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Published in: Journal of Cancer Survivorship 6/2019

01-12-2019

Posttraumatic stress as a contributor to behavioral health outcomes and healthcare utilization in adult survivors of childhood cancer: a report from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study

Authors: Emily Crochet, Vida L. Tyc, Mingjuan Wang, Deo Kumar Srivastava, Kristi Van Sickle, Paul C. Nathan, Wendy Leisenring, Todd M. Gibson, Gregory T. Armstrong, Kevin Krull

Published in: Journal of Cancer Survivorship | Issue 6/2019

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Abstract

Purpose

To examine the association between posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS), neurocognitive and psychosocial late-effects, health behaviors, and healthcare utilization in long-term survivors of childhood cancer.

Methods

Participants included individuals (N = 6844; 52.5% female; mean [SD] age at diagnosis = 7.6 [5.8], at follow-up = 34.9 [7.5]) in the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study (CCSS). Follow-up included the Posttraumatic Stress Scale, Brief Symptom Inventory-18, Short-form 36 Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) survey, CCSS Neurocognitive Questionnaire, and questions about sociodemographics, physical health, health behaviors, and healthcare utilization. Modified Poisson regression and multinomial logistic regression models examined associations between posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) and neurocognitive, HRQOL, health behavior, and healthcare outcomes when adjusting for sociodemographics, disease, and treatment.

Results

Long-term survivors with PTSS (N = 995, 14.5%) reported more impairment in mental (relative risk [RR] 3.42, 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.05–3.85), and physical (RR = 2.26, CI = 1.96–2.61) HRQOL. PTSS was also associated with increased impairment in task efficiency (RR = 3.09, CI = 2.72–3.51), working memory (RR = 2.55, CI = 2.30–2.83), organization (RR = 2.11, CI = 1.78–2.50), and emotional regulation (RR = 3.67, CI = 3.30–4.09). Survivors with PTSS were significantly more likely to attend cancer-specific health visits in the past 2 years (OR = 1.89, CI = 1.50–2.39), and showed greater likelihood of either high frequency (OR = 1.89, CI = 1.50–2.39) or complete lack of (OR = 1.63, CI = 1.32–2.01) primary care visits compared to survivors without PTSS.

Conclusions

Survivors with PTSS reported significantly more psychosocial and neurocognitive late effects, and were more likely to engage in variable use of healthcare.

Implications for Cancer Survivors

PTSS is associated with additional challenges for a population vulnerable to adverse late effects. Inclusion of integrative services during follow-up visits may benefit functional outcomes.
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Metadata
Title
Posttraumatic stress as a contributor to behavioral health outcomes and healthcare utilization in adult survivors of childhood cancer: a report from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study
Authors
Emily Crochet
Vida L. Tyc
Mingjuan Wang
Deo Kumar Srivastava
Kristi Van Sickle
Paul C. Nathan
Wendy Leisenring
Todd M. Gibson
Gregory T. Armstrong
Kevin Krull
Publication date
01-12-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Cancer Survivorship / Issue 6/2019
Print ISSN: 1932-2259
Electronic ISSN: 1932-2267
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11764-019-00822-5

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