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Neurodevelopmental consequences of pediatric cancer and its treatment: applying an early adversity framework to understanding cognitive,behavioral, and emotional outcomes
Authors:Hilary A Marusak  Allesandra S Iadipaolo  Felicity W Harper  Farrah Elrahal  Jeffrey W Taub  Elimelech Goldberg  Christine A Rabinak
Institution:1.Department of Pharmacy Practice, Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences,Wayne State University,Detroit,USA;2.Population Studies and Disparities Research Program,Karmanos Cancer Institute,Detroit,USA;3.Department of Oncology, School of Medicine,Wayne State University,Detroit,USA;4.Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine,Wayne State University,Detroit,USA;5.Children’s Hospital of Michigan,Detroit,USA;6.Kids Kicking Cancer,Southfield,USA;7.Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences,Wayne State University,Detroit,USA;8.Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, School of Medicine,Wayne State University,Detroit,USA
Abstract:Today, children are surviving pediatric cancer at unprecedented rates, making it one of modern medicine’s true success stories. However, we are increasingly becoming aware of several deleterious effects of cancer and the subsequent “cure” that extend beyond physical sequelae. Indeed, survivors of childhood cancer commonly report cognitive, emotional, and psychological difficulties, including attentional difficulties, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS). Cognitive late- and long-term effects have been largely attributed to neurotoxic effects of cancer treatments (e.g., chemotherapy, cranial irradiation, surgery) on brain development. The role of childhood adversity in pediatric cancer – namely, the presence of a life-threatening disease and endurance of invasive medical procedures – has been largely ignored in the existing neuroscientific literature, despite compelling research by our group and others showing that exposure to more commonly studied adverse childhood experiences (i.e., domestic and community violence, physical, sexual, and emotional abuse) strongly imprints on neural development. While these adverse childhood experiences are different in many ways from the experience of childhood cancer (e.g., context, nature, source), they do share a common element of exposure to threat (i.e., threat to life or physical integrity). Therefore, we argue that the double hit of early threat and cancer treatments likely alters neural development, and ultimately, cognitive, behavioral, and emotional outcomes. In this paper, we (1) review the existing neuroimaging research on child, adolescent, and adult survivors of childhood cancer, (2) summarize gaps in our current understanding, (3) propose a novel neurobiological framework that characterizes childhood cancer as a type of childhood adversity, particularly a form of early threat, focusing on development of the hippocampus and the salience and emotion network (SEN), and (4) outline future directions for research.
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