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Identifying causal relationships of cancer treatment and long-term health effects among 5-year survivors of childhood cancer in Southern Sweden

Holst, Anders ; Ekman, Jan ; Petersson-Ahrholt, Magnus ; Relander, Thomas LU ; Wiebe, Thomas LU and Linge, Helena M LU (2022) In Communications medicine 2. p.1-12
Abstract

Background: Survivors of childhood cancer can develop adverse health events later in life. Infrequent occurrences and scarcity of structured information result in analytical and statistical challenges. Alternative statistical approaches are required to investigate the basis of late effects in smaller data sets.

Methods: Here we describe sex-specific health care use, mortality and causal associations between primary diagnosis, treatment and outcomes in a small cohort (
n  = 2315) of 5-year survivors of childhood cancer (
n  = 2129) in southern Sweden and a control group (
n  = 11,882; age-, sex- and region-matched from the general population). We developed a constraint-based method for causal inference based on... (More)

Background: Survivors of childhood cancer can develop adverse health events later in life. Infrequent occurrences and scarcity of structured information result in analytical and statistical challenges. Alternative statistical approaches are required to investigate the basis of late effects in smaller data sets.

Methods: Here we describe sex-specific health care use, mortality and causal associations between primary diagnosis, treatment and outcomes in a small cohort (
n  = 2315) of 5-year survivors of childhood cancer (
n  = 2129) in southern Sweden and a control group (
n  = 11,882; age-, sex- and region-matched from the general population). We developed a constraint-based method for causal inference based on Bayesian estimation of distributions, and used it to investigate health care use and causal associations between diagnoses, treatments and outcomes. Mortality was analyzed by the Kaplan-Meier method.

Results: Our results confirm a significantly higher health care usage and premature mortality among childhood cancer survivors as compared to controls. The developed method for causal inference identifies 98 significant associations (
p  < 0.0001) where most are well known (
n  = 73; 74.5%). Hitherto undescribed associations are identified (
n  = 5; 5.1%). These were between use of alkylating agents and eye conditions, topoisomerase inhibitors and viral infections; pituitary surgery and intestinal infections; and cervical cancer and endometritis. We discuss study-related biases (
n  = 20; 20.4%) and limitations.

Conclusions: The findings contribute to a broader understanding of the consequences of cancer treatment. The study shows relevance for small data sets and causal inference, and presents the method as a complement to traditional statistical approaches.

(Less)
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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Communications medicine
volume
2
article number
21
pages
1 - 12
publisher
Nature Publishing Group
external identifiers
  • scopus:85164512893
  • pmid:35603279
ISSN
2730-664X
DOI
10.1038/s43856-022-00081-z
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
© The Author(s) 2022.
id
ac2473c3-b834-442f-8885-a1cf060440ad
date added to LUP
2022-06-03 10:13:33
date last changed
2024-06-12 04:01:37
@article{ac2473c3-b834-442f-8885-a1cf060440ad,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: Survivors of childhood cancer can develop adverse health events later in life. Infrequent occurrences and scarcity of structured information result in analytical and statistical challenges. Alternative statistical approaches are required to investigate the basis of late effects in smaller data sets.</p><p>Methods: Here we describe sex-specific health care use, mortality and causal associations between primary diagnosis, treatment and outcomes in a small cohort (<br>
 n  = 2315) of 5-year survivors of childhood cancer (<br>
 n  = 2129) in southern Sweden and a control group (<br>
 n  = 11,882; age-, sex- and region-matched from the general population). We developed a constraint-based method for causal inference based on Bayesian estimation of distributions, and used it to investigate health care use and causal associations between diagnoses, treatments and outcomes. Mortality was analyzed by the Kaplan-Meier method.<br>
 </p><p>Results: Our results confirm a significantly higher health care usage and premature mortality among childhood cancer survivors as compared to controls. The developed method for causal inference identifies 98 significant associations ( <br>
 p  &lt; 0.0001) where most are well known ( <br>
 n  = 73; 74.5%). Hitherto undescribed associations are identified (<br>
 n  = 5; 5.1%). These were between use of alkylating agents and eye conditions, topoisomerase inhibitors and viral infections; pituitary surgery and intestinal infections; and cervical cancer and endometritis. We discuss study-related biases (<br>
 n  = 20; 20.4%) and limitations.<br>
 </p><p>Conclusions: The findings contribute to a broader understanding of the consequences of cancer treatment. The study shows relevance for small data sets and causal inference, and presents the method as a complement to traditional statistical approaches.</p>}},
  author       = {{Holst, Anders and Ekman, Jan and Petersson-Ahrholt, Magnus and Relander, Thomas and Wiebe, Thomas and Linge, Helena M}},
  issn         = {{2730-664X}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{1--12}},
  publisher    = {{Nature Publishing Group}},
  series       = {{Communications medicine}},
  title        = {{Identifying causal relationships of cancer treatment and long-term health effects among 5-year survivors of childhood cancer in Southern Sweden}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s43856-022-00081-z}},
  doi          = {{10.1038/s43856-022-00081-z}},
  volume       = {{2}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}