CC-0
CC-0

Childhood cancer survivors more likely to get another cancer

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
Although recent advances in treating children with cancer have improved survival, childhood cancer survivors are five times more likely to develop a second primary cancer than members of the general population, according to Australian scientists. They looked at data from the Australian Childhood Cancer Registry, and found one in 50 childhood cancer survivors were later diagnosed with another cancer. Risk was greatest in the five years following the childhood cancer diagnosis, but remained elevated for 33 years.

Journal/conference: MJA

Link to research (DOI): 10.5694/mja2.50425

Organisation/s: Griffith University, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, The University of Queensland

Funder: NHMRC.

Media Release

From: Medical Journal of Australia (MJA)

CHILDHOOD CANCER SURVIVORS FACE GREATER ONGOING RISK

PEOPLE who have survived childhood cancer are five times more likely to develop a second primary cancer than members of the general population, according to the authors of research published online today by the Medical Journal of Australia.

Recent therapeutic advances for treating children with cancer — typically, intensive chemotherapy, often in combination with radiation therapy — have improved survival for many with childhood malignancies.

“However, a large proportion of patients experience adverse health effects throughout life that are attributable to either their cancer or its treatment. One of the most serious potential consequences is a second cancer,” wrote authors led by Associate Professor Danny Youlden, the Senior Manager of Childhood Cancer Research with Cancer Council Queensland.

Using data from the Australian Childhood Cancer Registry, Youlden and colleagues looked at people alive at least 2 months after being diagnosed before the age of 15 years with a primary cancer, between 1983–2013, followed until 31 December 2015 (2–33 years’ follow-up).

“Among 18 230 people diagnosed with cancer during childhood, 388 (2%) were later diagnosed with second primary cancers,” the authors found.

“The overall risk of a new primary cancer was five times as high as for the general population. Relative risk of a second primary cancer was greatest for people who had childhood rhabdomyosarcoma and was also particularly high for children who had undergone both chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

“Relative risk peaked during the 5 years following the first diagnosis (2 to less than 5 years), but was still significant at up to 33 years after the initial diagnosis. The most frequent second primary cancers were thyroid carcinomas (65 of 388, 17%) and acute myeloid leukaemias (57, 15%).”

Youlden and colleagues concluded that second primary cancers were a lifelong possibility for people who survive childhood cancer, and they were a leading cause of treatment-related mortality among survivors.

“Our finding that survivors of childhood cancer are at significantly increased risk of subsequent cancers is broadly consistent with findings from overseas studies; the increase in risk gradually diminishes over time from first diagnosis, but the level of risk never returns to that of the general population.

“Advances in treatment for childhood cancer in recent decades have significantly improved survival for many people with childhood malignancies; the challenge is to reduce treatment-associated morbidity without reducing survival.

“Survivors of childhood cancer should be monitored for second primary cancers as they remain at increased risk well into adulthood. Research is needed to minimise the deleterious late effects of cancer treatment early in life.”

Attachments:

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public

  • Medical Journal of Australia (MJA)
    Web page
    The URL will go live after the embargo ends

News for:

Australia
QLD

Media contact details for this story are only visible to registered journalists.