4.6 Article

Risk of somatic hospitalization in parents after cancer in a child, a nationwide cohort study

Journal

PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 7, Pages 1196-1203

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pon.5909

Keywords

cancer; children; morbidity; oncology; parents; stress

Funding

  1. Danish Childhood Cancer Foundation [2015-35]

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This study attempts to document the impact of childhood cancer on parents' somatic health for the first time. Except for an increased risk of neoplasms, likely due to shared genetic or lifestyle factors, our findings suggest that caring for a child with cancer does not generally increase parents' risk for somatic diseases.
Objective The diagnosis of cancer in a child is a profoundly stressful experience. The impact on parents' somatic health, including lifestyle-related diseases, however, is unresolved. This paper assesses parents' risk of hospitalization with somatic disease after a child's cancer diagnosis. Methods We conducted a nationwide population- and register-based study with parents of all children under age 20 diagnosed with cancer in Denmark between 1998 and 2013 and parents of cancer-free children, matched (1:10) on child's age and family type. We estimated HR with 95% CI in Cox proportional hazard models for 13 major International Classification of Diseases-10 disease groups, selected stress- and lifestyle-related disease-groups, and investigated moderation by time since diagnosis, parental sex, and cancer type. Results Among n = 7797 parents of children with cancer compared with n = 74,388 parents of cancer-free children (51% mothers, mean age 42), we found no overall pattern of increased risk for 13 broad disease groups. We found increases in digestive system diseases (HR 1.06, 95% CI 1.01-1.12), genitourinary system diseases (HR 1.08, 95% CI 1.02-1.14), and neoplasms (HR 1.20, 95% CI 1.13-1.27), the latter attributable mostly to increased rates of tobacco-related cancers and mothers' diet-related cancers. Conclusions This is the first attempt to document the impact of childhood cancer on parents' somatic health. With the exception of increased risk for neoplasms, likely due to shared genetic or lifestyle factors, our findings offer the reassuring message, that the burden of caring for a child with cancer does not in general increase parents' risk for somatic diseases.

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