Late recurrence in survivors of childhood and adolescent cancer: A report from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study (CCSS)

2016 
9534 Background: An increasing percentage of childhood cancer patients are surviving their disease, but limited research suggests that late recurrences may impact overall survival. The goal of this study is to estimate late recurrence rates for the most common pediatric cancers and to determine additional risk factors for late recurrence. Methods: CCSS is a retrospective cohort study of five-year survivors of childhood cancer diagnosed before 21 years of age, between 1970 and 1986 at one of 26 consortium centers. Late recurrence was defined as first recurrence occurring > five years post-diagnosis. Recurrences were determined by self-report questionnaire or by confirmation through medical record, death certificate or pathologic review. Probability of late recurrence was calculated using cumulative incidence. Adjusted hazard ratios (HR) were obtained using Cox proportional hazards regression. Results: In 12,948 survivors with no recurrence = five years from diagnosis, 670 (5.2%) subjects had a first recurr...
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