Hocking Matthew C, Hobbie Wendy L, Deatrick Janet A, Hardie Thomas L, Barakat Lamia P
Division of Oncology, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Division of Oncology, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ; School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol. 2015 Mar;4(1):18-25. doi: 10.1089/jayao.2014.0022.
Childhood brain tumor (BT) survivors experience significant neurocognitive sequelae that affect health-related quality of life (HRQOL). A model of neurodevelopmental late effects and family functioning in childhood cancer survivors suggests associations between survivor neurocognitive functioning, family functioning, and survivor HRQOL. This study examines the concurrent associations between survivor neurocognitive functioning, family functioning, and survivor emotional HRQOL, and the indirect effects of neurocognitive functioning on survivor emotional HRQOL through family functioning.
Participants included young adult-aged childhood BT survivors (18-30 years old; N=34) who were on average 16 years post-diagnosis, and their mothers. A brief neuropsychological battery assessed working and verbal memory, processing speed, and executive functioning. Survivors and mothers completed measures of family functioning, and mothers completed a proxy-report measure of survivor HRQOL.
Spearman bivariate correlations examined the associations between indices of survivor neurocognitive functioning and concurrent family functioning and survivor emotional HRQOL. Poorer survivor processing speed, working memory, verbal memory, and executive function were significantly associated with worse survivor- and mother-reported family functioning (r's range: 0.36-0.58). Additionally, worse survivor processing speed and executive function were significantly associated with poorer survivor emotional HRQOL (r's range: 0.44-0.48). Bootstrapping analyses provided evidence for the indirect effects of neurocognitive functioning on survivor emotional HRQOL through family functioning.
These findings suggest that family functioning is an important variable that might mitigate the negative influence of neurocognitive late effects on survivors and is a potential target in future interventions.
儿童脑肿瘤(BT)幸存者会经历显著的神经认知后遗症,这会影响与健康相关的生活质量(HRQOL)。儿童癌症幸存者的神经发育迟发效应和家庭功能模型表明,幸存者的神经认知功能、家庭功能和幸存者的HRQOL之间存在关联。本研究考察了幸存者神经认知功能、家庭功能与幸存者情绪HRQOL之间的并发关联,以及神经认知功能通过家庭功能对幸存者情绪HRQOL的间接影响。
参与者包括年轻成年期的儿童BT幸存者(18 - 30岁;N = 34),他们平均在确诊后16年,以及他们的母亲。一套简短的神经心理测试评估了工作记忆、言语记忆、处理速度和执行功能。幸存者和母亲完成了家庭功能测量,母亲完成了幸存者HRQOL的代理报告测量。
Spearman双变量相关性检验了幸存者神经认知功能指标与并发的家庭功能和幸存者情绪HRQOL之间的关联。幸存者较差的处理速度、工作记忆、言语记忆和执行功能与幸存者和母亲报告的较差家庭功能显著相关(r值范围:0.36 - 0.58)。此外,幸存者较差的处理速度和执行功能与较差 的幸存者情绪HRQOL显著相关(r值范围:0.44 - 0.48)。自抽样分析为神经认知功能通过家庭功能对幸存者情绪HRQOL的间接影响提供了证据。
这些发现表明,家庭功能是一个重要变量,可能减轻神经认知迟发效应对幸存者的负面影响,并且是未来干预的一个潜在目标。