WASHINGTON:
People who survive cancer when they are
teenagers or young adults are more likely than their peers who never had cancer
to engage in risky behaviors like smoking later on, a US study said on Monday.
They
also are more likely to be overweight and have mental health issues and
financial problems than their cancer-free counterparts, said the research in
the journal Cancer, a peer-reviewed publication of the American Cancer Society.
"There
are a lot of factors that play into it," said lead author Eric Tai of the
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Division of Cancer.
"Part
of it may be that adolescent and young adult cancer survivors are not aware of
their medical history and they are not aware of the long-term risks associated
with their cancer and their cancer treatment," he told AFP.
"Because
of that, they may engage in behaviors not knowing the long-term consequences of
them."
Also,
people diagnosed with cancer between age 15 and 29 are developmentally very
different than older cancer survivors, and so they tend to cope with their illnesses
in ways that elders might not, he added.
Finally,
they are not being tracked by health care providers as well as younger and
older patients.
"There
hasn't been very good follow-up of cancer survivors in this group in terms of
screening, health checks, those kinds of things looking for early signs of
problems that may come up and also looking at risk behaviors."
The
data for the study came from a nationwide survey known as the 2009 Behavioral
Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS).
Researchers
identified people who were diagnosed with cancer when they were adolescents or
young adults, and compared their responses to questions about their health to a
group of 345,592 cancer-free respondents.
A large
majority of the young cancer survivors group was female -- 81 percent -- and
the most commonly reported type of cancer was cervical (38 percent) followed by
other female reproductive cancers (13 percent) and melanoma (nine percent).
The
young survivors were more likely to smoke (26 percent compared to 18 percent in
the group that never had cancer) and more of them were obese (31 percent versus
27 percent).
Twice
as many reported being disabled (36 percent compared to 18 percent) and 24
percent said they were in poor physical health while just 10 percent of the
cancer-free group said the same.
Poor
mental health was mentioned by 20 percent of young cancer survivors, twice as
many as in the control group, and they were also more likely to forgo medical
care because of the cost (24 percent versus 15 percent).
Adolescent
and young adult cancer survivors also reported higher rates of heart disease,
high-blood pressure, asthma and diabetes.
Many of
these problems could be avoided with better follow-up care, Tai said.
"Health
care providers really need to be aware of established follow-up guidelines,
which includes information on potential latent effects, risk factors, screening
and evaluation, counseling, and other interventions."
-
AFP/al
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