PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Cancer diagnosis doesn't increase a child's risk of post-traumatic stress disorder

2014-01-22
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Summer Freeman
media@stjude.org
901-595-3061
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Cancer diagnosis doesn't increase a child's risk of post-traumatic stress disorder

A St. Jude Children's Research Hospital study found that despite being diagnosed with life-threatening illnesses, childhood cancer patients are no more likely than their healthy peers to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The research appears in the current online edition of the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Young cancer patients were also more likely than children who experience other stressful events to report having benefited from the experience. Reported benefits included developing greater empathy and growing closer to family and friends.

The study included 255 St. Jude patients who were ages 8 to 17 when their cancer was diagnosed. Based on self-reported patient symptoms, researchers concluded that 2.8 percent, or seven patients, met the criteria for a diagnosis of PTSD either when the study was conducted or in the past. The PTSD was cancer-related in two patients. In the other five patients, the anxiety disorder was linked to a drive-by shooting, Hurricane Katrina or other stressful events.

This incidence of PTSD was comparable to rates reported in community samples of children without cancer and a similar group of 101 healthy peers recruited for the study. The prevalence, however, contrasts sharply with previous reports from other investigators who identified cancer-related PTSD as a widespread problem. Those estimates suggested that 20 to 35 percent of childhood cancer patients would develop PTSD.

"These results should be very reassuring to childhood cancer patients and their families," said the study's first and corresponding author Sean Phipps, Ph.D., St. Jude Department of Psychology chair. "A cancer diagnosis is a highly significant and challenging event, but this study highlights the impressive capacity of children to adjust to changes in their lives and in most cases do just fine or even thrive emotionally as a result."

PTSD is a treatable anxiety disorder that can develop following combat, natural disasters, assaults, life-threatening illnesses and other terrifying events that result in real or potential physical harm. The diagnosis is based on patient reports of certain symptoms, including persistent frightening thoughts, flashbacks, numbness, detachment and sleep disturbances.

For this study, researchers used three established methods to screen pediatric cancer patients and their healthy peers for PTSD. Those included a symptom check list and a structured diagnostic interview about the event each child identified as the most traumatic. Parents were also interviewed about PTSD symptoms in themselves and their children. The study is part of a long-term project to track adjustment and predictors of adjustment in pediatric cancer patients.

Unlike many previous studies of PTSD in cancer patients, researchers initially refrained from asking patients specifically about their diagnosis. Investigators wanted to avoid suggesting to patients that their cancer diagnoses were traumatic, Phipps explained. "We know such suggestions, called focusing illusions, prime individuals to think about their cancer experience as traumatic and leaves them prone to exaggerating its impact in subjective reports," he said.

More than half of the patients identified their cancer as the most stressful event they had experienced. Of those who were long-term survivors, however, less than 25 percent cited cancer as their most traumatic experience. The study included patients whose cancer had been diagnosed between 1 month and more than 5 years earlier.

The cancer patients were recruited between 2009 and 2012 and were battling cancers of the blood, brain and other organs. The patients were divided into roughly equal groups based on the time since their diagnosis. Unlike previous studies of PTSD in pediatric cancer patients, this study included a similar group of healthy children recruited from Memphis-area schools.

Parental interviews suggested slightly higher rates of PTSD in both cancer patients and their healthy peers. Based on parent-reported symptoms, researchers reported that 5.9 percent met the criteria for PTSD. Two percent of the non-cancer volunteers also met the criteria. The difference between the two groups was not statistically significant.



INFORMATION:



The study involved St. Jude patients, but Phipps said the findings should apply to children treated at other institutions.

The other authors of this study are James Klosky, Alanna Long, Melissa Hudson, Qinlei Huang and Hui Zhang, all of St. Jude; and Robert Noll of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

The study was funded in part by a grant (CA136782) from the National Institutes of Health and ALSAC.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Subterranean 'sedimentary bathtub' amplifies earthquakes

2014-01-22
Subterranean 'sedimentary bathtub' amplifies earthquakes A basin of stiff soil beneath Vancouver might make earthquakes there more severe than expected, a San Diego State University seismologist finds SAN DIEGO, Calif. (Jan. 21, 2014)— Like an amphitheater amplifies ...

Emergency treatment takes longer for heart attack victims during off-hours

2014-01-22
Emergency treatment takes longer for heart attack victims during off-hours ROCHESTER, Minn. — Jan. 21, 2014 — More people die and emergency hospital treatment takes longer for heart attack victims who arrive at the hospital during off-hours (nights and weekends), compared ...

White, green or black roofs? Berkeley Lab report compares economic payoffs

2014-01-22
White, green or black roofs? Berkeley Lab report compares economic payoffs Looking strictly at the economic costs and benefits of three different roof types—black, white and "green" (or vegetated)—Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) ...

Exposure to cold temperatures can help boost weight loss

2014-01-22
Exposure to cold temperatures can help boost weight loss Regular exposure to mild cold may be a healthy and sustainable way to help people lose weight, according to researchers writing in the Cell Press publication Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism on January 22nd. On ...

Parental exposure to THC Linked to drug addiction, compulsive behavior in unexposed offspring

2014-01-22
Parental exposure to THC Linked to drug addiction, compulsive behavior in unexposed offspring Mount Sinai study pinpoints molecular and neurobiological effects of THC, the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana New York, NY ...

Sneak preview of Survey Telescope treasure trove

2014-01-22
Sneak preview of Survey Telescope treasure trove VST images the Lagoon Nebula The VLT Survey Telescope (VST) at ESO's Paranal Observatory in Chile has captured this richly detailed new image of the Lagoon Nebula. This giant cloud of gas and dust is creating intensely bright young stars, ...

Stanford researchers reveal more about how our brains control our arms

2014-01-22
Stanford researchers reveal more about how our brains control our arms Recording the neural activity of monkeys as they plan to reach, or just react, will help engineers design better brain controlled prosthetic limbs. Ready, set, go. Sometimes that's how ...

Carsey Institute: 39 percent of unemployed Americans are seeking work for 6+ months

2014-01-22
Carsey Institute: 39 percent of unemployed Americans are seeking work for 6+ months New UNH research looks at long-term unemployment in wake of the recession DURHAM, N.H. – Thirty-nine percent of unemployed Americans are experiencing long-term unemployment ...

Long-term follow-up shows need for new chemotherapy strategies for rectal cancer

2014-01-22
Long-term follow-up shows need for new chemotherapy strategies for rectal cancer Results of EORTC trial 22921 at 10.4 years median follow-up Appearing in Lancet Oncology, long term results of EORTC trial 22921 with 10.4 years median follow-up show ...

Deepwater Horizon: Identifying harmful elements of persisting oil

2014-01-22
Deepwater Horizon: Identifying harmful elements of persisting oil On 20 April 2010, a floating oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico called Deepwater Horizon suddenly exploded, leading to the largest accidental marine oil disaster in the world. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Ultrafast untethered levitation device utilized squeeze film for omni-directional transport

Cancer cells can evade anti-cancer drugs by entering and surviving within bone marrow fibroblasts

Clarifying medical images using next-level pixel-particle analogy

What exactly is Long COVID? New UCLA research shows the answer depends on whom you ask

Work impairment and financial outcomes among adults with vs without long COVID

Hospital financial health and provision of obstetric and neonatal intensive care unit services

Studying terrestrial rocks to prepare techniques for Mars

Tiny ants crack the secret to perfect teamwork

Scientists find a microbial molecule that restores liver and gut health

Regulation of the temperature stability in ordered olivine microwave dielectric ceramics with low-loss for dielectric resonant antenna

Core-cladding-like phosphor ceramics wafer: a path to ultra-high luminance

Exercise may slow epigenetic aging

RSNA AI challenge models can independently interpret mammograms

Embargoed study: Breaking the link between alcohol use and pancreatic cancer

Why common blood pressure readings may be misleading – and how to fix them

Neural navigation: FAU engineers, sensing institute map brain’s blood flow

“Skin in a syringe” a step towards a new way to heal burns

BTI, Meiogenix and FFAR announce $2 million breakthrough tomato genetics collaboration

Better calibration for cuff-based blood pressure readings

The future of ‘personalized’ cancer treatment: Antitumor mRNA-based vaccines

Common food thickeners – long thought to pass right through us – are actually digested

Off-the-shelf cancer vaccine elicits strong immune response in patients with pancreatic and colorectal cancer

New strategy to boost the effect of immunotherapy in the most aggressive form of lung cancer

Counties with animal feeding operations have more air pollution, less health insurance coverage

Mirror-like graphite films break records in strength and conductivity

AI uncovers new antibiotics in ancient microbes

AI meets CRISPR for precise gene editing

New method to synthesize carbohydrates could pave the way to biomedical advances

Plants feed through one-way routes

3D-printed kidney tumors show potential for more targeted treatment

[Press-News.org] Cancer diagnosis doesn't increase a child's risk of post-traumatic stress disorder