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      Cognitive and academic outcome following cranial irradiation and chemotherapy in children: a longitudinal study

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          Abstract

          Cranial irradiation therapy (CRT) and chemotherapy are associated with neurobehavioural deficits. Many studies have investigated late effects of these treatments, but few have evaluated changes in abilities over time. This study employed a longitudinal design to map abilities following these treatments. Three groups of children were studied: Group 1 ( n = 35): children treated with CRT (18 Gy) + chemotherapy, aged 5 years or less at time of diagnosis; Group 2 ( n = 19): children treated with chemotherapy alone, aged 5 years or less at time of diagnosis; Group 3 ( n = 35): healthy children. All children were aged 7–13 years at time of initial assessment, with no pre-diagnosis history of neurologic, developmental, or psychiatric disorder. Intellectual and educational abilities were evaluated twice: T1, not less than 2 years post-treatment, and T2, 3 years later. Group 1 achieved poorest results at T1, with comparison groups performing similarly. At T2 group differences were maintained. For verbal skills differences remained stable. Group 1 exhibited deterioration on non-verbal and processing tasks, while comparison groups showed improved abilities. Group 1 exhibited increases in literacy skills, with educational intervention predicting progress. Results suggest cumulative deficits in non-verbal and information processing skills for children treated with CRT + chemotherapy, with other deficits remaining relatively stable over time. Improved literacy skills suggest that gains can occur with remediation. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaign

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Br J Cancer
          British Journal of Cancer
          Nature Publishing Group
          0007-0920
          1532-1827
          18 January 2000
          January 2000
          : 82
          : 2
          : 255-262
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Dept. Psychology, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia
          [2 ]Departments of Psychology, Royal Children's Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia
          [3 ]Haematology/Oncology, Royal Children's Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia
          Article
          6690912
          10.1054/bjoc.1999.0912
          2363266
          10646874
          e94468a5-e18e-4838-a503-9062265b40f9
          Copyright 2000, Cancer Research Campaign
          History
          : 31 March 1998
          : 27 August 1999
          : 14 September 1999
          Categories
          Regular Article

          Oncology & Radiotherapy
          intellectual educational sequela,cranial irradiation,childhood leukaemia

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