| Literature DB >> 32269016 |
Thomas Suter1, Nicolas Xavier von der Weid2, Christina Schindera3,2, Claudia Elisabeth Kuehni3,4, Mladen Pavlovic1, Eva Simona Haegler-Laube1, Daniel Rhyner1, Nicolas Waespe3,5, Jochen Roessler4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular disease is the leading nonmalignant cause of late deaths in childhood cancer survivors. Cardiovascular disease and cardiac dysfunction can remain asymptomatic for many years, but eventually lead to progressive disease with high morbidity and mortality. Early detection and intervention are therefore crucial to improve outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Switzerland; alkylating agents; anthracyclines; cardiac radiation; cardiotoxicity; echocardiography; speckle tracking; steroids; strain
Year: 2020 PMID: 32269016 PMCID: PMC7315371 DOI: 10.2196/17724
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Figure 1Responsible teams in the study of preclinical diagnosis of cardiac dysfunction in childhood cancer survivors.
Figure 2Study design and risk group stratification of childhood cancer survivors.
Figure 3Recruitment of childhood cancer survivors eligible for the study, current as of October 1, 2019.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of survivors eligible for participation in the cohort study (n=544), as of January 1, 2018.
| Demographic and clinical characteristics | n (%) | ||
| Male sex | 297 (55) | ||
| Age at the time of the study (years)a | 32.5 (25.4-38.5, 18.3-56.0) | ||
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| <20 | 30 (6) | |
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| 20-29 | 197 (36) | |
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| 30-39 | 207 (38) | |
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| >39 | 110 (20) | |
| Age at diagnosis (years)a | 6.7 (3.1-12.5, 0.1-17.5) | ||
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| ||
|
| <5 | 207 (38) | |
|
| 5-9 | 134 (25) | |
|
| 10-14 | 149 (27) | |
|
| 15-19 | 54 (10) | |
| Time since diagnosis (years)a | 25.0 (17.9-32.0, 6.2-42.0) | ||
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| ||
|
| 5-10 | 31 (6) | |
|
| 11-20 | 130 (24) | |
|
| 21-30 | 220 (40) | |
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| 31-40 | 147 (27) | |
|
| >40 | 16 (3) | |
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| I Leukemia | 218 (40) | |
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| II Lymphoma | 118 (22) | |
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| III CNSc | 35 (6) | |
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| IV Neuroblastoma | 17 (3) | |
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| V Retinoblastoma | 11 (2) | |
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| VI Renal tumor | 38 (7) | |
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| VII Hepatic tumor | 6 (1) | |
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| VIII Bone tumor | 40 (7) | |
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| IX Soft tissue sarcoma | 33 (6) | |
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| X Germ cell tumor | 8 (2) | |
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| XI&XII Other rare tumorsd | 20 (4) | |
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| 1976-1985 | 136 (25) | |
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| 1986-1995 | 199 (36) | |
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| 1996-2005 | 156 (29) | |
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| 2006-2012 | 53 (10) | |
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| High-riske | 300 (55) | |
|
| Standard-riskf | 244 (45) | |
| Any radiation therapy | 213 (39) | ||
| Any surgery | 329 (61) | ||
| Any chemotherapy | 531 (98) | ||
| Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation | 28 (5) | ||
amedian (IQR, range).
bICCC-3, International Classification of Childhood Cancer third edition.
cCNS, central nervous system.
dincluding Langerhans cell histiocytosis, other malignant epithelial neoplasms, malignant melanomas, and other or unspecified malignant neoplasms.
eanthracyclines and/or cardiac radiation.
fany chemotherapy other than anthracyclines.