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Examining health-related quality of life in pediatric cancer patients with febrile neutropenia: Factors predicting poor recovery in children and their parents
- Source :
- EClinicalMedicine
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Elsevier, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Background The impact febrile neutropenia (FN) has on the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of children with cancer and their families is poorly understood. We sought to characterize the course of child and parent HRQoL during and following FN episodes. Method Data on HRQoL were collected in the multisite Australian Predicting Infectious ComplicatioNs in Children with Cancer (PICNICC) study. Participants were enrolled between November 2016 to January 2018. The Child Health Utility (CHU9D) was used to assess HRQoL in children (N = 167 FN events) and the Assessment of Quality of Life (AQoL-8D) was used to assess HRQoL parents (N = 218 FN events) at three time points: 0–3 days, 7-days and 30-days following the onset of FN. Group-based trajectory modeling (GBTM) was used to characterize the course of HRQoL. Findings For children, three distinct groups were identified: persistently low HRQoL over the 30-day course of follow-up (chronic: N = 78/167; 47%), increasing HRQoL after the onset of FN to 30 days follow-up (recovering: N = 36/167; 22%), and persistently high HRQoL at all three timepoints (resilient: N = 53/167; 32%). Applying these definitions, parents were classified into two distinct groups: chronic (N = 107/218, 49%) and resilient (N = 111/218, 51%). The child being male, having solid cancer, the presence of financial stress, and relationship difficulties between the parent and child were significant predictors of chronic group membership for both parents and children. Children classified as high-risk FN were significantly more likely to belong to the recovery group. Being female, having blood cancers and the absence of financial or relationship difficulties were predictive of both parents and children being in the resilient group. Interpretation Approximately half the children and parents had chronically low HRQoL scores, which did not improve following resolution of the FN episode. The child's sex, cancer type, and presence of financial and relationship stress were predictive of chronic group membership for both parents and children. These families may benefit from increased financial and psychosocial support during anti-cancer treatment. Funding National Health and Medical Research Council Grant (APP1104527).
- Subjects :
- National health
Health related quality of life
Pediatrics
medicine.medical_specialty
Group membership
Fever
business.industry
Health-related quality of life
Parent, pediatric cancer
Febrile neutropenia
Cancer
Pediatric oncology
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Pediatric cancer
Blood cancer
Quality of life
medicine
business
Child
Research Paper
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 25895370
- Volume :
- 40
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- EClinicalMedicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....54b5f25fe7279d1798a52e227fbe4700