Childhood brain tumours survivors experience lasting cognitive\, socioeconomic burdens: Study

Childhood brain tumours survivors experience lasting cognitive, socioeconomic burdens: Study

ANI 

People who survive and undergo during childhood may experience cognitive and socioeconomic burdens even decades after treatment, find a new study.

Therapies for children diagnosed with have prolonged the lives of many patients, but survivors may experience a variety of effects from their and its treatment. To assess such burdens, M. Douglas Ris, and Texas Children's Hospital, and his colleagues at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, compared 181 survivors of with 105 siblings of survivors who were participating in the Childhood Survivor Study.

The survivors and siblings all completed a comprehensive battery of standardised cognitive tests and socioeconomic assessments performed at 16 major medical centers in the and

Survivors were a median age of 8 years at the time of diagnosis and they were a median age of 40 years at the time of assessment. Overall, survivors treated with plus at the site of the had lower estimated IQ scores than survivors treated with only, who had lower scores than siblings.

Survivors diagnosed at younger ages had low scores on most of the cognitive measures. Survivors--especially those treated with plus radiotherapy--were less educated, earned lower incomes, and had lower prestige occupations than siblings.

"Late effects in adulthood are evident even for children with the least malignant types of who were treated with the least toxic therapies available at the time. Also, these neurocognitive and socioeconomic risks are evident many decades after treatment," said Dr Ris.

"As become more survivable with continued advances in treatments, we need to improve surveillance of these populations so that survivors continue to receive the best interventions during their transition to adulthood and well beyond," added Dr Ris.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, June 24 2019. 18:30 IST