Neurocognitive and Emotional Outcomes in Childhood Cancer: A Developmental Perspective.
- 1. Department of Special Education, University of Thessaly, 38221 Volos, Greece.
- 2. Department of Primary Education, University of Thessaly, 38221 Volos, Greece.
- 3. Clinic for Assessment of Adolescent Learning Difficulties, Center for Adolescent Medicine and UNESCO Chair in Adolescent Health Care, First Department of Pediatrics, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11527 Athens, Greece.
- 4. National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Description
Childhood cancer survivors (CCSs) are at heightened risk of long-term neurocognitive and emotional difficulties that can affect educational attainment, social participation, and overall quality of life. These outcomes vary across developmental stages and are influenced by treatment modality, age at diagnosis, and central nervous system (CNS) involvement.
A comprehensive literature search was conducted in PubMed, Scopus, PsycINFO, and Web of Science for articles published between January 2000 and June 2024. Search terms included combinations of "childhood cancer survivors," "neurocognitive outcomes," "executive function," "emotional regulation," and related MeSH terms. Inclusion criteria required peer-reviewed studies assessing CCS using standardized neuropsychological or emotional measures.
Evidence indicates persistent deficits in processing speed, working memory, and higher-order executive functions, with additional challenges in attention and memory. Emotional difficulties, including anxiety, depression, and social withdrawal, were prevalent and often co-occurred with cognitive impairments. Developmental timing of cancer and treatment was a key determinant of outcome. Family functioning, school reintegration support, and broader social environments emerged as important moderators of resilience.
CCSs face complex, interrelated cognitive and emotional challenges that warrant early identification and ongoing, developmentally tailored intervention. Integrated approaches combining cognitive remediation and psychosocial support appear most effective. Future research should prioritize longitudinal designs, multi-informant assessments, and culturally sensitive frameworks to inform targeted prevention and rehabilitation strategies. Our synthesis highlights that deficits in processing speed and working memory are most pronounced following CNS-directed therapies during early developmental stages, whereas emotional vulnerabilities such as anxiety and social withdrawal often emerge later in adolescence. Interventions combining cognitive remediation, targeted psychosocial support, and structured school reintegration show the strongest evidence for improving adaptive outcomes. Coordinated survivorship care across healthcare, educational, and family systems is essential to sustain developmental recovery.
Open Access
Licence Attribution (CC BY)
Publisher Website
Access full text
Publication Details
Journal article
Journal:
Current oncology (Toronto, Ont.)
Publisher:
Multimed Inc.
ISSN:
17187729
Volume:
32
Pages:
611
Persistent Identifiers
References
Neurooncol Pract. 2020 Jul 16;8(1):18-30
Read more
Huang . Association between the Prevalence of Symptoms and Health-Related Qualit...
Read more
Zeltzer . Psychosocial Outcomes and Health-Related Quality of Life in Adult Chil...
Read more
Huang . Pulmonary Outcomes in Survivors of Childhood Cancer: A Systematic Review...
Read more
Sansom-Daly, U.M., Wakefield, C.E., Bryant, R.A., Butow, P., Sawyer, S., Patters...
Read more
Showing first 5 of 120 references.
MeSH Terms
MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) is the NLM controlled vocabulary for indexing biomedical articles.
Click any term to view its definition and hierarchy.