1. The interaction of family functioning and disease- and treatment-related factors on quality of life for children after cancer.
- Author
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Moscato, Emily L., Albee, May V., Anil, Ashley, and Hocking, Matthew C.
- Subjects
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TUMORS in children , *RESEARCH funding , *SECONDARY analysis , *FAMILY relations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *QUALITY of life , *MEDICAL records , *ACQUISITION of data , *CANCER patient psychology , *DATA analysis software , *BRAIN tumors , *CHILDREN ,DIAGNOSIS of tumors in children - Abstract
Purpose: Children with cancer experience low quality of life (QOL), yet heterogeneity underscores a need to understand how risk and resilience factors interact. This study evaluated if family functioning relates to QOL differentially depending on diagnosis and treatment intensity. Methods: Participants included children (ages 8–14) who completed treatment within six months for either brain tumor (BT; n = 42) or non-central nervous system solid tumor (ST; n = 29). Caregivers and children rated QOL and family functioning. Treatment intensity was categorized as low, moderate, or high. Cross-informant moderation models tested hypothesized interactions. Results: Child-reported family functioning significantly interacted with diagnosis and treatment intensity in models of caregiver-reported QOL. More maladaptive family functioning was associated with reduced QOL for children with BT and moderately-intense treatments. Conclusions: Children with BT and moderate treatment intensities are sensitive to family functioning, highlighting an at-risk group to target for family-level intervention. Future work should evaluate these associations longitudinally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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