JournalTimes.com

Cancer as kids: Now what?

By Susan Brink
Los Angeles Times | Posted: Wednesday, June 18, 2008 12:00 am

As young survivors of the modern era of cancer treatment enter their third and fourth decades, they find themselves poster children for the hope of medical progress - and also for the toll taken by cancer's toxic treatments.

The cure rate for childhood cancer is one of 20th-century medicine's greatest success stories. Before 1970, few children with cancer made it. Today, nearly 80 percent of children who have cancer are cured, according to the American Cancer Society's 2008 statistics. Of the 11 million American cancer survivors, 270,000 have survived childhood cancer.

But they have not survived unscathed.

In a kind of cosmic kick in the pants, the treatment that once saved them can put their health at risk for the rest of their lives.

Cancer therapies injure, starve or kill healthy cells along with malignant ones and, as a consequence, survivors have a heightened risk of health problems, including early heart attacks, second cancers, stunted growth and infertility.

"It really hits home when you see a young adult who comes in with congestive heart failure because of their radiation exposure," said Dr. Jacqueline Casillas, pediatric oncologist and associate director of the University of California, Los Angeles-Livestrong Survivorship Center of Excellence.

The survivorship center is part of UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The developing brain - and psyche - can be affected as well. Radiation to the brain can result in a drop of 20 or more IQ points, causing learning disabilities for some.

And while some cured youngsters enter adulthood feeling a renewed sense of purpose, others must deal with lingering bitterness and trauma from their treatment, which can emerge as depression or anxiety when they become adults.

Doctors are using the experiences of these young survivors to try to make things better for new generations of pediatric cancer patients.

They are also coming to realize they must do better by young people whose cancer lies behind them. Only recently is the medical community understanding the importance of lifelong health monitoring to help them avoid, or detect early on, the host of medical risks that could lie in their path.

That often isn't easy. By the time the consequences hit, many young survivors have worked hard to forget the cancer experience.

"Some survivors of childhood cancer, when they become adults, don't ever want to see another doctor again," said Anne Kazak, director of the department of psychology at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

The long-term consequences of cancer treatment vary tremendously, depending on the type of treatment, dose of drugs or radiation, and age and sex of the child.

Children who were treated with radiation to the brain are at future risk for growth hormone deficiency, learning deficits, seizures, strokes and cataracts. Those whose chests were radiated are at risk for breast cancer, thyroid cancer and lung cancer; those who received radiation in the pelvic area could suffer bladder disease, kidney disease or infertility.

Various chemotherapy drugs are linked to infertility, early menopause in females, leukemia, kidney disease, hearing loss, heart disease and lung disease.

Precise statistics vary because combinations of drugs, or drugs paired with radiation, can increase the risks, as do higher treatment doses.

But it's known that up to half of females who received high doses of chest radiation, for example, will have breast cancer later in life (and should have a mammogram every year starting at age 25).

The bottom line is that about two-thirds of childhood cancer survivors experience at least one late health effect of treatment, and for more than one-quarter of survivors it is severe or life-threatening, according to a 2006 report in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Researchers have begun studying these grown-up "miracle" kids, the ones who made it at a time when thousands like them didn't, to find ways to make survival less risky for today's young cancer patients.

Not so long ago, the desperation to cure children was so intense that physicians were willing to throw everything in their medical arsenal at childhood cancer. In the all-out fight for life, there was little room to consider future consequences.

Increasingly, treatments take future quality of life into account, though cure remains the top goal. But whether to ease up on toxic treatments or continue to pull out all the stops remains a difficult balancing act, said Dr. Archie Bleyer, adolescent and young adult oncologist in Bend, Ore.

Because there is so much variation in individual patients, the Institute of Medicine's overall recommendation in its 2003 report on childhood cancer is that all pediatric cancer patients be told what treatment they received and get individualized advice on what to do in the future.

Such planning still falls short. A study presented at the 2007 meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology reported that of 8,500 childhood cancer survivors whose average age was 31, only 18 percent received the kind of risk-based medical follow-up recommended. Among survivors at increased risk for breast cancer, for example, only 49 percent had had a mammogram.

And of those at increased risk for heart disease, only 28 percent received an echocardiogram.

Part of the problem is that when children are cured of cancer, they leave their pediatric oncologists - the doctors who know the most about their condition - behind them. And general physicians, even specialists, may not be aware of the unique care required for cancer survivors.

"What primary care physician is going to routinely recommend a mammogram for a 25-year-old?" said Dr. Patricia Ganz, director of cancer prevention and control at UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The patients themselves are understandably reluctant to hold on to cancer memories. "These young folks want to put the cancer behind them and be like everyone else," Ganz said. "But we're also telling them, 'You're not normal.' They've survived this experience, but they have these risks."

Once cancer and childhood are behind patients, the general physicians who treat them as adults need detailed records on past drug doses, age of treatment or exposure to radiation to be aware of the unique needs of survivors.

They also need to be provided with information on the increased risks the survivors may face because of their cancer treatments. That way, physicians who might have few cancer survivors in their practices will understand that illnesses of middle and old age can appear sooner in this group.

"An adult cardiologist will be familiar with cardiac patients but may not be up to date on heart problems in childhood cancer survivors," Casillas said.

For young adults whose treatment occurred decades ago, gathering the old information isn't easy. "We've seen patients who were treated in New York, in Israel," Casillas said. "It is often very challenging to get the medical records. Their oncologist may no longer be practicing, or even alive."

Parents, traumatized by almost losing their children, can be poor sources of information too, as eager as their growing kids to put the experience behind them. "Some survivors don't even remember their cancer experience," Casillas said. "Sometimes, parents don't even tell their children that they had cancer. We try to piece the record together as best as we can."

Such challenges are why many institutions have experts to help ease pediatric patients, and their records, into the adult medical world. The programs also see adult patients who were treated for childhood cancer at other centers.

Patients, as they enter adulthood, should arm themselves with the most complete and detailed copies of their medical records they can gather. And parents of children who are recovering from cancer now can familiarize themselves with the likely future health issues and begin to prepare.

An important, and nonmedical, part of preparing for life after childhood cancer is getting a good education that leads to a good job - and that means a job with health insurance.

At about age 21, childhood cancer survivors fall off their parents' health insurance plans. The lifelong "pre-existing condition" of childhood cancer could make individual health insurance unattainable or unaffordable.

"How do they find a vocation that's going to be rewarding but will provide them with good pay and benefits? That means completing education," said Dr. David Freyer, director of the LIFE Survivorship and Transition Program at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles. "We encourage them to stay in school."

Children surviving cancer have made it through a harrowing medical experience. They'll need a job. And they'll also need to understand fully what happened to them - some when they were too young to know - and how it affects their future.

"What happens to people we've made infertile? What happens to them psychologically? What happens medically?" said Dr. Leonard Sender, medical director of the Children's Hospital of Orange County Cancer Institute. "We're getting cures. Now we owe it to them to help them survive."

Program and resources for young cancer survivors

Like almost everyone their age, young adult cancer survivors are into the Web. The following sites help them deal with the aftermath of cancer:

A national list of transition programs for childhood and adult cancer survivors is available at http://www.acor.org/ped-onc/treatment/surclinics.html

These programs help adults piece together treatment records and develop preventive care-plans.

http://seventyk.org Named for the 70,000 new young adults diagnosed with cancer in the U.S. each year, the organization drew up a bill of rights for the unique needs of adolescent and young adult cancer patients.

http://www.vitaloptions.org This psychosocial and advocacy group offers topics for young survivors, including motherhood and cancer.

http://www.imtooyoungforthis.org This survivor-led support group works on behalf of survivors younger than 40.

http://www.livestrong.org Founded by Lance Armstrong, who survived testicular cancer at age 25, it is an advocacy organization that has funded research and transition clinics.

http://www.planetcancer.org Planet Cancer welcomes young adult cancer patients and survivors with: "We're glad you're here. (Well, not really, but you know what we mean.)"