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Journal of Oncology Research and Treatment
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  • Opinion Article   
  • J Oncol Res Treat, Vol 8(1)
  • DOI: 10.4172/aot.1000205

Correlations of Health-Related Quality of Life in Childhood Cancer Patients

Bo Minlee*
Department of Medicine, Keio University, Minato, Japan
*Corresponding Author: Bo Minlee, Department of Medicine, Keio University, Minato, Japan, Email: Minleebo45@gmail.com

Received: 03-Jan-2023 / Manuscript No. AOT-23- 94262 / Editor assigned: 06-Jan-2023 / PreQC No. AOT-23- 94262 (PQ) / Reviewed: 27-Jan-2023 / QC No. AOT-23- 94262 / Revised: 03-Feb-2023 / Manuscript No. AOT-23- 94262 (R) / Published Date: 10-Feb-2023 DOI: 10.4172/aot.1000205

Description

Childhood cancer survival rates have now exceeded 80% and are continuing to increase, there is a growing need to evaluate and handle quality-of-life outcomes post treatment. Pain is a major source of Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) worry. The majority of studies attempting to characterize pain in childhood cancer patients have concentrated on long-term adult survivors. There is known little information about the frequency and character of pain in youth SCCs, or how pain affects HRQoL. Pain can have a variety of effects on HRQoL in SCCs. Persistent; frequent pain can interfere with everyday mental and physical performance, lowering HRQoL. Recent qualitative research suggests that daily pain experiences can cause recurrence worries years after cancer therapy. Thus, pain may have an indirect effect on HRQoL by perpetuating the dread of cancer recurrence, which is a major HRQoL issue for cancer patients.

Clinical and socio-demographic factors

From the child's medical documents, sex, diagnosis, and therapy details were extracted. The Treatment Intensity Scale was used to categories treatment intensity based on prior diagnostic, illness stage, and therapy details. Caregivers provided information about their child's age, ethnicity, age at diagnosis, and time off therapy.

Pain frequency and worry

The Symptom worry measure is divided into two subscales that evaluate how much respondents worry about 10 distinct somatic feelings as an indication of cancer return, as well as how frequently they encountered those sensations in the preceding month. Both subscales are responded on a 5 point Likert scale ranging from never to almost always. Each subscale's first item was pain; only data from the pain items were used in the research.

Quality of living in terms of health

The Pediatric Quality of Life Questionnaire HRQoL was assessed using 4.0 Generic Core Scales, which included four distinct subscales of physical, mental, social, and educational performance. The researchers looked at each subscale individually to see if there were any differences in pain frequency and pain-related concern. Survivors of childhood cancer finished validated forms for their age group. Two items were reverse-scored and linearly transformed to a range of 0 to 100, with greater mean scores suggesting improved HRQoL.

Characteristics of the sample

The studies included 111 childhood cancer patients (52% of whom were female, M aged: 17.67 years, (range 8-25 years). Participants had gotten a variety of prior diagnoses (solid tumours: 48%, blood disorders: 22%, lymphoma: 19%, and CNS tumours: 11%) and therapies (chemotherapy: 99%, surgery: 71%, radiation: 38%, and transplant, 16%).

Previous research has found that pain incidence rates in pediatric cancer patients range from 4.3% to 75%. 70% is a conservative estimate of those who indicated some level of pain in the preceding month. Authors also discovered that 15% of participants had encountered pain regularly (i.e., frequently or almost always) in the preceding month, indicating that pain may be more troublesome and impactful for some people. The prior research is one of the few to report on the frequency of pain in childhood cancer survivors in their twenties. Survivors of childhood cancers who have chronic and regular pain are likely to have the highest clinical need for pain relief and pain control.

Participants who reported more frequent pain and greater painrelated concern also reported lower bodily and emotional HRQoL, correlating with our theories. Pain frequency and pain-related worry each described distinct variance in bodily HRQoL in complete statistical models that controlled for sex, age at diagnosis, and time off therapy linked with HRQoL. Furthermore, once pain-related concern was included in the model, pain frequency no longer described the distinct variance in emotional HRQoL. These results suggest that pain may influence HRQoL via numerous, distinct pathways.

Pain is an unpleasant sensory and mental experience that can disrupt daily activities, impede with accomplishing cherished life objectives, and contribute to functional impairment, lowering quality of life. Pain can also serve as a memory of a previous cancer experience and provoke fears of disease return, resulting in a dread of cancer recurrence that adversely impacts mental functioning and quality of life. It has drawbacks, the most significant of which is that pain recurrence was evaluated within the previous month, so the data cannot speak to pain persistence. Authors did not know which characteristics or regions of pain were most concerned about or whether worry was focused on chronic pains or new acute pains because pain-related worry was evaluated with a single item. Furthermore, the group was mainly White, which could explain the absence of race differences in HRQoL.

Citation: Minlee B (2023) Correlations of Health-Related Quality of Life in Childhood Cancer Patients. J Oncol Res Treat. 8:205. DOI: 10.4172/aot.1000205

Copyright: © 2023 Minlee B. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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