Adverse late health outcomes among children treated with 3D radiotherapy techniques: Study design of the Dutch pediatric 3D-RT study

Publication date

2023-02

Authors

Beijer, Josien G.M.
Kok, Judith L.
Janssens, Geert O.ORCID 0000-0002-0331-713X
Streefkerk, Nina
de Vries, Andrica C.H.
Slagter, Cleo
Maduro, John H.
Kroon, Petra S
Grootenhuis, Martha A.
van Dulmen-den Broeder, Eline

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Background: Adverse late health outcomes after multimodal treatment for pediatric cancer are diverse and of prime interest. Currently available evidence and survivorship care guidelines are largely based on studies addressing side-effects of two dimensional planned radiotherapy. Aims: The Dutch pediatric 3D-planned radiotherapy (3D-RT) study aims to gain insight in the long-term health outcomes among children who had radiotherapy in the 3D era. Here, we describe the study design, data-collection methods, and baseline cohort characteristics. Methods and Results: The 3D-RT study represents an expansion of the Dutch Childhood Cancer Survivor study (DCCSS) LATER cohort, including pediatric cancer patients diagnosed during 2000–2012, who survived at least 5 years after initial diagnosis and 2 years post external beam radiotherapy. Individual cancer treatment parameters were obtained from medical files. A national infrastructure for uniform collection and archival of digital radiotherapy files (Computed Tomography [CT]-scans, delineations, plan, and dose files) was established. Health outcome information, including subsequent tumors, originated from medical records at the LATER outpatient clinics, and national registry-linkage. With a median follow-up of 10.9 (interquartile range [IQR]: 7.9–14.3) years after childhood cancer diagnosis, 711 eligible survivors were identified. The most common cancer types were Hodgkin lymphoma, medulloblastoma, and nephroblastoma. Most survivors received radiotherapy directed to the head/cranium only, the craniospinal axis, or the abdominopelvic region. Conclusion: The 3D-RT study will provide knowledge on the risk of adverse late health outcomes and radiation-associated dose-effect relationships. This information is valuable to guide follow-up care of childhood cancer survivors and to refine future treatment protocols.

Keywords

childhood cancer survivors, pediatric radiotherapy, radiation dose effects, side effects, study design, Oncology, Cancer Research

Citation

Beijer, J G M, Kok, J L, Janssens, G O, Streefkerk, N, de Vries, A C H, Slagter, C, Maduro, J H, Kroon, P S, Grootenhuis, M A, van Dulmen-den Broeder, E, Loonen, J J, Wendling, M, Tissing, W J E, van der Pal, H J, Louwerens, M, Bel, A, den Hartogh, J, van der Heiden-van der Loo, M, Kremer, L C M, Teepen, J C & Ronckers, C M 2023, 'Adverse late health outcomes among children treated with 3D radiotherapy techniques : Study design of the Dutch pediatric 3D-RT study', Cancer Reports, vol. 6, no. 2, e1620. https://doi.org/10.1002/cnr2.1620