MACC Fund Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders, Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.
Pediatric Oncology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2024 Sep;71(9):e31092. doi: 10.1002/pbc.31092. Epub 2024 Jun 12.
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy provides promising outcomes in relapsed/refractory B acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), yet still carries high toxicity rates and relatively poor long-term survival. Efficacy has yet to be demonstrated in other diagnoses while toxicity and risk profiles remain formidable. To date, treatment-related symptom burden is gleaned from clinical trial toxicity reports; the patient perspective remains understudied.
English- or Spanish-speaking patients (ages 8-25 years) undergoing CAR T-cell therapy for any malignancy and their primary caregivers were recruited from Seattle Children's Hospital (SCH), St. Jude Children's Research Hospital (SJCRH), and the Pediatric Oncology Branch of the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Both patient and caregiver completed semi-structured dyadic interviews 3 months post treatment. We used directed content analysis for codebook development and thematic network analysis for inductive qualitative analysis.
Twenty families completed interviews (13 patients, 15 parents). Patients were a median age 16.5 years, predominantly female (65%), White (75%), and diagnosed with ALL (75%). Global themes included "A clear decision," "Coping with symptoms," and "Unforeseen psychosocial challenges." When families were asked to describe the "most challenging part of treatment," most described "the unknown." Most reported "the symptoms really weren't that bad," even among patients hospitalized for severe toxicity events. Fatigue, pain, and nausea were the most prevalent symptoms. Importantly, only one family would have chosen a different therapy, if given another opportunity.
Although physical symptoms were largely tolerable, recognizing supportive care opportunities remains imperative, particularly psychosocial concerns.
嵌合抗原受体 (CAR) T 细胞疗法在复发/难治性 B 急性淋巴细胞白血病 (ALL) 中提供了有希望的结果,但仍具有较高的毒性率和相对较差的长期生存率。在其他诊断中尚未证明其疗效,而毒性和风险概况仍然严峻。迄今为止,治疗相关的症状负担是从临床试验毒性报告中得出的;患者的观点仍未得到充分研究。
从西雅图儿童医院 (SCH)、圣裘德儿童研究医院 (SJCRH) 和国家癌症研究所 (NCI) 的儿科肿瘤学分支机构招募正在接受 CAR T 细胞治疗任何恶性肿瘤的英语或西班牙语患者(8-25 岁)及其主要照顾者。治疗后 3 个月,患者及其照顾者均完成了半结构化的对偶访谈。我们使用定向内容分析来开发代码本,并使用归纳定性分析进行主题网络分析。
20 个家庭完成了访谈(13 名患者,15 名父母)。患者的平均年龄为 16.5 岁,主要为女性(65%)、白人(75%),且被诊断为 ALL(75%)。总体主题包括“明确的决策”、“应对症状”和“意料之外的心理社会挑战”。当被问及“治疗中最具挑战性的部分”时,大多数人描述为“未知”。大多数人表示“症状真的不是那么糟糕”,即使是在因严重毒性事件住院的患者中也是如此。疲劳、疼痛和恶心是最常见的症状。重要的是,如果有机会,只有一个家庭会选择另一种治疗方法。
尽管身体症状大多可以耐受,但仍需认识到支持性护理的机会仍然至关重要,尤其是心理社会问题。