Background: Survival of neuroblastoma patients has improved over recent decades, but chronic health issues and treatment related late effects cause significant morbidity in survivors.
Aims: We aimed to describe late effects and long-term toxicity in neuroblastoma patients treated at a tertiary, paediatric institution in Australia.
Methods & results: Patients with neuroblastoma treated primarily at The Children's hospital at Westmead were eligible for inclusion. Retrospective analysis of 65 (45 with high-risk and 20 with non-high-risk disease) neuroblastoma patients were performed via medical record review. Approximately 60% of patients were >5 years from diagnosis and termed the "full effects cohort" who had a range of medical and psychosocial late effects analysed through descriptive means. The remaining 26 patients who had not yet reached 5 years post treatment had audiometry analysis only. Of the 65 patients, 72% were alive at last follow-up. The median length of follow-up was 7 years from diagnosis amongst survivors. Therapy was according to contemporary protocols for neuroblastoma and ranged from standard cytotoxic therapies to intensive multimodal regimens and/or experimental therapy depending on risk group/relapse status. Of the 39 full effects cohort, 85% suffered from at least one late effect. Late effects were common in the endocrine, dental and audiometry domains with 38%, 49% and 72% of patients affected in these areas, respectively. Neuro-cognitive domains were also notably affected with 46% of patients suffering a deficit. Two thirds of survivors were disease free at last follow-up.
Conclusion: Survivors of high-risk neuroblastoma suffer from a range of chronic illnesses, which lead to morbidity and affect quality of life of survivors.
Keywords: childhood cancer; late effects; long-term toxicity; neuroblastoma; survivorship.
© 2022 The Authors. Cancer Reports published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.