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Associations of Symptom Clusters and Health Outcomes in Adult Survivors of Childhood Cancer: A Report From the St Jude Lifetime Cohort Study

Title
Associations of Symptom Clusters and Health Outcomes in Adult Survivors of Childhood Cancer: A Report From the St Jude Lifetime Cohort Study
Authors
Shin, HyewonDudley, William N.Bhakta, NickhillHoran, Madeline R.Wang, ZhaomingBartlett, T. RobinSrivastava, DeokumarYasui, YutakaBaker, Justin N.Robison, Leslie L.Ness, Kirsten K.Krull, Kevin R.Hudson, Melissa M.Huang, I-Chan
Ewha Authors
신혜원
SCOPUS Author ID
신혜원scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
ISSN
0732-183XJCR Link

1527-7755JCR Link
Citation
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY vol. 41, no. 3, pp. 497 - +
Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS &

WILKINS
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
PURPOSE To identify symptom clusters among adult survivors of childhood cancers and test associations with health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and physical and neurocognitive performance. METHODS This cross-sectional study included 3,085 survivors (mean age at evaluation 31.9 8.3 years; mean years from diagnosis 28.1 9.1) participating in the St Jude Lifetime Cohort Study. Survivors self-reported the presence of 37 symptoms capturing 10 domains (cardiac, pulmonary, sensory, motor/movement, nausea, pain, fatigue, memory, anxiety, and depression). The Short Form-36's Physical/Mental Component Summaries assessed HRQOL; the Physical Performance Test evaluated physical performance; and neurocognitive batteries tested attention, processing/psychomotor speed, memory, and executive function. Latent class analysis identified subgroups of survivors experiencing different patterns of symptom burden (ie, symptom clusters). Multivariable regression models identified risk of cluster membership and tested associations with health outcomes. RESULTS Four symptom clusters were identified including cluster 1 (prevalence 52.4%; low physical, somatization, and psychologic domains), cluster 2 (16.1%; low physical, moderate somatic, and high psychologic domains), cluster 3 (17.6%; high physical, moderate somatic, and low psychologic domains), and cluster 4 (13.9%; high in all three domains). Compared with cluster 1, survivors in cluster 4 were more likely to have less than high school education (odds ratio [OR], 7.71; 95% CI, 4.46 to 13.31), no insurance (OR, 1.49; 95% CI, 1.04 to 2.13), and exposure to corticosteroids (OR, 1.76; 95% CI, 1.02 to 3.03); survivors in cluster 3 were more likely to have received platinum agents (OR, 2.22; 95% CI, 1.34 to 3.68) and brain radiation >= 30 Gy (OR, 3.99; 95% CI, 2.33 to 6.86). Survivors in cluster 4 reported the poorest Physical Component Summary/Mental Component Summary scores (31.0/26.7) and physical and neurocognitive performance versus survivors in the other clusters (P < .001). CONCLUSION Nearly 50% of survivors had moderate to high multisymptom burden, which was associated with sociodemographic, treatment factors, HRQOL, and functional outcomes.
DOI
10.1200/JCO.22.00361
Appears in Collections:
간호대학 > 간호학전공 > Journal papers
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