Second malignant neoplasms within 5 years from first primary diagnosis in pediatric oncology patients in Canada : a population-based retrospective cohort study

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2024.1376652

Language of the publication
English
Date
2024-03-27
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Ricci, Christina
  • Pole, Jason
  • Zakaria, Dianne
  • Pelland-Marcotte, Marie-Claude
  • Barber, Randy
  • Israels, Sara J.
  • Tran, Thai-Hoa
  • Oberoi, Sapna
  • Renzi, Samuele
  • MacDonald, Tamara
  • Sung, Lillian
  • Kulkarni, Ketan
  • Shukla, Neetu
  • Laverty, Meghan
  • Kaur, Jaskiran
  • Lim, Kate
  • Xie, Lin
  • Subburaj, Divya
Publisher
Frontiers in Oncology

Abstract

Introduction
From the advancement of treatment of pediatric cancer diagnosis, the five-year survival rate has increased significantly. However, the adverse consequence of improved survival rate is the second malignant neoplasm. Although previous studies provided information on the incidence and risk of SMN in long term survivors of childhood cancer, there is still scarce information known for short term (< 5 years) prognosis. This study aims to assess the incidence, characteristics, management, and outcome of children who develop SMN malignancies within 5 years of diagnosis of their initial cancer.

Methods
This is a retrospective cohort study of early Second Malignant Neoplasms (SMN) in pediatric oncology patients. The Cancer in Young People – Canada (CYP-C) national pediatric cancer registry was used and reviewed pediatric patients diagnosed with their first cancer from 2000-2015.

Results
A total of 20,272 pediatric patients with a diagnosis of a first malignancy were analyzed. Of them, 0.7% were diagnosed with a SMN within the first 5 years following their first cancer diagnosis. Development of a SMN impacted survival, shown by an inferior survival rate in the SMN cohort (79.1%) after three years compared to that of the non-SMN cohort (89.7%). Several possible risk factors have been identified in the study including the use of epipodophyllotoxins, exposure to radiation, and hematopoietic stem cell 169 transplant.

Discussion
This is the first national study assessing the incidence, 170 characteristics, risk factors and outcome of early SMN in Canadian children 171 from age 0-15 from 2000-2015.

Subject

  • Health,
  • Cancer

Rights

Pagination

1-14

Peer review

Yes

Identifiers

PubMed ID
38606094
ISSN
2234-943X

Article

Journal title
Frontiers in Oncology
Journal volume
14
Article number
1376652

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Collection(s)

Noncommunicable diseases

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