Litcius/Paper detail

Parental Considerations Regarding Cure and Late Effects for Children With Cancer

Katie A. Greenzang, Hasan Al‐Sayegh, Clement Ma, Mehdi Najafzadeh, Eve Wittenberg, Jennifer W. Mack

2020PEDIATRICS21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: More than 80% of children with cancer become long-term survivors, yet most survivors experience late effects of treatment. Little is known about how parents and physicians consider late-effects risks against a potential survival benefit when making treatment decisions. METHODS: We used a discrete choice experiment to assess the importance of late effects on treatment decision-making and acceptable trade-offs between late-effects risks and survival benefit. We surveyed 95 parents of children with cancer and 41 physicians at Dana-Farber/Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center to assess preferences for 5 late effects of treatment: neurocognitive impairment, infertility, cardiac toxicity, second malignancies, and impaired growth and development. RESULTS: < .001). Avoidance of severe cognitive impairment was the most important treatment consideration to parents and physicians. Parents also valued cure and decreased risk of second malignancies; physician decision-making was driven by avoidance of second malignancies and infertility. Both parents and physicians accepted a high risk of infertility (parents, a 137% increased risk; physicians, an 80% increased risk) in exchange for a 10% greater chance of cure. CONCLUSIONS: Avoidance of severe neurocognitive impairment was the predominant driver of parent and physician treatment preferences, even over an increased chance of cure. This highlights the importance of exploring parental late-effects priorities when discussing treatment options.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNeurocognitiveInfertilityCancerCancer treatmentCognitive impairmentPediatricsCognitionPsychiatryPregnancyInternal medicineGeneticsBiologyChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of LifeEthics and Legal Issues in Pediatric HealthcareReproductive Biology and Fertility
Parental Considerations Regarding Cure and Late Effects for Children With Cancer | Litcius