Author:
Ruan Haishan,Sun Jiwen,Zhao Kangjia,He Mengxue,Yuan Changrong,Fu Lijuan,Shen Nanping
Abstract
Background
Children and adolescents may experience a variety of subjective adverse events (AEs) caused by cancer treatment. The identification of distinct groups of patients is crucial for guiding symptomatic AE management interventions to prevent AEs from worsening.
Objective
The aim of this study was to identify subgroups of children with cancer experiencing similar patterns of subjective toxicities and evaluate differences among these subgroups in demographic and clinical characteristics.
Methods
A cross-sectional survey was conducted of 356 children in China with malignancies who received chemotherapy within the past 7 days using the pediatric Patient-Reported Outcomes version of the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events. A latent class analysis (LCA) was conducted to identify subgroups of patients with distinct profiles of symptomatic AE occurrence.
Results
Nausea (54.5%), anorexia (53.4%), and headache (39.3%) were the top 3 AEs children experienced. Nearly all participants (97.8%) experienced ≥1 core AEs, and 30.3% experienced ≥5 AEs. The LCA results identified 3 subgroups (“high gastrotoxicity and low neurotoxicity” [53.2%], “moderate gastrotoxicity and high neurotoxicity” [23.6%], and “high gastrotoxicity and high neurotoxicity” [22.8%]). The subgroups were differentiated by monthly family per-capita income, time since diagnosis, and Karnofsky Performance Status score.
Conclusions
Children experienced multiple subjective toxicities during chemotherapy, especially gastrotoxicity and neurotoxicity. Heterogeneity was found in the LCA in the patients’ toxicities. The prevalence of toxicities could be distinguished by the children’s characteristics.
Implications for Practice
The results showing different subgroups in our study may assist clinical staff in focusing on patients with higher toxicities to provide effective interventions.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Oncology (nursing),Oncology
Cited by
2 articles.
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