Litcius/Paper detail

Disparities in parental distress in a multicenter clinical trial for pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Puja J. Umaretiya, Victoria Koch, Yael Flamand, Rahela Aziz‐Bose, Lenka Ilcisin, Ariana Valenzuela, Peter D. Cole, Lisa Gennarini, Justine M. Kahn, Kara M. Kelly, Thai Hoa Tran, Bruno Michon, Jennifer Welch, Joanne Wolfe, Lewis B. Silverman, Kira Bona

2023JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Parent psychological distress during childhood cancer treatment has short- and long-term implications for parent, child, and family well-being. Identifying targetable predictors of parental distress is essential to inform interventions. We investigated the association between household material hardship (HMH), a modifiable poverty-exposure defined as housing, food, or utility insecurity, and severe psychological distress among parents of children aged 1-17 years with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) enrolled on the multicenter Dana-Farber ALL Consortium Trial 16-001. METHODS: This was a secondary analysis of parent-reported data. Parents completed an HMH survey within 32 days of clinical trial enrollment (T0) and again at 6 months into therapy (T1). The primary exposure was HMH at T0 and primary outcome was severe parental distress at T0 and T1, defined as a score greater than or equal to 13 on the Kessler-6 Psychological Distress Scale. Multivariable models were adjusted for ALL risk group and single parent status. RESULTS: Among 375 evaluable parents, one-third (32%; n = 120/375) reported HMH at T0. In multivariable analyses, T0 HMH was associated with over twice the odds of severe psychological distress at T0 and T1 HMH was associated with over 5 times the odds of severe distress at T1. CONCLUSIONS: Despite uniform clinical trial treatment of their children at well-resourced pediatric centers, HMH-exposed parents-compared with unexposed parents-experienced statistically significantly increased odds of severe psychological distress at the time of their child's leukemia diagnosis, which worsened 6 months into therapy. These data identify a high-risk parental population who may benefit from early psychosocial and HMH-targeted interventions to mitigate disparities in well-being.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDistressOdds ratioPopulationPediatricsOddsClinical trialPsychological interventionInternal medicinePsychiatryClinical psychologyLogistic regressionEnvironmental healthChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of LifeAcute Lymphoblastic Leukemia researchFamily Support in Illness