4.8 Review

Clinical practice guideline and expert consensus recommendations for rehabilitation among children with cancer: A systematic review

Journal

CA-A CANCER JOURNAL FOR CLINICIANS
Volume 73, Issue 5, Pages 524-545

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3322/caac.21783

Keywords

cancer; cancers of childhood; child; consensus; physical medicine; practice guideline; rehabilitation; survivorship

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Increased attention to rehabilitation needs of children with cancer is important for better health, quality of life, and productivity outcomes. Current guidelines and expert consensus reports lack recommendations for pediatric oncology rehabilitation. A systematic review identified 18 guidelines and 10 expert consensus reports with rehabilitation recommendations for childhood cancer patients. Recommendations were mainly focused on specific diseases, impairments, adolescents and young adults, and long-term follow-up. Evidence supports the effectiveness of rehabilitation recommendations in long-term follow-up care, fatigue, and psychosocial/mental health screening.
Increased attention to the rehabilitation needs of children with cancer is vital to enhance health, quality-of-life, and productivity outcomes. Among adults with cancer, rehabilitation recommendations are frequently incorporated into guidelines, but the extent to which recommendations exist for children is unknown. Reports included in this systematic review are guideline or expert consensus reports containing recommendations related to rehabilitation referral, evaluation, and/or intervention for individuals diagnosed with cancer during childhood (younger than 18 years). Eligible reports were published in English from January 2000 to August 2022. Through database searches, 42,982 records were identified; 62 records were identified through citation and website searching. Twenty-eight reports were included in the review: 18 guidelines and 10 expert consensus reports. Rehabilitation recommendations were identified in disease-specific (e.g., acute lymphoblastic leukemia), impairment-specific (e.g., fatigue, neurocognition, pain), adolescent and young adult, and long-term follow-up reports. Example recommendations included physical activity and energy-conservation techniques to address fatigue, referral to physical therapy for chronic pain management, ongoing psychosocial surveillance, and referral to speech-language pathology for those with hearing loss. High-level evidence supported rehabilitation recommendations for long-term follow-up care, fatigue, and psychosocial/mental health screening. Few intervention recommendations were included in guideline and consensus reports. In this developing field, it is critical to include pediatric oncology rehabilitation providers in guideline and consensus development initiatives. This review enhances the availability and clarity of rehabilitation-relevant guidelines that can help prevent and mitigate cancer-related disability among children by supporting access to rehabilitation services.

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