Janardan Sanyukta K, Lewis Rebecca Williamson, Marchak Jordan Gilleland, Mertens Ann C, Effinger Karen E
Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta - Arthur M. Blank Hospital, 2220 North Druid Hills Road NE, Atlanta, GA, 30329, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Support Care Cancer. 2025 Jan 15;33(2):98. doi: 10.1007/s00520-025-09157-7.
Childhood cancer survivors (CCS) are at risk for therapy-related late effects. Physical activity (PA) can minimize some late effects risk, but rates of PA are low in CCS. We aimed to determine how perception of survivor health status and presence of chronic conditions are associated with patient- or proxy-reported PA.
This cross-sectional, retrospective study of CCS (6-25 years; ≥ 1 year off-therapy) defined low PA as < 5 days per week with ≥ 60 minutes/day of patient- or proxy-reported activity. Participants completed PROMIS Global Health questions assessing perceptions of overall, physical, and mental health. Presence of chronic conditions was abstracted from the health record and defined as ≥ 2 late effects. Multivariable logistic regressions were performed to identify associations between physical activity and health status or chronic conditions.
Of 284 CCS, 71.8% reported low PA. Negative perceived overall, physical, and mental health status were present in 5.6%, 10.6%, and 15.9% of CCS, respectively, with presence of chronic conditions in 49.7%. Low PA was directly associated with female sex (p = 0.002) and poor physical (p = 0.01) and mental (p = 0.02) health status, and inversely associated with relapsed/refractory disease (p = 0.03). Presence of chronic conditions was not associated with low PA (p = 0.68); however, all CCS with chronic graft-versus-host disease or vision impairment had low PA.
Low PA is an issue for CCS, especially females, and is associated with negative perceived physical and mental health. Future PA interventions for CCS should address perceived physical and mental health, and focus on specific at-risk sub-groups.
儿童癌症幸存者(CCS)面临与治疗相关的晚期效应风险。体育活动(PA)可将某些晚期效应风险降至最低,但CCS的PA率较低。我们旨在确定幸存者健康状况认知以及慢性病的存在与患者或代理人报告的PA之间的关联。
这项针对CCS(6 - 25岁;治疗结束≥1年)的横断面回顾性研究将低PA定义为患者或代理人报告的每周活动天数<5天且每天≥60分钟。参与者完成了PROMIS全球健康问题问卷,以评估对整体、身体和心理健康的认知。慢性病的存在从健康记录中提取,并定义为≥2种晚期效应。进行多变量逻辑回归以确定体育活动与健康状况或慢性病之间的关联。
在284名CCS中,71.8%报告PA较低。分别有5.6%、10.6%和15.9%的CCS存在负面的整体、身体和心理健康认知,49.7%存在慢性病。低PA与女性性别(p = 0.002)、身体(p = 0.01)和心理健康状况不佳(p = 0.02)直接相关,与复发/难治性疾病呈负相关(p = 0.03)。慢性病的存在与低PA无关(p = 0.68);然而,所有患有慢性移植物抗宿主病或视力障碍的CCS都有低PA。
低PA是CCS面临的一个问题,尤其是女性,并且与负面的身体和心理健康认知相关。未来针对CCS的PA干预措施应解决身体和心理健康认知问题,并关注特定的高危亚组。