Symptom profiles and health care utilization in long-term survivors of Survivors of Childhood Childhood Cancer Survivor (CCSS) study

Autor: Rachel Tillery Webster, Wei Liu, Meghan Eileen McGrady, Nicole M. Alberts, Tara M. Brinkman, Kirsten K. Ness, Bernard Fuemmeler, Alicia Kunin-Batson, Deokumar Srivastava, I-Chan Huang, Gregory T. Armstrong, Rebecca M. Howell, Daniel M. Green, Yutaka Yasui, Kevin R. Krull
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Clinical Oncology. 40:e22024-e22024
ISSN: 1527-7755
0732-183X
DOI: 10.1200/jco.2022.40.16_suppl.e22024
Popis: e22024 Background: Physical and psychological symptoms co-occur among survivors of childhood cancer, and subgroups with high symptom burden may be at increased risk for problematic healthcare utilization (HCU). Methods: Childhood Cancer Survivor Study participants (N = 17,231; Mean [SD] age = 27.4 [5.98]; 79% non-Hispanic White; 48% female) self-reported sensory, motor, cardiac, respiratory, pain, gastrointestinal, fatigue, memory, depression, and anxiety symptoms at baseline evaluation and latent class analysis identified symptom profiles. Chronic health conditions (CHCs) at baseline (graded per CTCAE 1-2 [mild or moderate; reference] vs 3-4 [severe-life threatening or disabling). HCU (no health care, general care, oncology-focused, long-term follow-up, emergency room visit) for the past 2 years was assessed 6.3 median years after baseline. Logistic regressions examined associations between class membership and follow-up HCU, adjusted for sex, age, health insurance and CHCs. Results: Five symptom classes were identified: 1) Global symptoms (global; 7.7%); 2) emotional distress and pain (distress-pain; 13.3%); 3) neurologic and pain (neuro-pain; 10.6%); 4) cardiopulmonary and pain (cardio-pain; 5.3%); 5) non-elevated symptoms (norm; 63.1%). Bone tumor survivors had higher risk of falling into global, neuro-pain and cardio-pain groups (p’s < .001), and CNS tumor survivors had higher risk of falling into global and neuro-pain group (all p < .001) compared to leukemia survivors. Radiation, Grade 3-4 CHCs, female sex, and older age increased risk of global, distress-pain, neuro-pain and cardio-pain membership compared to norm (all p’s < .001). Oncology-focused care was more common in cardio-pain and global symptom groups, while long-term follow-up care was more common in neuro-pain and global groups (Table). All elevated symptoms groups were more likely to have emergency room visits compared to norm group. Conclusions: Adjusting for insurance, CHCs and older age, elevated symptoms are associated with future emergency room use. Pain is prevalent in all high symptom groups, and suggests an important intervention target.[Table: see text]
Databáze: OpenAIRE