be the more affected [18, 19]. Nevertheless, a variety of other factors can contribute to growth impairment, including decreased nutritional intake, psychosocial dysfunction, chemotherapy and steroid therapy [20]. Data on long-term growth in children treated with chemotherapy alone are scarce and discordant [9, 12, 13, 18, 21–26]. Our data demonstrate that chemotherapy minimally affected final height, confirming some short-term previous published findings [18, 24, 25, 27]. In 2013, Vandecruys and colleagues described the longitudinal growth of 67 adult survivors of childhood ALL, treated from 1983 to 1989 according to European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer 58831/2 protocols with chemotherapy as the only treatment modality, and demonstrated a decrease in FH SDS from the time of diagnosis of -0.53 SDS in the standard-risk ALL group (45 patients) and of -0.73 SDS in the medium- or high-risk survivors (22 patients) [26]. In our study, survivors showed at FH a significant mean height loss of – 0.42 SDS (p 0 .000) compared to height SDS at diagnosis and, analyzing height-SDS adjusted according to TH, the loss in SDS from sT to FH still persisted (-0.30; p 0.000). Differences could be due to the inclusion in our study of a larger number of survivors treated on more recent chemotherapy protocols. The damage induced by chemotherapy could impede a complete catch-up growth, even if our survivors reached a FH within the normality. In fact, only TH and height-SDS at sT directly correlated with FH and they were both identified as independent predictive factors for FH in the multiple regression analysis, demonstrating than genetic potentiality together with growth pattern before ALL still remain the two main factors influencing FH. In irradiated population, girls typically experienced greater growth impairment than boys [11, 28]. Also in our study, analyzing data adjusted according to TH, only females showed a significant persistent reduction of height-SDS data, while males seemed to partially catch up after the end of chemotherapy. Because of the retrospective design of our study and the lack of a description of pubertal data, we could only hypothesized that it is possibly due to the early occurrence of puberty in female survivors of childhood ALL but not in males, as already described in literature [29, 30]. How chemotherapy can affect growth is still unclear, even because hypothalamic-pituitary cells together with liver and chondrocyte do not have a high multiplicative capacity and, therefore, they have not usually been considered vulnerable to the action of chemotherapeutic agents. A reduction of growth hormone (GH) secretion induced by chemotherapy could be supposed. Rose and colleagues documented a hypothalamic-pituitary abnormality after chemotherapy in 83% of 18 hematological malignancy survivors (17 ALL) who were referred to their Clinic because of slow growth [31]. GH deficiency developed in 9 survivors. Even if this report did not represent a study of prevalence, authors hypothesized that chemotherapy alone may affect hypothalamic neurons through the loss of hypothalamic releasing or inhibitory hormone functions or through an altered processing of pituitary hormone. Host factors which might be associated with greater susceptibility to chemotherapy could be considered contributing factors [31]. On the contrary, Vandecruys and colleagues evaluated GH status in their population through glucagon stimulation test at the end of chemotherapy. In the 28% of cases, they demonstrated a decrease of GH secretion. This biochemical status did not correlate with the reduction in height SDS from diagnosis or end of treatment to FH [26]. Moreover, patients with an altered peak GH level at the end of chemotherapy were retested at the onset of puberty and demonstrated a normalized response to the GH stimulation test [26]. In older studies, a condition of GH-deficiency requiring GH replacement therapy has reported prevalence of 0.9 and 1.2% of childhood survivors of ALL treated with chemotherapy alone [32, 33]. In our study, data were collected retrospectively and we did not investigate GH secretion in our population. Nevertheless, the demonstration of limited growth during chemotherapy could support the hypothesis that GH secretion could be directly and acutely altered by chemotherapeutic agents and that, in acute phases, both ALL and its treatment can caused severe catabolic effects in children, leading to increasing protein breakdown and reducing protein synthesis. The growth-promoting and metabolic actions of GH are mediated by specific GH receptors. The absence of or reduction in functional proteins might result in a condition of partial, transient and reversible GH insensitivity [34]. All our patients were exposed to high dose, intravenous MTX associated to its intrathecal administrations and to glucocorticoids in pre-induction, induction and re-induction phases (Table  1). Mild late effects on growth could be due to a direct, structural negative effect of chemotherapy on epiphysis with partial recovery [35]. Up to now, we can demonstrate a significant and not obvious role of chemotherapy in long-term growth impairment, but we can only hypothesize a synergic effect of all chemotherapeutic compounds in altering the multitude and the functionality of cells in growth plate. Obesity is probably the most worrisome and common late effect in survivors of childhood ALL [36]. Razzouk in 2007 documented that 33.7% of 101 young adults treated previously with chemotherapy-alone for ALL were obese [37]. In addition, children treated for childhood cancer may be at unusually high risk from the consequences of obesity, particularly cardiovascular and metabolic comorbidities. Our data help in clarifying changes in BMI SDS over time, meanwhile and after chemotherapy for ALL. Excess weight gain usually starts soon after diagnosis, particularly during the first year of therapy, and it seems to be maintained [20, 38]. Nevertheless, up to now, long-term BMI data in an unirradiated population are not yet fully described and short-term data are extrapolated from small populations [39]. The rate of weight gain varies between studies [10, 37, 40–42]. In our study, BMI-SDS increased significantly from the start of treatment and the increase persisted until the achievement of FH. Increased energy intake and reduced habitual physical activity are commonly considered the main responsible factors of weight gain. During treatment, patients usually undergo changes in their lifestyle. The loss of physical activity may start during hospitalization or unwellness period of the patient, but it persists into adulthood due to a number of factors, including diminished exercise capacity, impaired motor function, diminished interest in recreational activity and over-protectiveness of the child’s primary caregivers [36]. In adulthood, almost 44% of ALL survivors are unlikely to meet the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Recommendations for physical activity and over 74% are less likely to be physically active [43] and their dietary intake is not concordant with specific dietary recommendation [44]. In our study, BMI SDS at sT is identified as independent predictive factor for BMI-SDS at FH. This might indirectly document that, independently from the diagnosis of ALL and its treatment, environmental factors as a negative lifestyle acquired in the family setting during first years of life may intervene in the development of obesity during and after the treatment of ALL. Exposure to chemotherapeutic medications seemed to differ between genders: females seemed more sensitive to effects of chemotherapy and they might be more at risk to present greater and more persistent metabolic alterations than males. Up to now, none of therapeutic choices and/or doses could explain this sexual dimorphism. Others factors should be considered. Female survivors are already known to be less active and to have a more unbalanced caloric intake than males [45]. Nevertheless, a definitive explanation of gender dymorphism could be identified only when other risk factors responsible for an indirect damage of the hypothalamus-pituitary region or of the metabolic pathways will be studied [36]. Our findings confirm and reinforce recent Harper’s data [27, 46]. The group from Cambridge presented data from only 27 ALL survivors (17 females) who reached FH. Only in females, persisting increases in weight-SDS and BMI-SDS (+1.45 vs. +0.46, p < 0.0001) were evident at FH [27]. In our cohort, age at diagnosis did not correlate with final BMI SDS and it was not identified as its independent predictive factors. Nevertheless, examining population according to age-subgroups (younger and older than 4 years at sT), only younger children presented a persistent increase of BMI SDS after the end of chemotherapy. This might support that chemotherapy acts similarly to radiotherapy in altering body composition later-in-life via blunting hypothalamic leptin sensitivity and via modification of metabolism.

Conclusions

In conclusion, our study demonstrates that chemotherapy alone, as in AIEOP protocols, minimizes the loss in FH SDS together with the increase in BMI SDS in adult survivors of childhood. These results could be positively influenced by the fact that, in all the included Italian centers, the management of oncologic patients involves pediatric endocrinologists from the early stages of treatment, allowing early evaluation of pathological conditions and, consequently, early interventions. Nevertheless, both males and females experienced a loss in height-SDS during chemotherapy that was not followed by an appropriate catch-up growth, and an increase of BMI-SDS. Physicians have to keep in mind that cancer survivors, because of treatment (potential cardiotoxic chemotherapy), are prone to develop cardiovascular disease. Obesity can increase the risk for morbidity and mortality due to diabetes, coronary artery disease, atherosclerosis and other diseases related to overweight in adulthood [38], especially in females [47]. Our findings confirmed females as more at risk of either becoming or persisting obese long after chemotherapy. This enables us to focus our efforts in preventing their weight gain and long-term complications of obesity. Nevertheless, the majority of adult survivors are followed by primary health care physicians, rather than by an oncologic center. This leads to an imperative need: educate all health workers on preventing these risks and on developing specific intervention strategies, including correct dietary and lifestyle choices [48] in ALL survivors, even if treated with chemotherapy only.
  46 in total

1.  Non-irradiated female survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia are at risk of long-term increases in weight and body mass index.

Authors:  Robert L C Harper; Richard A L Breene; Michael Gattens; Rachel M Williams; Matthew J Murray
Journal:  Br J Haematol       Date:  2013-09-14       Impact factor: 6.998

2.  Modifiable risk factors and major cardiac events among adult survivors of childhood cancer.

Authors:  Gregory T Armstrong; Kevin C Oeffinger; Yan Chen; Toana Kawashima; Yutaka Yasui; Wendy Leisenring; Marilyn Stovall; Eric J Chow; Charles A Sklar; Daniel A Mulrooney; Ann C Mertens; William Border; Jean-Bernard Durand; Leslie L Robison; Lillian R Meacham
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2013-09-03       Impact factor: 44.544

3.  Physical activity and fitness in adolescent and young adult long-term survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.

Authors:  Liisa S Järvelä; Harri Niinikoski; Päivi M Lähteenmäki; Olli J Heinonen; Jukka Kapanen; Mikko Arola; Jukka Kemppainen
Journal:  J Cancer Surviv       Date:  2010-06-15       Impact factor: 4.442

4.  Metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular risk among long-term survivors of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia - From the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort.

Authors:  Kerri A Nottage; Kirsten K Ness; Chenghong Li; Deokumar Srivastava; Leslie L Robison; Melissa M Hudson
Journal:  Br J Haematol       Date:  2014-01-27       Impact factor: 6.998

5.  Longitudinal linear growth and final height is impaired in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia survivors after treatment without cranial irradiation.

Authors:  Els Vandecruys; Catharina Dhooge; Margarita Craen; Yves Benoit; Jean De Schepper
Journal:  J Pediatr       Date:  2013-01-23       Impact factor: 4.406

6.  Survival and cure trends for European children, adolescents and young adults diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia from 1982 to 2002.

Authors:  Gemma Gatta; Silvia Rossi; Roberto Foschi; Annalisa Trama; Rafael Marcos-Gragera; Guido Pastore; Rafael Peris-Bonet; Charles Stiller; Riccardo Capocaccia
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2013-02-12       Impact factor: 9.941

7.  Height deficit and impairment of the GH/IGF-1 axis in patients treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia during childhood.

Authors:  Maria Ivone Oliveira Pinto Vilela; Marina de Oliveira Serravite; Natália Bragança Oliveira; Patrícia Carneiro de Brito; Antônio Ribeiro-Oliveira; Marcos Borato Viana
Journal:  Horm Res Paediatr       Date:  2013-01-10       Impact factor: 2.852

8.  Risk of late effects of treatment in children newly diagnosed with standard-risk acute lymphoblastic leukaemia: a report from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study cohort.

Authors:  Stefan Essig; Qiaozhi Li; Yan Chen; Johann Hitzler; Wendy Leisenring; Mark Greenberg; Charles Sklar; Melissa M Hudson; Gregory T Armstrong; Kevin R Krull; Joseph P Neglia; Kevin C Oeffinger; Leslie L Robison; Claudia E Kuehni; Yutaka Yasui; Paul C Nathan
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2014-06-19       Impact factor: 41.316

9.  Auxological changes in UK survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia treated without cranial irradiation.

Authors:  R A L Breene; R M Williams; J Hartle; M Gattens; C L Acerini; M J Murray
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2011-02-15       Impact factor: 7.640

Review 10.  Obesity in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in childhood.

Authors:  Lorenzo Iughetti; Patrizia Bruzzi; Barbara Predieri; Paolo Paolucci
Journal:  Ital J Pediatr       Date:  2012-01-27       Impact factor: 2.638

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  7 in total

1.  Increased Body Mass Index during Therapy for Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: A Significant and Underestimated Complication.

Authors:  Helen C Atkinson; Julie A Marsh; Shoshana R Rath; Rishi S Kotecha; Hazel Gough; Mandy Taylor; Thomas Walwyn; Nicholas G Gottardo; Catherine H Cole; Catherine S Choong
Journal:  Int J Pediatr       Date:  2015-05-25

2.  Comparison of height and weight after 12 vs. 18 Gy cranial radiation therapy in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients.

Authors:  Albert C Chen; M Fatih Okcu; ZoAnn E Dreyer; Kala Y Kamdar; Rona Y Sonabend; Hilary S Suzawa; Eunji Jo; Arnold C Paulino
Journal:  Adv Radiat Oncol       Date:  2017-02-01

3.  Response to GH Treatment After Radiation Therapy Depends on Location of Irradiation.

Authors:  Susan R Rose; Martin Carlsson; Adda Grimberg; Ferah Aydin; Assunta Albanese; Anita C S Hokken-Koelega; Cecilia Camacho-Hubner
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 5.958

4.  Endocrine Complications in Children and Adolescents With Non-Central Nervous System Solid Tumors.

Authors:  Yena Lee; Juhee Shin; Yunha Choi; Hyery Kim; Kyung-Nam Koh; Ho Joon Im; Han-Wook Yoo; Jin-Ho Choi
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2021-03-17       Impact factor: 5.555

5.  Pre- and postdiagnosis growth failure, adult short stature, and untreated growth hormone deficiency in radiotherapy-treated long-term survivors of childhood brain tumor.

Authors:  Julia Anttonen; Tiina Remes; Pekka Arikoski; Päivi Lähteenmäki; Mikko Arola; Arja Harila-Saari; Tuula Lönnqvist; Tytti Pokka; Pekka Riikonen; Kirsti Sirkiä; Heikki Rantala; Marja Ojaniemi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-09-06       Impact factor: 3.752

6.  Effect of Vertebral Fracture on Auxological Profiles of Children Undergoing Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Treatment.

Authors:  Moon Bae Ahn; Seongkoo Kim; Won Kyoung Cho; Jae Wook Lee; Min Ho Jung; Nack-Gyun Chung; Bin Cho; Byung-Kyu Suh
Journal:  Front Pediatr       Date:  2021-06-16       Impact factor: 3.418

7.  Irreversible growth plate fusions in children with medulloblastoma treated with a targeted hedgehog pathway inhibitor.

Authors:  Giles W Robinson; Sue C Kaste; Wassim Chemaitilly; Daniel C Bowers; Stephen Laughton; Amy Smith; Nicholas G Gottardo; Sonia Partap; Anne Bendel; Karen D Wright; Brent A Orr; William C Warner; Arzu Onar-Thomas; Amar Gajjar
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-09-01
  7 in total

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