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When the Cancer Patient Isn't a Kid Anymore
Health insurance emerges as leading issue in the transition to adult care.

CHICAGO – Every parent of a teenager has heard some variation of the demand, "Stop treating me like a kid!" The same can be said for adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancers, investigators say.

With childhood cancer survivorship rates hovering around 80% (according to Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results data from 1996 to 2003), many patients are outgrowing their pediatricians and their pediatric oncologists. The patients still need regular follow-up, but just who will do that follow-up and how thoroughly is still an open question, said Dr. Karim Thomas Sadak, a pediatric oncology fellow at the Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C.

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Young cancer survivors are outgrowing their pediatricians, raising questions as to what comes next.

He and his colleagues surveyed 103 cancer survivors aged 16-24 years and asked them to identify what they found to be the most important factors in their decision to make the transition from a survivorship program at a children’s hospital to a similar program at an adult institution.

"They told us some things we were very surprised to hear about their preferences for care. By far, the most commonly selected component of their clinical care that was rated as very important was the acceptability of their insurance. We might expect to hear that from 30-year-olds, but these people are most likely on their parents’ insurance, as they are under 25," Dr. Sadak said in an interview at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

Based on the responses, Dr. Sadak and his associates asked a social worker who helps young patients make the transition to adult care to discuss insurance options with patients and their parents before and during patient visits and in follow-up.

"She gained knowledge about different insurances, reimbursements, copays, and policy issues related to survivorship care, and then she was able to proactively address these concerns with survivors," he said.

Survivors also rated flexible scheduling and comprehensive care as either very important or important. Paradoxically, while 97% of responders said that they wanted to make a transition that promoted independence, 96% wanted their primary childhood cancer provider present during the transition.

Conversely, "availability of vocational training and peer networking as well as considering readiness and a gradual introduction appear to be least important" factors in the decision to make the transition, Dr. Sadak said.

Internists Willing but Uncertain

In a different study, investigators from the United States and Canada surveyed U.S. internists about their knowledge of caring for childhood cancer survivors and found that most general internists said they are willing to follow adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancers but many also said that they would feel more comfortable doing so in collaboration with a cancer center.

Internists need to know that there are a wide variety of resources available to help them care for such patients, said coauthor Dr. Eugene Suh, a fellow in pediatric oncology at the University of Chicago Medical Center.

"Internists are really good at gathering information, but I don’t think they necessarily know that this information is out there to help guide them in taking care of these cancer survivors," he said in an interview.

In their survey of a random sample of 2,000 U.S. general internists, 1,025 of whom responded, the investigators found that 72% of those who had seen pediatric cancer survivors in the past 5 years said they never received a treatment summary or survivorship care plan documenting diagnosis, cancer therapy, and plan for follow-up.

Additionally, on a 7-point scale rating familiarity with the Children’s Oncology Group (COG) long-term follow-up guidelines, most respondents reported being "very unfamiliar" (mean score of 5.2 points) with the recommendations.

When presented with a clinical vignette of a female survivor of Hodgkin’s lymphoma treated at age 16 with 25 Gy of mantle radiation and cumulative doses of doxorubicin 150 mg/m2 and cyclophosphamide 15 g/m2, 73% did not recommend yearly breast cancer surveillance, 85% did not recommend cardiac surveillance, and 23% did not recommend thyroid surveillance.

The investigators plan to conduct intervention studies aimed at improving general physicians’ comfort with and knowledge of long-term care for survivors.

Research Resource

One source for survivorship studies could be vertically integrated health care systems, said Dr. Robert M. Cooper and colleagues from Kaiser Permanente Southern California in Los Angeles.

They found that, 5 years after diagnosis, 77% of 4,782 adolescent and young adult cancer patients were still being cared for by Kaiser physicians, as were 62% at 10 years.

 

 

"The lengthy insurance retention of adolescent/young adult cancer survivors makes a vertically integrated medical care system an ideal population laboratory for adolescent/young adult cancer survivorship research," they wrote in a poster presented at ASCO 2012.

Patient, Advocate for Thyself

Dr. Sadak said that patients also have to be willing to step up to the plate and act as their own best advocates.

"At some point, we as the provider want to educate the patient ... to have some kind of responsibility for their own health care," he said. "The question is, at what age? It may not be 16, 17, or 18, especially in a population that’s been through a serious illness like childhood cancer. The bonds that these patients and their parents have created are very strong. We have to respect that, while still encouraging the survivor to take responsibility for his health."

Dr. Sadak’s study was funded by a Children’s Health Center Board grant. Dr. Suh’s study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Cooper’s study was supported by Kaiser Permanente. All authors reported having no relevant conflicts of interest.

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Health insurance emerges as leading issue in the transition to adult care.
Health insurance emerges as leading issue in the transition to adult care.

CHICAGO – Every parent of a teenager has heard some variation of the demand, "Stop treating me like a kid!" The same can be said for adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancers, investigators say.

With childhood cancer survivorship rates hovering around 80% (according to Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results data from 1996 to 2003), many patients are outgrowing their pediatricians and their pediatric oncologists. The patients still need regular follow-up, but just who will do that follow-up and how thoroughly is still an open question, said Dr. Karim Thomas Sadak, a pediatric oncology fellow at the Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C.

©BVDC/Fotolia.com
Young cancer survivors are outgrowing their pediatricians, raising questions as to what comes next.

He and his colleagues surveyed 103 cancer survivors aged 16-24 years and asked them to identify what they found to be the most important factors in their decision to make the transition from a survivorship program at a children’s hospital to a similar program at an adult institution.

"They told us some things we were very surprised to hear about their preferences for care. By far, the most commonly selected component of their clinical care that was rated as very important was the acceptability of their insurance. We might expect to hear that from 30-year-olds, but these people are most likely on their parents’ insurance, as they are under 25," Dr. Sadak said in an interview at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

Based on the responses, Dr. Sadak and his associates asked a social worker who helps young patients make the transition to adult care to discuss insurance options with patients and their parents before and during patient visits and in follow-up.

"She gained knowledge about different insurances, reimbursements, copays, and policy issues related to survivorship care, and then she was able to proactively address these concerns with survivors," he said.

Survivors also rated flexible scheduling and comprehensive care as either very important or important. Paradoxically, while 97% of responders said that they wanted to make a transition that promoted independence, 96% wanted their primary childhood cancer provider present during the transition.

Conversely, "availability of vocational training and peer networking as well as considering readiness and a gradual introduction appear to be least important" factors in the decision to make the transition, Dr. Sadak said.

Internists Willing but Uncertain

In a different study, investigators from the United States and Canada surveyed U.S. internists about their knowledge of caring for childhood cancer survivors and found that most general internists said they are willing to follow adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancers but many also said that they would feel more comfortable doing so in collaboration with a cancer center.

Internists need to know that there are a wide variety of resources available to help them care for such patients, said coauthor Dr. Eugene Suh, a fellow in pediatric oncology at the University of Chicago Medical Center.

"Internists are really good at gathering information, but I don’t think they necessarily know that this information is out there to help guide them in taking care of these cancer survivors," he said in an interview.

In their survey of a random sample of 2,000 U.S. general internists, 1,025 of whom responded, the investigators found that 72% of those who had seen pediatric cancer survivors in the past 5 years said they never received a treatment summary or survivorship care plan documenting diagnosis, cancer therapy, and plan for follow-up.

Additionally, on a 7-point scale rating familiarity with the Children’s Oncology Group (COG) long-term follow-up guidelines, most respondents reported being "very unfamiliar" (mean score of 5.2 points) with the recommendations.

When presented with a clinical vignette of a female survivor of Hodgkin’s lymphoma treated at age 16 with 25 Gy of mantle radiation and cumulative doses of doxorubicin 150 mg/m2 and cyclophosphamide 15 g/m2, 73% did not recommend yearly breast cancer surveillance, 85% did not recommend cardiac surveillance, and 23% did not recommend thyroid surveillance.

The investigators plan to conduct intervention studies aimed at improving general physicians’ comfort with and knowledge of long-term care for survivors.

Research Resource

One source for survivorship studies could be vertically integrated health care systems, said Dr. Robert M. Cooper and colleagues from Kaiser Permanente Southern California in Los Angeles.

They found that, 5 years after diagnosis, 77% of 4,782 adolescent and young adult cancer patients were still being cared for by Kaiser physicians, as were 62% at 10 years.

 

 

"The lengthy insurance retention of adolescent/young adult cancer survivors makes a vertically integrated medical care system an ideal population laboratory for adolescent/young adult cancer survivorship research," they wrote in a poster presented at ASCO 2012.

Patient, Advocate for Thyself

Dr. Sadak said that patients also have to be willing to step up to the plate and act as their own best advocates.

"At some point, we as the provider want to educate the patient ... to have some kind of responsibility for their own health care," he said. "The question is, at what age? It may not be 16, 17, or 18, especially in a population that’s been through a serious illness like childhood cancer. The bonds that these patients and their parents have created are very strong. We have to respect that, while still encouraging the survivor to take responsibility for his health."

Dr. Sadak’s study was funded by a Children’s Health Center Board grant. Dr. Suh’s study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Cooper’s study was supported by Kaiser Permanente. All authors reported having no relevant conflicts of interest.

CHICAGO – Every parent of a teenager has heard some variation of the demand, "Stop treating me like a kid!" The same can be said for adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancers, investigators say.

With childhood cancer survivorship rates hovering around 80% (according to Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results data from 1996 to 2003), many patients are outgrowing their pediatricians and their pediatric oncologists. The patients still need regular follow-up, but just who will do that follow-up and how thoroughly is still an open question, said Dr. Karim Thomas Sadak, a pediatric oncology fellow at the Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C.

©BVDC/Fotolia.com
Young cancer survivors are outgrowing their pediatricians, raising questions as to what comes next.

He and his colleagues surveyed 103 cancer survivors aged 16-24 years and asked them to identify what they found to be the most important factors in their decision to make the transition from a survivorship program at a children’s hospital to a similar program at an adult institution.

"They told us some things we were very surprised to hear about their preferences for care. By far, the most commonly selected component of their clinical care that was rated as very important was the acceptability of their insurance. We might expect to hear that from 30-year-olds, but these people are most likely on their parents’ insurance, as they are under 25," Dr. Sadak said in an interview at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

Based on the responses, Dr. Sadak and his associates asked a social worker who helps young patients make the transition to adult care to discuss insurance options with patients and their parents before and during patient visits and in follow-up.

"She gained knowledge about different insurances, reimbursements, copays, and policy issues related to survivorship care, and then she was able to proactively address these concerns with survivors," he said.

Survivors also rated flexible scheduling and comprehensive care as either very important or important. Paradoxically, while 97% of responders said that they wanted to make a transition that promoted independence, 96% wanted their primary childhood cancer provider present during the transition.

Conversely, "availability of vocational training and peer networking as well as considering readiness and a gradual introduction appear to be least important" factors in the decision to make the transition, Dr. Sadak said.

Internists Willing but Uncertain

In a different study, investigators from the United States and Canada surveyed U.S. internists about their knowledge of caring for childhood cancer survivors and found that most general internists said they are willing to follow adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancers but many also said that they would feel more comfortable doing so in collaboration with a cancer center.

Internists need to know that there are a wide variety of resources available to help them care for such patients, said coauthor Dr. Eugene Suh, a fellow in pediatric oncology at the University of Chicago Medical Center.

"Internists are really good at gathering information, but I don’t think they necessarily know that this information is out there to help guide them in taking care of these cancer survivors," he said in an interview.

In their survey of a random sample of 2,000 U.S. general internists, 1,025 of whom responded, the investigators found that 72% of those who had seen pediatric cancer survivors in the past 5 years said they never received a treatment summary or survivorship care plan documenting diagnosis, cancer therapy, and plan for follow-up.

Additionally, on a 7-point scale rating familiarity with the Children’s Oncology Group (COG) long-term follow-up guidelines, most respondents reported being "very unfamiliar" (mean score of 5.2 points) with the recommendations.

When presented with a clinical vignette of a female survivor of Hodgkin’s lymphoma treated at age 16 with 25 Gy of mantle radiation and cumulative doses of doxorubicin 150 mg/m2 and cyclophosphamide 15 g/m2, 73% did not recommend yearly breast cancer surveillance, 85% did not recommend cardiac surveillance, and 23% did not recommend thyroid surveillance.

The investigators plan to conduct intervention studies aimed at improving general physicians’ comfort with and knowledge of long-term care for survivors.

Research Resource

One source for survivorship studies could be vertically integrated health care systems, said Dr. Robert M. Cooper and colleagues from Kaiser Permanente Southern California in Los Angeles.

They found that, 5 years after diagnosis, 77% of 4,782 adolescent and young adult cancer patients were still being cared for by Kaiser physicians, as were 62% at 10 years.

 

 

"The lengthy insurance retention of adolescent/young adult cancer survivors makes a vertically integrated medical care system an ideal population laboratory for adolescent/young adult cancer survivorship research," they wrote in a poster presented at ASCO 2012.

Patient, Advocate for Thyself

Dr. Sadak said that patients also have to be willing to step up to the plate and act as their own best advocates.

"At some point, we as the provider want to educate the patient ... to have some kind of responsibility for their own health care," he said. "The question is, at what age? It may not be 16, 17, or 18, especially in a population that’s been through a serious illness like childhood cancer. The bonds that these patients and their parents have created are very strong. We have to respect that, while still encouraging the survivor to take responsibility for his health."

Dr. Sadak’s study was funded by a Children’s Health Center Board grant. Dr. Suh’s study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Cooper’s study was supported by Kaiser Permanente. All authors reported having no relevant conflicts of interest.

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When the Cancer Patient Isn't a Kid Anymore
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When the Cancer Patient Isn't a Kid Anymore
Legacy Keywords
pediatric cancer patients, cancer and kids, pediatric oncologists, childhood cancer survivors, cancer survivor rates, cancer kids, Childrens Oncology Group, adolescent and young adult cancer patients, Karim Sadak, Eugene Suh, Robert M. Cooper
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pediatric cancer patients, cancer and kids, pediatric oncologists, childhood cancer survivors, cancer survivor rates, cancer kids, Childrens Oncology Group, adolescent and young adult cancer patients, Karim Sadak, Eugene Suh, Robert M. Cooper
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AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY

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Inside the Article

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Major Finding: Among adolescent and young adult cancer survivors, 97% said acceptance of their insurance was important or very important for making the transition to an adult physician’s care.

Data Source: Investigators surveyed 103 survivors, aged 16-24 years, of pediatric cancers.

Disclosures: Dr. Sadak’s study was funded by a Children’s Health Center Board grant. Dr. Suh’s study was funded by the NIH. The study by Dr. Cooper and colleagues was supported by Kaiser Permanente. All authors reported having no relevant conflicts of interest.