Quality-of-life, mood and executive functioning after childhood craniopharyngioma treated with surgery and proton beam therapy
- PMID: 22372414
- DOI: 10.3109/02699052.2011.648709
Quality-of-life, mood and executive functioning after childhood craniopharyngioma treated with surgery and proton beam therapy
Abstract
Primary objective: Childhood craniopharyngioma, a benign tumour with a good survival rate, is associated with important neurocognitive and psychological morbidity, reducing quality-of-life (QoL).
Method: This retrospective study analysed QoL, mood disorders, everyday executive functioning and disease's impact on family life in 29 patients (mean age at diagnosis 7 years 10 months (SD = 4.1); mean follow-up period 6 years 2 months (SD = 4.5)) treated for childhood craniopharyngioma by surgery combined with radiotherapy using proton beam. Assessment included a semi-structured interview and standardized scales evaluating self-report of QoL (Kidscreen 52) and depression (MDI-C) and proxy-reports of QoL (Kidscreen 52), executive functioning (BRIEF) and disease's impact (Hoare and Russel Questionnaire).
Results: Twenty-three families answered the questionnaires completely. Overall QoL self-report was within the normal range. QoL proxy-report was lower than self-report. Eleven patients reported depression; 24-38% had dysexecutive symptoms. A majority of families felt 'very concerned' by the disease. Depression and low parental educational level were associated with lower QoL and higher levels of executive dysfunction.
Conclusion: Given the high morbidity of childhood craniopharyngioma, screening for psychosocial outcome, cognitive functioning, including executive functions, mood and QoL should be systematic and specific interventions should be developed and implemented.
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