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Late Mortality in Childhood Cancer Survivors according to Pediatric Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment Era in the Dutch LATER Cohort.

Ellen Kilsdonk ,
Eline van Dulmen-den Broeder ,
Flora E van Leeuwen ,
Marry M van den Heuvel-Eibrink ,
Jacqueline J Loonen ,
Helena J van der Pal ,
Dorine Bresters ,
A B Versluys ,
Rob Pieters ,
Michael Hauptmann ,
Monique W M Jaspers ,
Sebastian J C Neggers ,
Martine F Raphael ,
Wim J E Tissing ,
Leontine C M Kremer ,
Cécile M Ronckers ,

Abstract

This multi-center cohort-study examined late mortality among 6,165 Dutch five-year childhood cancer survivors diagnosed 1963-2001. Clinical details and cause of death were based on medical records. Mortality was 12-fold that of the general population, with 51.3 additional deaths per 10,000 person-years (21.9 yrs median follow-up). Cumulative mortality 15 yrs post-diagnosis was 6.9%, predominantly from late recurrences; thereafter the absolute contribution of other health outcomes increased. Cumulative all-cause and recurrence-related mortality were highest for Central Nervous System and bone tumor survivors. All-cause, but not subsequent tumor and circulatory disease-related cumulative mortality, was highest for patients diagnosed 1963-1979 vs. later (p-trend <0.001).

More about this publication

Cancer investigation

Volume 40
Issue nr. 5
Pages 413-424
Publication date 01-05-2022

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1080/07357907.2022.2034841
Europe PubMed Central 35175864
Pubmed 35175864

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