cohort · 2014 · en
Aging and Risk of Severe, Disabling, Life-Threatening, and Fatal Events in the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study
Armstrong G T, Kawashima T, Leisenring W, Stratton K, Stovall M, Hudson M M, Sklar C A, Robison L L, Oeffinger K C
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Evidencia · SeminalOpen Access
Síntesis
By age 50, childhood cancer survivors face cumulative incidence of severe/life-threatening chronic conditions of ~53% vs ~20% in siblings; underscores need for risk-based long-term follow-up.
Etapas
12-18, transversal
Dominios
oncology, survivorship
Tags
late-effects · chronic-conditions · CCSS · aging · Armstrong
Afirmaciones que citan esta fuente (1)
clm-ccss-late-effects
Survivors of childhood cancer carry a high cumulative burden of severe chronic health conditions (>50% by midlife), neurocognitive impairment, and excess late mortality, requiring lifelong risk-based survivorship surveillance.