European recommendations for short-term surveillance of health problems in childhood, adolescent and young adult cancer survivors from the end of treatment to 5 years after diagnosis: a PanCare guideline

Publication date

2025-04

Authors

de Beijer, Ismay A.E.
Skinner, Roderick
Haupt, Riccardo
Grabow, Desiree
Bardi, Edit
Beccaria, Andrea
Nieto, Adela Cañete
Essiaf, Samira
Filbert, Anna Liesa
Gsell, Hannah

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

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License

cc_by

Abstract

Purpose: Childhood, adolescent and young adult (CAYA) cancer survivors require ongoing surveillance for health problems from the end of cancer treatment throughout their lives. There is a lack of evidence-based guidelines on optimal surveillance strategies for the period from the end of treatment to 5 years after diagnosis. We aimed to address this gap by developing recommendations for short-term surveillance of health problems based on existing long-term follow-up (LTFU) care guidelines. Methods: The guideline working group, consisting of healthcare professionals, parents and survivor representatives from 10 countries, worked together to identify relevant health problems that may occur in survivors between the end of treatment and 5 years after diagnosis and to develop recommendations for short-term surveillance of health problems. The recommendations were drawn from existing LTFU guidelines and adapted where necessary based on clinical expertise. Results: The working group developed 44 recommendations for short-term surveillance of health problems, which were divided into four categories based on the level of surveillance required: awareness only (n = 11), awareness, history and/or physical examination without surveillance test (n = 15), awareness, history and/or physical examination with potential surveillance test (n = 1) and awareness, history and/or physical examination with surveillance test (n = 17). Conclusion: The development of a guideline for short-term surveillance of health problems fills a critical gap in survivorship care for CAYA cancer survivors, providing much-needed support immediately after treatment up to 5 years after diagnosis. Implications for Cancer Survivors. This guideline will support healthcare professionals to provide appropriate follow-up care and improve the quality of life of CAYA cancer survivors.

Keywords

Aftercare, Cancer survivors, Paediatric oncology, Practice guideline, Quality of life, Short-term follow-up care, Surveillance, Survivorship, Survivorship Passport, Oncology, Oncology(nursing)

Citation

de Beijer, I A E, Skinner, R, Haupt, R, Grabow, D, Bardi, E, Beccaria, A, Nieto, A C, Essiaf, S, Filbert, A L, Gsell, H, Kienesberger, A, Langer, T, McColgan, P, Muraca, M, Rascon, J, Tallone, R, Tomasikova, Z, Uyttebroeck, A, Kremer, L C M, van der Pal, H J H & Mulder, R L 2025, 'European recommendations for short-term surveillance of health problems in childhood, adolescent and young adult cancer survivors from the end of treatment to 5 years after diagnosis : a PanCare guideline', Journal of Cancer Survivorship, vol. 19, pp. 603-613. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11764-023-01493-z