COMPLICATIONS OF TREATMENT OF HODGKINS-DISEASE IN CHILDREN CANCER TREATMENT REPORTS Donaldson, S. S., KAPLAN, H. S. 1982; 66 (4): 977-989

Abstract

An analysis of complications of therapy requires long-term and frequent followup. Reported here is a review of 179 consecutive children with Hodgkin's disease from Stanford University Medical Center who were seen, treated, and followed over a 20-year period. Complications of treatment are related to the extent of disease and the aggressiveness of therapy. Severe complications from radiotherapy are associated with high-dose, extended-field treatment in preadolescent children. Severe chemotherapy-associated complications include immunosuppression, sterility, and secondary oncogenesis. As cure rates are increasingly optimistic among children with Hodgkin's disease, successful treatment with minimal morbidity remains our greatest challenge. Therapy programs require continual refinement utilizing assessment of short- and long-term side effects of treatment.

View details for Web of Science ID A1982NQ55100042

View details for PubMedID 7074658