48 Longitudinal Language Outcomes in Pediatric Brain Tumor Patients Diagnosed in Early Childhood.

Autor: Paltin, Iris, Kochashvili, Mariam, Sy, Megan, Schofield, Hannah-Lise, Kearns, Zoe, Janke, Kelly
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society; 2023 Supplement, Vol. 29, p654-655, 2p
Abstrakt: Objective: Pediatric brain tumor (PBT) survivors are at risk for speech (e.g., articulation, prosody, fluency) and language (e.g., vocabulary, grammar, narratives, pragmatics) difficulties (Hodges et al., 2020). It is important to understand what treatment and/or demographic factors are associated with language functioning soon after diagnosis, and what factors are associated with language functioning years after treatment completion. This study characterizes longitudinal language functioning for clinically referred PBT survivors diagnosed in early childhood. Participants and Methods: Participants were 48 PBT patients (54% supratentorial, 6% disseminated), 21% with NF-1, who were diagnosed by age 6 (M = 43.2 months, SD 24.5) and received tumor-directed intervention including surgery (85%), chemotherapy (69%), and/or radiation therapy (50%). Hearing concerns existed for 29% of the patients. Age at first neuropsychological evaluation was 2-15 years (M=7.6, SD=3.63), age at second neuropsychological evaluation was 5-19 years (M=12.04, SD=3.86), with an average of 4.42 years (SD=2.37) between evaluations. Patients were 63% male, 77% White, 94% non-Hispanic, and fluent English speakers. Verbal IQ, working memory, fluencies, comprehension, memory, and parent-reported functional communication outcomes were assessed as part of comprehensive batteries. Rates of weak performance (1 SD
Databáze: Complementary Index