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Nancy Keene Mother, Writer, Advocate Wendy Hobbie, MSN, CRNP, FAAN Associate Director, Cancer Survivorship Program The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Health Maintenance for Survivors: A Conversation with a Parent and a Practitioner October 2012 Today’s Discussion Topics • A little history • Late effects • Managing late effects • Maintaining health • Finding helpful resources • Questions and answers 2 A Little History Landmarks In Pediatric Oncology • 1970s • Recognition that cure was possible • Proliferation of randomized clinical trials • Effective multi-modality protocols • 1980s • Tailoring therapy to risk factors • Defining late effects • Reducing radiation dose Slide reproduced with permission from Anna Meadows, M.D., 2003 4 Landmarks In Pediatric Oncology • 1990s • Substituting effective drugs for radiation • Understanding the relationship of dose to late effects • Initiating efforts to track and educate survivors • 2000s • Surveillance for late effects based on risk • Interventions to reduce late effects • Transition to adult health care Slide reproduced with permission from Anna Meadows, M.D., 2003 5 Transitions • Time of diagnosis • Treatment • Completion of treatment • Early survivorship • Long-term survivorship • Transition to adult healthcare system 6 Late Effects Causes of Late Effects • Chemotherapy • Radiation • Surgery • Stem cell transplantation 8 Clinically Obvious Late Effects 9 Clinically Subtle Late Effects Effects that are apparent only to the trained observer. 10 Subclinical Late Effects Effects that are detectable only by laboratory screening or radiographic imaging techniques. 11 Some Late Effects Have Changed Over Time 12 Late Complications of Childhood Cancer Therapy • Growth and development • Linear growth • Intellectual function • Sexual maturation • Reproduction • Fertility • Health of offspring • Second cancers • Organ function • • • • Cardiac Pulmonary Renal Gastrointestinal • Benign • Malignant • Psychosocial adjustment • PTSD • Overall adjustment 13 Cognitive Effects of Therapy • Cognitive changes are among the most challenging to manage, especially in young adulthood • Impact on education • Impact on transition to adulthood • Impact on quality of life 14 Neurocognitive Late Effects • Learning disabilities • Developmental delays • Attention deficit disorder • Behavioral abnormalities • Fine motor coordination • Leukoencephalopathy 15 Endocrine Effects • Hypothalamic pituitary axis • Fertility • Thyroid • Adrenals 16 Cardiac Late Effects • Anthracyclines • Gender • Age • Dose • Radiation: • > 25-30 Gy • Cardiomyopathy • Ventricular dysfunction • Pericarditis • Arrhythmias • Pericardial damage • Valve damage • Coronary artery disease 17 Psychosocial Effects • Fear of recurrence • Sense of physical damage • Anxiety • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder • School, employment, finances • Interpersonal issues • Social well-being/re-entry • Intimacy issues • Sexual functioning 18 Why is Cancer Treatment Traumatic? • Repeated invasive, distressing procedures • Life threat • Feelings of helplessness • Disruption to individuals and families 19 Why is Survivorship Traumatic? • Continued health vigilance and tests can trigger distress • Emergence of late effects • Knowledge of future medical vulnerabilities • Treatment-related losses (e.g., cognitive function or fertility) 20 Families Identify Positive Aspects of Surviving Cancer • Greater appreciation for life • Increased life satisfaction • Renewed spirituality or religiosity • Improved self-acceptance and self-awareness • Strengthened relationships • Increased ability to cope with adversity • Present-centered awareness 21 Managing Late Effects Comprehensive Care “Comprehensive care of the individual with cancer demands that the same expertise, energy, empathy, and support that were provided during the crisis of diagnosis and treatment are provided throughout survivorship.” Source: Harpham, W. (1998). Late effects of Cancer Therapy. In Principles and Practice of Supportive Oncology. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott-Raven. 23 Goals for Follow-up Care • Education • Treatment • Risk factors • Surveillance • Surveillance • Early detection of problems • Development of individual risk profile • Anticipatory guidance • Modifiable risk factors • Health promotion/maintenance • Empowerment/advocacy • Education • Awareness • Transitional needs • • • • Assess readiness Identify adult medical home Provide information to new provider Facilitate transfer of care 24 Survivorship Team Members • Nurse practitioners • Medical oncologists • Psychologists • Research nurses • Social workers • Nutritionists • Specialty care providers 25 Ways to Reduce Late Effects • Health education about exercise, diet, smoking, sun, seat belts, texting while driving • Reproductive counseling • Psychosocial support • Education about disease history • Discussion of risks associated with treatment 26 What Childhood Cancer Survivors Know • Cancer diagnosis • With details • Without details 72% 19% • Chemotherapy (yes, no) 94% • Doxorubicin (Adriamycin) • Daunomycin (Cerubidine) 52% 30% • Radiation therapy (yes, no) 89% • Site of radiation • Therapy can lead to complications 70% 35% Source: Kadan-Lottick. NS. Journal of the American Medical Association, 2002; 287(14): 1832-9. 27 What Experts in Survivorship Know • More than 60% of childhood cancer survivors have late effects; almost half of those late effects are severe, life threatening, or disabling.* • The incidence of late effects increases over time.* • Few survivors get adequate follow-up care.** • The need for information is high; availability of accurate information is low. *Source: Oeffinger, KC, et al. New England Journal of Medicine, 2006; 355: 1572-82. **Source: Institute of Medicine. 2003; Childhood Cancer Survivorship, pp. 101-105; Hobbie and Keene were invited reviewers of this book 28 Maintaining Health Healthcare Practices of Young Adult Survivors • In the past two years • General medical contact • Cancer-related visit • Survivorship program visit 87% 42% 19% • Risk factors for lack of health care • • • • No insurance Not concerned Age over 30 years Male gender Source: Nathan, PC, et al. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2009; 27(14): 2363-73. 30 Provider Education to Reduce Late Effects • Increase knowledge of late effects of cancer therapy • Improve ability to recognize and treat subclinical late effects • Detect second cancers early • Screening of high-risk patients for radiation-associated cancers • Counseling of survivors with genetic predisposition 31 The Science and Art of Cancer Survivorship Care • The Science: • Identify known risk factors • Establish and update criteria to evaluate survivors for physical and psychological late effects • The Art: • A balanced approach to care • Provide information to empower • Focus on modifiable risk factors 32 “Cure is Not Enough” The greatest threat to a survivor’s well being is lack of information. 33 Finding Helpful Resources Helpful Resources • Childhood Cancer Survivors: A Practical Guide to Your Future, 3rd ed. • Survivorship guidelines from the Children's Oncology Group • Ped-Onc Resource Center • National Children’s Cancer Society 35 Childhood Cancer Survivors 36 Childhood Cancer Survivors • Updated and reviewed by experts • Stories from 100 survivors and their parents • Five general chapters • One disease chapter • Thirteen chapters on late effects by system • Comprehensive list of resources • Citations to the technical literature • Tear-out cancer survivors treatment record 37 Childhood Cancer Survivors • Published by a 501c(3) nonprofit called Childhood Cancer Guides • Website: www.childhoodcancerguides.org/survivors • Facebook: Childhood Cancer Survivors: A Practical Guide to Your Future 38 Children’s Oncology Group Guidelines • Contain current recommendations based on treatment • Use in partnership with healthcare provider • Find at www.survivorshipguidelines.org 39 Ped-Onc Resource Center • Created and maintained by a mother of a long-term survivor • Includes current events, technical articles, links to resources, links to online support groups, and accurate information about late effects • Provides up-to-date list of scholarships for survivors • Lists follow-up clinics organized by state • Find at www.ped-onc.org/survivors 40 National Children’s Cancer Society • NCCS provides financial and emotional support when children are being treated • Global Outreach Program partners with pharmaceutical companies to distribute donated cancer treatment drugs and medical supplies around the world • Beyond the Cure program provides support during survivorship, including scholarships 41 Questions & Answers Thank You!