Division of Oncology, Cancer and Blood Diseases Institute, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Pediatric Neuro-Oncology Program, Division of Hematology, Oncology, and BMT, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol. 2023 Apr;12(2):215-223. doi: 10.1089/jayao.2022.0006. Epub 2022 Jun 8.
Adolescent and young adult (AYA) oncology patients experience unique biological, behavioral, and socioeconomic challenges, for which provision of care must be tailored. AYAs with central nervous system (CNS) tumors and sarcomas represent a vulnerable population with worse outcomes and potential for serious sequelae from intense multimodal therapy. Comorbidity burden impacts treatment tolerance, adherence, and efficacy, yet has been understudied among these high-risk AYA patients. Utilizing a validated AYA oncology comorbidity index, we (1) measured comorbid conditions present at diagnosis in AYA-aged patients with CNS tumors and sarcomas and (2) compared baseline comorbidity burden across ascending AYA age groups (15-19, 20-29, and 30-39 years) and with pediatric patients (10-14 years). The cohort included 131 AYAs and 50 pediatric patients. Mean comorbidity score significantly differed between pediatric (0.8) and AYA (1.7) patients, and across ascending age subgroups (0.8 [10-14] < 1.2 [15-19] < 1.7 [20-29] < 2.5 [30-39]). AYAs were significantly more likely than pediatric patients to have ≥2 or ≥3 comorbidities (47% vs. 18%, 24% vs. 6%), with increasing prevalence across ascending age subgroups. Frequency of overweight/obese status, smoking/substance use, obstetric/gynecologic conditions, and cardiovascular comorbidities increased with age. In multivariate analyses adjusting for sex, tumor type, and race, age remained a significant predictor of comorbidity score. AYAs with CNS tumors or sarcomas have a high burden of baseline comorbidities, which increase with age at diagnosis, conferring susceptibility to treatment-related toxicity and mortality. Improving the prognosis for AYAs requires appropriate identification of pre-existing comorbidities and tailoring therapeutic and supportive care accordingly.
青少年和年轻成人(AYA)肿瘤患者经历独特的生物、行为和社会经济挑战,因此必须针对这些挑战提供护理。中枢神经系统(CNS)肿瘤和肉瘤的 AYA 患者是一个弱势群体,他们的治疗效果更差,并且可能因强化多模式治疗而产生严重的后遗症。合并症负担会影响治疗耐受性、依从性和疗效,但在这些高危 AYA 患者中研究不足。我们利用经过验证的 AYA 肿瘤合并症指数,(1)测量了中枢神经系统肿瘤和肉瘤的 AYA 患者在诊断时存在的合并症情况,(2)比较了不同年龄组(15-19 岁、20-29 岁和 30-39 岁)和儿科患者(10-14 岁)的基线合并症负担。该队列包括 131 名 AYA 和 50 名儿科患者。AYA 患者(1.7)的平均合并症评分明显高于儿科患者(0.8),并且在递增年龄亚组(0.8 [10-14] < 1.2 [15-19] < 1.7 [20-29] < 2.5 [30-39])之间也有显著差异。与儿科患者相比,AYA 患者更有可能患有≥2 种或≥3 种合并症(47% vs. 18%,24% vs. 6%),并且随着年龄递增,其患病率也在增加。超重/肥胖状态、吸烟/药物使用、产科/妇科疾病和心血管合并症的频率随着年龄的增长而增加。在调整性别、肿瘤类型和种族的多变量分析中,年龄仍然是合并症评分的显著预测因素。患有 CNS 肿瘤或肉瘤的 AYA 患者存在较高的基线合并症负担,随着诊断时的年龄增长而增加,这使他们易患与治疗相关的毒性和死亡。改善 AYA 的预后需要适当识别现有的合并症,并相应地调整治疗和支持性护理。