Quality of Life (QoL) of Children and Adolescents Participating in a Precision Medicine Trial for High-Risk Childhood Cancer

Author:

Hetherington KateORCID,Wakefield Claire E.ORCID,Kunalan Kavitha P. K.,Donoghoe Mark W.ORCID,McGill Brittany C.ORCID,Fardell Joanna E.,Daly RebeccaORCID,Deyell Rebecca J.,Ziegler David S.ORCID

Abstract

Precision medicine is changing the treatment of childhood cancer globally, however little is known about quality of life (QoL) in children and adolescents participating in precision medicine trials. We examined QoL among patients enrolled in PRISM, the Zero Childhood Cancer Program’s precision medicine trial for high-risk childhood cancer. We assessed patient QoL via self-report (aged 12–17 years) and parent-proxy (aged 4–17 years) completion of the EQ-5D-Y. We analysed data using descriptive statistics and regression models. Patients (n = 23) and parents (n = 136) provided data after trial enrolment and following receipt of trial results and treatment recommendations (n = 8 patients, n = 84 parents). At enrolment, most patients were experiencing at least some difficulty across more than one QoL domain (81% patient self-report, 83% parent report). We did not find strong evidence of a change in QoL between timepoints, or of demographic or disease factors that predicted parent-reported patient QoL (EQ-VAS) at enrolment. There was strong evidence that receiving a treatment recommendation but not a change in cancer therapy was associated with poorer parent-reported patient QoL (EQ-VAS; Mdiff = −22.5, 95% CI: −36.5 to −8.5, p = 0.006). Future research needs to better understand the relationship between treatment decisions and QoL and would benefit from integrating assessment of QoL into routine clinical care.

Funder

NHMRC

Luminesce Alliance

Zero Childhood Cancer National Personalised Medicine Program

Kids with Cancer Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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