儿童癌症患者和成年癌症幸存者的神经心理功能。

IF 1.8 4区 心理学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Lisa M Jacola, Rachel K Peterson, Kaitlin A Oswald-McCloskey, Angela Sekely, Donald J Mabbott, Kim Edelstein
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引用次数: 0

摘要

过去几十年来,儿童和青少年癌症的人群发病率有所增加,由于治疗的进步,儿童癌症的总体存活率超过85%。在这个不断增长和年轻的幸存者群体中,有大量的后期影响负担。特别是,神经心理的后期效应是常见的,儿童癌症的后遗症会改变生活,对教育程度、职业成就和社会融合产生不利影响。在这篇综述文章中,我们总结了现有的文献描述儿童癌症幸存者的神经心理晚期效应,包括潜在的大脑机制和贡献的个人、临床和社会环境风险因素。我们回顾了现有的生存护理指南和实施这些指南的策略,这些指南通过神经心理学筛查,由发育考虑告知。最后,我们确定了该领域未来的发展方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Neuropsychological function in childhood cancer patients and adult survivors of childhood cancer.

Population-based incidence rates of childhood and adolescent cancers have increased over the past several decades, and the overall survival rate for childhood cancer exceeds 85% due to advances in treatment. There is a substantial burden of late effects in this growing and youthful survivorship population. In particular, neuropsychological late effects are common and life-altering sequelae of childhood cancer that adversely impact educational attainment, vocational attainment, and social integration. In this review article, we summarize the extant literature to describe neuropsychological late effects in survivors of childhood cancer, including underlying brain mechanisms and contributing individual, clinical, and socioenvironmental risk factors. We review existing guidelines for survivorship care and strategies for implementation of these guidelines via neuropsychological screening that are informed by developmental considerations. We end by identifying future directions for the field.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
4.50%
发文量
52
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology ( JCEN) publishes research on the neuropsychological consequences of brain disease, disorders, and dysfunction, and aims to promote the integration of theories, methods, and research findings in clinical and experimental neuropsychology. The primary emphasis of JCEN is to publish original empirical research pertaining to brain-behavior relationships and neuropsychological manifestations of brain disease. Theoretical and methodological papers, critical reviews of content areas, and theoretically-relevant case studies are also welcome.
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