Background Survivors of childhood cancer develop early and severe chronic health conditions (CHCs). A quantitative landscape of morbidity among survivors, however, has not been described. Methods Among 5,522 patients treated for childhood cancer at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital who survived ≥10 years and were ≥18 years old, 3,010 underwent prospective clinical assessment and retrospective medical validation of health records as part of the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort Study. Age- and sex-frequency-matched community-controls (n=272) were used for comparison. 168 CHCs for all participants were graded for severity using a modified Common Terminology Criteria of Adverse Events. Multiple imputation with predictive mean matching was used for missing occurrences and grades of CHCs among the 2512 survivors not clinically evaluated. Mean cumulative count and marked-point-process regression were used for descriptive and inferential cumulative burden analyses, respectively. Findings The cumulative incidence of any grade CHC at age 50 was 99·9%; 96·0% (95·3%–96·8%) for severe/disabling, life-threatening or fatal CHCs. By age 50, a survivor experienced, on average, 17·1 (16·2–18·0) CHCs including 4·7 (4·6–4·9) graded as severe/disabling, life-threatening or fatal. The cumulative burden among survivors was nearly 2-fold greater than matched community-controls (p<0·001). Second neoplasms, spinal disorders and pulmonary disease were major contributors to the excess total cumulative burden. Significant heterogeneity in CHCs among survivors with differing primary cancer diagnoses was observed. Multivariable analyses demonstrated that age at diagnosis, treatment era and higher doses of brain and chest radiation are significantly associated with a greater cumulative burden and severity of CHCs. Interpretation The burden of surviving childhood cancer is substantial and highly variable. The total cumulative burden experienced by survivors of pediatric cancer, in conjunction with detailed characterization of long-term CHCs, provide data to better inform future clinical guidelines, research investigations and health services planning for this vulnerable, medically-complex population.
Characterization of toxicity associated with cancer and its treatment is essential to quantify risk, inform optimization of therapeutic approaches for newly diagnosed patients, and guide health surveillance recommendations for long-term survivors. The National Cancer Institute’s Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) provides a common rubric for grading severity of adverse outcomes in cancer patients that is widely used in clinical trials. The CTCAE has also been used to assess late cancer treatment-related morbidity, but is not fully representative of the spectrum of events experienced by pediatric and aging adult survivors of childhood cancer. Also, CTCAE characterization does not routinely integrate detailed patient-reported and medical outcomes data available from clinically assessed cohorts. To address these deficiencies, we standardized the severity grading of long-term and late-onset health events applicable to childhood cancer survivors across their lifespan by modifying the existing CTCAEv4.03 criteria and aligning grading rubrics from other sources for chronic conditions not included or optimally addressed in the CTCAEv4.03. This manuscript describes the methods of late toxicity assessment used in the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort (SJLIFE) Study, a clinically assessed cohort in which data from multiple diagnostic modalities and patient-reported outcomes are ascertained.
Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) offers potentially curative therapy for Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia (CMML). We evaluated HCT outcomes in 85 patients with CMML, 1.0–69.1 (median 51.7) years of age, with follow-up extending to 19 years. CMML was considered de novo in 71 and secondary in 14 patients. Conditioning regimens were of various intensities. Thirty-eight patients had related (34 HLA identical), and 47 (39 HLA matched) unrelated donors. The source of stem cells was marrow in 32 and peripheral blood progenitor cells in 53 patients. Acute GVHD grades II–IV occurred in 72% and chronic GVHD in 26% of patients. Relapse incidence was 27% at 10 years. Relapse correlated with increasing scores by the MD Anderson prognostic score (p=0.01). The major causes of death were relapse and infections ±GVHD. Progression-free survival was 38% at 10 years. Mortality was negatively correlated with pre-HCT hematocrit (p=0.007), and increased with high-risk cytogenetics (p=0.02), higher HCT Comorbidity Index (p=0.0008), and increased age (p=.02). WHO classification did not statistically significantly affect outcome. Thus, a proportion of patients with CMML have lasting remissions following allogeneic HCT and appear to be cured of their disease.
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