Technical Brief
Number 39
R
Disparities and Barriers to
Pediatric Cancer Survivorship
Care
Technical Brief
Number 39
Disparities and Barriers to Pediatric Cancer
Survivorship Care
Prepared for:
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
5600 Fishers Lane
Rockville, MD 20857
www.ahrq.gov
Contract No. 75Q80120D00009
Prepared by:
Southern California Evidence-based Practice Center
Los Angeles, CA
Investigators:
Erin M. Mobley, Ph.D.
Diana J. Moke, M.D.
Joel Milam, Ph.D.
Carol Y. Ochoa, M.P.H.
Julia Stal, B.A.
Nosa Osazuwa, B.A.
Maria Bolshakova, B.S.
Jai Kemp, B.A.
Jennifer E. Dinalo, Ph.D.
Aneesa Motala, B.A.
Drizelle Baluyot, B.A.
Susanne Hempel, Ph.D.
AHRQ Publication No. 21-EHC014
March 2021
Key Messages
Purpose of Review
This Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Technical Brief was commissioned
by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) to support the development of a research agenda
associated with the Childhood Cancer Survivorship, Treatment, Access, and Research (STAR)
Act. This Technical Brief provides an overview of the existing evidence and forthcoming
research relevant to disparities and barriers for pediatric cancer survivorship care, outlines open
questions, and offers concrete guidance for future research in a user-friendly format.
Key Messages
• In total, 110 studies were identified that addressed disparities, barriers to survivorship
care, proposed strategies, evaluated interventions, and ongoing studies in childhood
cancer survivors.
• Twenty-six studies assessed disparities in survivorship care. The most commonly
examined sources of disparities impacting survivorship care were biological sex and
insurance.
• Forty-seven studies assessed barriers to survivorship care at various levels and their
impact on key outcome domains. The most frequently studied barriers were at the level of
the patient and provider, and predominantly impacted outcomes in the care domain.
• Sixteen organizations have proposed strategies to address survivorship care, most
frequently endorsing the presence of disparities and barriers to care, with variation in the
level of detail of specific recommendations. We identified only 8 ongoing and 27
published studies evaluating interventions to alleviate disparities and reduce barriers to
care.
• While research has addressed disparities and barriers to survivorship care for childhood
cancer survivors, evidence-based interventions to address these disparities and barriers to
care are sparse. Interventions at the patient level were most frequently evaluated and
include raising awareness of the need for life-long survivorship care.
• Additional research and corresponding funding opportunities are needed to successfully
study large and diverse survivorship cohorts representative of disparate subgroups, to
examine less frequently studied disparities and barriers, and to evaluate suggested
strategies to alleviate barriers that can lead to disparities.
ii
This report is based on research conducted by the Southern California Evidence-based Practice
Center (EPC) under contract to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ),
Rockville, MD (Contract No. 75Q80120D00009). The National Cancer Institute (NCI) of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded the report. The findings and conclusions in this
document are those of the authors, who are responsible for its contents; the findings and
conclusions do not necessarily represent the views of AHRQ or NCI/NIH. Therefore, no
statement in this report should be construed as an official position of AHRQ, NCI/NIH, or the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
None of the investigators have any affiliations or financial involvement that conflicts with
the material presented in this report.
The information in this report is intended to help healthcare decision makers—patients and
clinicians, health system leaders, and policymakers, among others—make well-informed
decisions and thereby improve the quality of healthcare services. This report is not intended to be
a substitute for the application of clinical judgment. Anyone who makes decisions concerning the
provision of clinical care should consider this report in the same way as any medical reference
and in conjunction with all other pertinent information, i.e., in the context of available resources
and circumstances presented by individual patients.
This report is made available to the public under the terms of a licensing agreement between the
author and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. This report may be used and
reprinted without permission except those copyrighted materials that are clearly noted in the
report. Further reproduction of those copyrighted materials is prohibited without the express
permission of copyright holders.
AHRQ or U.S. Department of Health and Human Services endorsement of any derivative
products that may be developed from this report, such as clinical practice guidelines, other
quality enhancement tools, or reimbursement or coverage policies, may not be stated or implied.
AHRQ appreciates appropriate acknowledgment and citation of its work. Suggested language for
acknowledgment: This work was based on an evidence report, Disparities and Barriers to
Pediatric Cancer Survivorship Care, by the Evidence-based Practice Center Program at the
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
Suggested citation: Mobley EM, Moke DJ, Milam J, Ochoa CY, Stal J, Osazuwa N, Bolshakova
M, Kemp J, Dinalo JE, Motala A, Baluyot D, Hempel S. Disparities and Barriers to Pediatric
Cancer Survivorship Care . Technical Brief No. 39. (Prepared by the Southern California
Evidence-based Practice Center under Contract No. 75Q80120D00009.) Rockville, MD: Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality; March 2021.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.23970/AHRQEPCTB39. Posted final reports are located on the Effective
Health Care Program search page.
iii
Preface
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), through its Evidence-based
Practice Centers (EPCs), sponsors the development of evidence reports and technology
assessments to assist public- and private-sector organizations in their efforts to improve the
quality of healthcare in the United States. The reports and assessments provide organizations
with comprehensive, science-based information on common, costly medical conditions and new
healthcare technologies and strategies. The EPCs systematically review the relevant scientific
literature on topics assigned to them by AHRQ and conduct additional analyses when
appropriate prior to developing their reports and assessments. This report from the EPC Program
at AHRQ is one of several efforts underway across the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services to implement provisions of the Childhood Cancer Survivorship, Treatment, Access, and
Research (STAR) Act of 2018 (Public Law No: 115-180). The National Cancer Institute of the
National Institutes of Health funded this report from the EPC Program at AHRQ.
This EPC evidence report is a Technical Brief. A Technical Brief is a rapid report, typically
on an emerging medical technology, strategy, or intervention. It provides an overview of key
issues related to the intervention—for example, current indications, relevant patient populations
and subgroups of interest, outcomes measured, and contextual factors that may affect decisions
regarding the intervention. Although Technical Briefs generally focus on interventions for which
there are limited published data and too few completed protocol-driven studies to support
definitive conclusions, the decision to request a Technical Brief is not solely based on the
availability of clinical studies. The goals of the Technical Brief are to provide an early objective
description of the state of the science, a potential framework for assessing the applications and
implications of the intervention, a summary of ongoing research, and information on future
research needs. In particular, through the Technical Brief, AHRQ hopes to gain insight on the
appropriate conceptual framework and critical issues that will inform future research.
AHRQ expects that the EPC evidence reports and technology assessments will inform
individual health plans, providers, and purchasers as well as the healthcare system as a whole by
providing important information to help improve healthcare quality.
If you have comments on this Technical Brief, they may be sent by mail to the Task Order
Officer named below at: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 5600 Fishers Lane,
Rockville, MD 20857, or by email to epc@ahrq.hhs.gov.
David Meyers, M.D.
Acting Director
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Arlene S. Bierman, M.D., M.S.
Director
Center for Evidence and Practice
Improvement
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Christine Chang, M.D., M.P.H.
Acting Director
Evidence-based Practice Center Program
Center for Evidence and Practice Improvement
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Lionel L. Bañez, M.D.
Task Order Officer
Center for Evidence and Practice
Improvement
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
iv
Acknowledgments
The authors gratefully acknowledge the following individuals for their contributions to this
project: We thank Mary Butler, Paul Jacobsen, Emily Tonorezos, Shobha Srinivasan, Danielle
Daee, Amy Kennedy, Lionel Bañez, and Meghan Wagner for their helpful comments, and David
Freyer and Kimberly Miller for help identifying Key Informants.
Key Informants
In designing the study questions, the EPC consulted a panel of Key Informants who represent
subject experts and end-users of research. Key Informant input can inform key issues related to
the topic of the Technical Brief. Key Informants are not involved in the analysis of the evidence
or the writing of the report. Therefore, in the end, study questions, design, methodological
approaches, and/or conclusions do not necessarily represent the views of individual Key
Informants.
Key Informants must disclose any financial conflicts of interest greater than $5,000 and any
other relevant business or professional conflicts of interest. Because of their role as end-users,
individuals with potential conflicts may be retained. The TOO and the EPC work to balance,
manage, or mitigate any conflicts of interest.
The list of Key Informants who provided input to this report follows:
Deborah L. Friedman, M.D., M.S.*
Professor, Department of Pediatrics,
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Director, Division of Pediatric Hematology
and Oncology
Associate Director for Community Science
and Health Outcomes, Vanderbilt-Ingram
Cancer Center
Nashville, TN
Kaitlyn Ash, B.S.*
Co-Founder
Live For Today Foundation, Inc.
Jacksonville, FL
Kira Bona, M.D., M.P.H.
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard
Medical School
Physician, Pediatric-Oncology, DanaFarber-Cancer Institute
Boston, MA
Melissa M. Hudson, M.D.*
Director, Cancer Survivorship Division
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital
Memphis, TN
Eric Chow, M.D., M.P.H.*
Associate Professor, Clinical Research and
Public Health Sciences Divisions
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Seattle, WA
Jennifer Malin, M.D., Ph.D.
Senior Medical Director, Oncology and
Genetics
United Healthcare
Minneapolis, MN
v
Shelley Fuld Nasso
CEO
National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship
Silver Spring, MD
Robin Yabroff, Ph.D.
Scientific Vice President
Health Services Research, American Cancer
Society
Atlanta, GA
Jennifer Tsui, Ph.D., M.P.H.
Associate Professor
Department of Preventative Medicine
Keck School of Medicine
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA
*Provided input on draft report
Peer Reviewers
Prior to publication of the final evidence report, EPCs sought input from independent Peer
Reviewers without financial conflicts of interest. However, the conclusions and synthesis of the
scientific literature presented in this report do not necessarily represent the views of individual
reviewers.
Peer Reviewers must disclose any financial conflicts of interest greater than $5,000 and any
other relevant business or professional conflicts of interest. Because of their unique clinical or
content expertise, individuals with potential nonfinancial conflicts may be retained. The TOO
and the EPC work to balance, manage, or mitigate any potential nonfinancial conflicts of interest
identified.
The list of Peer Reviewers follows:
Theresa Keegan, Ph.D., M.S.
Associate Professor
University of California at Davis
Comprehensive Cancer Center
Sacramento, CA
Karim Thomas Sadak, M.D., M.P.H.,
M.S.E.
Assistant Professor
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN
Paul Nathan, M.D., MS.c., FRCPC
Director, Aftercare Program and Staff
Oncologist
The Hospital for Sick Children Research
Institute
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Brad Zebrack, Ph.D., M.S.W., M.P.H.
Professor
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
vi
Disparities and Barriers to Pediatric Cancer
Survivorship Care
Structured Abstract
Objectives. Survival rates for pediatric cancer have dramatically increased since the 1970s, and
the population of childhood cancer survivors (CCS) exceeds 500,000 in the United States.
Cancer during childhood and related treatments lead to long-term health problems, many of
which are poorly understood. These problems can be amplified by suboptimal survivorship care.
This report provides an overview of the existing evidence and forthcoming research relevant to
disparities and barriers for pediatric cancer survivorship care, outlines pending questions, and
offers guidance for future research.
Data sources. This Technical Brief reviews published peer-reviewed literature, grey literature,
and Key Informant interviews to answer five Guiding Questions regarding disparities in the care
of pediatric survivors, barriers to cancer survivorship care, proposed strategies, evaluated
interventions, and future directions.
Review methods. We searched research databases, research registries, and published reviews for
ongoing and published studies in CCS to October 2020. We used the authors’ definition of CCS;
where not specified, CCS included those diagnosed with any cancer prior to age 21. The grey
literature search included relevant professional and nonprofit organizational websites and
guideline clearinghouses. Key Informants provided content expertise regarding published and
ongoing research, and recommended approaches to fill identified gaps.
Results. In total, 110 studies met inclusion criteria. We identified 26 studies that assessed
disparities in survivorship care for CCS. Key Informants discussed subgroups of CCS by race or
ethnicity, sex, socioeconomic status, and insurance coverage that may experience disparities in
survivorship care, and these were supported in the published literature. Key Informants indicated
that major barriers to care are providers (e.g., insufficient knowledge), the health system (e.g.,
availability of services), and payers (e.g., network adequacy); we identified 47 studies that
assessed a large range of barriers to survivorship care. Sixteen organizations have outlined
strategies to address pediatric survivorship care. Our searches identified only 27 published
studies that evaluated interventions to alleviate disparities and reduce barriers to care. These
predominantly assessed approaches that targeted patients. We found only eight ongoing studies
that evaluated strategies to address disparities and barriers.
Conclusions. While research has addressed disparities and barriers to survivorship care for
childhood cancer survivors, evidence-based interventions to address these disparities and barriers
to care are sparse. Additional research is also needed to examine less frequently studied
disparities and barriers and to evaluate ameliorative strategies in order to improve the
survivorship care for CCS.
vii
Contents
Introduction ................................................................................................................................... 1
Background and Objectives ........................................................................................................ 1
Purpose and Scope ...................................................................................................................... 1
Guiding Questions ...................................................................................................................... 2
Methods.......................................................................................................................................... 3
Technical Brief Approach ........................................................................................................... 3
Data Collection ........................................................................................................................... 3
Key Informants ....................................................................................................................... 3
Grey Literature Search ............................................................................................................ 5
Published Literature Search .................................................................................................... 5
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria............................................................................................. 5
Screening and Abstraction ...................................................................................................... 7
Findings.......................................................................................................................................... 9
Guiding Question 1. What are the disparities in survivorship care for pediatric cancer
survivors? .................................................................................................................................. 10
Guiding Question 2. What are the barriers to survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors
who experience disparities? ...................................................................................................... 12
Guiding Question 3. What are proposed strategies for addressing those barriers? .................. 15
Guiding Question 4. What published and unpublished studies have assessed these strategies?
................................................................................................................................................... 19
Technology ........................................................................................................................... 20
Education .............................................................................................................................. 21
Shared Care, Collaboration, and Location-Based Strategies ................................................ 22
Guiding Question 5. What are future directions for research in addressing barriers to
survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors? ..................................................................... 22
Summary and Implications ........................................................................................................ 25
What are the disparities in survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors? .......................... 25
What are the barriers to survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors who experience
disparities? ................................................................................................................................ 25
What are proposed strategies for addressing those barriers? .................................................... 25
What published and unpublished studies have assessed these strategies? ................................ 26
What are future directions for research in addressing barriers to survivorship care for pediatric
cancer survivors? ...................................................................................................................... 26
Next Steps .................................................................................................................................... 27
Population ................................................................................................................................. 27
Independent variables/interventions and comparators .............................................................. 28
Outcome .................................................................................................................................... 29
Study design .............................................................................................................................. 29
Conclusion ................................................................................................................................ 30
References .................................................................................................................................... 31
Abbreviations and Acronyms .................................................................................................... 45
Tables
Table 1. Criteria for Inclusion/Exclusion of Studies in the Technical Brief .................................. 5
Table 2. Research on Disparities in CCS Care ............................................................................. 11
viii
Table 3. Research on Barriers to Pediatric Cancer Survivorship Care ......................................... 13
Table 4. Guiding Question 3: Proposed Strategies ....................................................................... 16
Table 5. Research on Evaluated Strategies to Overcome Disparities and Barriers to Pediatric
Cancer Survivorship Care ............................................................................................................. 19
Table 6. Ongoing Studies to Assess Strategies Targeting Reducing Disparities and Barriers ..... 23
Figures
Figure 1. Study flow diagram ......................................................................................................... 9
Figure 2. Studies by Outcome Domain and Guiding Question .................................................... 10
Figure 3. Disparities in Care Mapped to Outcome Domains ........................................................ 12
Figure 4. Patient, Caregiver, Family, and Local Environment Barriers and Assessed Outcomes 14
Figure 5. Provider, Health System, and Payer Barriers to Survivorship Care Connection to
Outcomes by Domain ................................................................................................................... 15
Figure 6. Study Design, Care Domain, and Primary Target of Evaluated Strategies ................... 20
Figure 7. Study Design, Care Domain, and Primary Target of Ongoing Studies Assessing
Strategies Mapped to Outcomes by Domain ................................................................................ 24
Appendixes
Appendix A. Methods
Appendix B. Excluded Studies
Appendix C. Key Informant Interviews
Appendix D. Evidence Tables
ix
Introduction
Background and Objectives
It is estimated that there are more than 500,000 survivors of childhood cancer—that is,
survivors who were diagnosed under the age of 21, whether currently children, adolescents, or
adults—in the United States. The 5-year survival rate for childhood cancer has increased
dramatically from the 1970s, when it was about 62 percent, to 86 percent in the 2010s.1 This
increase in survival is attributed to improved treatment, which may include surgery,
chemotherapy, radiation, immunotherapy, hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation, or a
combination of these treatments using a risk-stratified approach and improvements in supportive
care. After completion of treatment, childhood cancer survivors (CCS) face many challenges
regarding long-term health outcomes as a result of their cancer diagnosis and treatment. Despite
gains in survival, CCS are at risk for adverse physical, psychosocial, functional, and behavioral
outcomes. These late effects range in severity and complexity, and commonly result in
multimorbidity. including cardiovascular disease and heart failure, decreased pulmonary
function, infertility, hormonal changes, kidney failure, osteopenia and osteoporosis,
neurocognitive deficits, and secondary malignancies.2 Moreover, CCS exhibit disparities and
effects in social, economic, and health-related quality of life outcomes in comparison to healthy
peers, including poor academic or professional performance, lower income, and greater burden
of mental health disorders.3, 4 Indeed, these nonclinical factors have been demonstrated to impact
disparities as much as biological factors.5 Survivorship care is a clinical approach to address the
health and well-being of cancer survivors, ideally using risk-based methods (e.g., according to
exposure to potentially harmful therapies) of surveillance, screening, management, and
prevention of late effects, along with coordination of care with primary care and other healthcare
providers.6 Many CCS do not receive recommended survivorship care, particularly after
transitioning into adulthood.6 Barriers to survivorship care can encompass barriers at the level of
patient and caregiver, healthcare provider, health system or payer, and many other levels.6, 7 As a
result of these barriers, disparities exist for a range of outcomes among CCS, and this complexity
poses unique challenges for research, clinical care, education, and advocacy.
While disparities are increasingly recognized in the pediatric survivorship field, practitioners
often are at a loss for how to mitigate disparities. The lack of rigorous assessment of strategies to
reduce barriers and the fragmented nature of existing research hinder the establishment of
appropriate policies at multiple levels. Effective and efficient access to care for CCS is critical to
minimize and alleviate disparities among this population who are burdened by the adverse
sequelae of their prior malignancy and treatment.
Purpose and Scope
This Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Technical Brief was commissioned by the
National Cancer Institute as a result of the passage of the Childhood Cancer Survivorship,
Treatment, Access, and Research (STAR) Act.8 The STAR Act is resulting in enhanced support
for pediatric, adolescent, and young adult cancer research, including ongoing efforts to address
pediatric cancer survivorship disparities. The goals of a Technical Brief are to provide an early
objective description of the current science, a potential framework for assessing the intervention,
and identification of future research needs. A Technical Brief does not grade evidence or
synthesize data on outcomes, and does not attempt to determine whether an intervention is safe
1
or effective.9 This Technical Brief provides an overview of the existing evidence and
forthcoming research relevant to disparities and barriers for pediatric cancer survivorship care,
outlines open questions, and offers concrete guidance for future research in a user-friendly
format. Furthermore, this Technical Brief also discusses disparities in biomedical, psychosocial,
health services/economics, and survivorship related outcomes among CCS as a presumed result
of barriers to care.
Guiding Questions
The Technical Brief addresses five Guiding Questions:
Guiding Question 1. What are the disparities in survivorship care for
pediatric cancer survivors?
Guiding Question 2. What are the barriers to survivorship care for pediatric
cancer survivors who experience disparities?
Guiding Question 3. What are proposed strategies for addressing those
barriers?
Guiding Question 4. What published and unpublished studies have
assessed these strategies?
Guiding Question 5. What are future directions for research in addressing
barriers to survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors?
2
Methods
This Technical Brief provides a user-friendly synopsis of the existing evidence regarding
disparities and barriers to survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors, outlines unanswered
questions, and suggests topic areas for future research.
Technical Brief Approach
The methods for this Technical Brief follows the Content and Procedures Guide for
Evidence-based Practice Center Program. The topic of this report was developed by the National
Cancer Institute (NCI) in consultation with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ). Key Informants provided input on the Guiding Questions to be addressed and future
research directions. The protocol was posted on AHRQ’s Effective Health Care website
(https://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/products/pediatric-cancer-survivorship/protocol) on June
24, 2020 and a notice referencing the protocol was posted on the Federal Register
(https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/07/15/2020-15190/supplemental-evidenceand-data-request-on-disparities-and-barriers-for-pediatric-cancer-survivorship) on July 15, 2020.
We solicited submission of supplemental evidence and data from the public from June 24 to
August 14, 2020. The Technical Brief is organized by five Guiding Questions that address
observed disparities and barriers to survivorship care, as well as the strategies and their effects to
address barriers and disparities.
Data Collection
Key Informants
In consultation with AHRQ and NCI, our team identified areas of expertise that were
targeted for Key Informant solicitation, which included: patient, family, or caregiver perspective
(N = 2); clinical implications, patient care, and disparities research (N = 4); health services
research and access to care for populations that experience disparities (N = 2); and administrative
and payer perspective (N = 1). Individual representatives for the key stakeholder groups were
determined with the help of content experts and approached for their willingness to serve as a
Key Informant. Key Informants were asked to provide feedback regarding topics related to
pediatric cancer survivor disparities and barriers to survivorship care, in particular those that
have been insufficiently covered in formal research studies. They also helped identify notable
subgroups that may experience a disparity, explain barriers that could cause a disparity, and,
ultimately, how disparities and barriers could impact key outcomes of interest. Additionally, Key
Informant input was used to identify grey literature resources, ongoing research, and recommend
approaches to help fill identified gaps.
Key Informants addressed the following Guiding Questions and subquestions:
• What are the disparities in survivorship care for pediatric cancer
survivors?
o What types of disparities impact survivorship care for pediatric
survivors?
o What disparities do you think are most significant in impacting
pediatric cancer survivorship care?
3
•
•
•
•
o Which domains of disparities should be distinguished?
What are the barriers to survivorship care for pediatric cancer
survivors who experience disparities?
o What are the most influential barriers to pediatric cancer
survivorship care?
o How do those barriers change as childhood cancer survivors
(CCS) transition from pediatric to adult survivorship care?
o How do barriers to survivorship care vary by subgroups of
pediatric cancer survivors?
o How do barriers affecting specific subgroups change over time,
specifically as they transition from pediatric to adult care?
What are proposed strategies for addressing those barriers?
o What strategies to address barriers to survivorship care that
lead to disparities are most promising?
o Do those strategies need to be implemented using different
approaches for subgroups of survivors?
o Which professional bodies have proposed strategies?
What published and unpublished studies have assessed these
strategies?
o How effective are the strategies that you are familiar with?
o What confounding factors pose a challenge to interpreting
research and evaluation studies?
What are future directions for research in addressing barriers to
survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors?
o What are the most important gaps in our current knowledge of
disparities and barriers to survivorship care, and how would you
recommend filling those gaps?
o How can future research be designed to minimize the
confounding factors influencing barriers, and ultimately,
disparities?
o Are you aware of any important ongoing studies addressing
disparities or barriers in pediatric survivorship care?
Prior to the Key Informant interviews preliminary feedback was gathered using a Web-based
survey regarding the abovementioned Guiding Questions. Data received before the Key
Informant calls were included as prompts on the meeting slides to promote discussion.
Representatives from AHRQ and NCI attended all three Key Informant interviews meetings,
which were held over the course of three weeks. The online survey also enabled Key Informants
to provide additional feedback to the EPC after the calls. Key Informant interviews were
recorded and the content was discussed in the investigative team. We reviewed themes in the
responses and organized resulting themes by Guiding Questions.
4
Grey Literature Search
Key to identifying strategies that have been proposed to reduce or mitigate disparities and
barriers to pediatric cancer survivorship care is a thorough grey literature search and the grey
literature search strategy is detailed in Appendix A. Briefly, we searched the websites of relevant
organizations and reviewed clinical practice guideline clearing houses using specified key search
terms. We searched clinicaltrials.gov, NIH RePORTER, and Open Science Framework for
ongoing research studies. Systematic reviews were identified using PubMed and PROSPERO, an
international database of systematic reviews, and reviews were reference-mined to identify
further studies.
Published Literature Search
We designed targeted search strategies for the individual Guiding Question, also detailed in
Appendix A. Search strategies were designed, executed, and documented by the Evidence-based
Practice Center librarian. We searched PubMed®, CINAHL®, and PsycINFO® databases for
published research. We identified studies in CCS that addressed either disparities or barriers
directly (either in the title, abstract, or key word). In addition to using synonyms for the term
disparity, we also searched for specific disparities using the National Instututes of Health
definition of populations that experience health disparities: racial/ethnic minorities (including
those who are Blacks/African Americans, Hispanics/Latinos, American Indians/Alaska Natives,
Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders); socioeconomic status;
underserved or rural populations; sexual and gender minorities; and educational attainment.10, 11
We also used a sample of publications in CCS that did not highlight disparities in the title or
abstract of the publication but that used an important study design (e.g., long-term follow-up or
longitudinal studies). We screened the full text of the publications to identify subgroup results
that suggest disparities or barriers to survivorship care.
Appendix A details the methods and search strategies.
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
The eligibility criteria are shown in Table 1 below, organized in a PICOTSS (population,
independent variables/intervention, comparator, outcomes, timing, setting, and study
design/other limiters) framework.
Table 1. Criteria for inclusion/exclusion of studies in the Technical Brief
PICOTSS
Inclusion
Exclusion
Population
All Guiding Questions:
Childhood cancer survivors (CCS) of all ages. We accepted the
authors’ definition of CCS. Mixed samples were eligible where
studies include at least 50% CCS or report a subgroup analysis.
In studies not self-identifying as CCS research, we applied the
following criteria: diagnosed before age 21, received primary
acute treatment for any cancer, currently in remission, and
currently receiving or eligible to receive survivorship care
services, care plans, and/or models of follow-up care.
All Guiding Questions:
Studies that predominantly
included other populations
than CCS, that included
patients diagnosed
predominantly after the age
of 20, that had other
conditions than cancer, or
that were currently
undergoing treatment for
cancer.
5
PICOTSS
Inclusion
Exclusion
Independent
variables and
interventions
Guiding Question 1:
Survivorship care. We included studies addressing healthcare
approaches aimed at the health and well-being of cancer
survivors.
Guiding Question 2:
Barriers and facilitators of survivorship care for CCS.
Guiding Question 3, 4, 5:
Strategies to address barriers to survivorship care and to reduce
care disparities. We included care initiatives, structured care
programs, care plan, care models, and healthcare interventions
aiming to address barriers or disparities. Strategies may have
targeted CCS (e.g., providing patient information), primary
caregivers (e.g., parents), healthcare providers (e.g., initiating
training), or healthcare systems (e.g., implementing health
information technologies such as telemedicine).
Guiding Question 1, 2:
We accepted the authors’ choice of a participant characteristic
comparator. Studies could compare subgroups to the general
population of CCS or compare multiple participant subgroups
defined by participant characteristics (e.g., race/ethnicity,
socioeconomic status, gender, rural residence, educational
attainment or patient or their parents, other populations that
experience health disparities).
Guiding Question 3:
Strategies did not need to document alternative care models in
detail as long as the difference of the proposed survivorship care
strategy to usual care was described.
Guiding Question 4, 5:
Studies comparing participant subgroups as defined in Guiding
Question 1 and 2 and studies comparing to other care strategies
(no intervention, waitlist, usual care, other active strategies aiming
to address barriers or disparities).
All Guiding Questions:
Studies without reference
to survivorship care and
studies not addressing care
disparities, barriers to care,
or strategies outside of
healthcare.
Guiding Question 1, 2:
Disparities and barriers (causes of disparity) in any patient
outcomes related to utilization of survivorship care services, care
plans, or models of care; intermediate health outcomes and
adverse events; mortality; late effects and morbidity (including
psychosocial); quality of life, well-being, and satisfaction with care;
and cost and resource utilization.
Guiding Question 3:
Strategies were documented regardless of any information on
outcome effects, but strategies had to aim to prevent, reduce, or
mitigate disparities and barriers to survivorship care.
Guiding Question 4:
Changes (reduction) in disparities between comparison groups for
outcomes listed in Guiding Question 1 and 2.
Guiding Question 5:
Ongoing and upcoming studies had to indicate that the study will
report on outcomes eligible for Guiding Question 1, 2, or 4.
All Guiding Questions:
No timing restriction applied. Studies may have addressed CCS
who recently or long in the past experienced pediatric cancer now
in remission.
All Guiding Questions:
All care settings applicable to US settings were eligible, including
primary, secondary, and tertiary care; inpatient and outpatient
care; pediatric and adult care context.
All Guiding Questions:
Studies that did not
address disparities or
barriers to survivorship
care for pediatric survivors.
Comparators
Outcomes
Timing
Setting(s)
6
All Guiding Questions:
Studies not addressing
patient characteristics or
intervention characteristics.
All Guiding Questions:
No exclusions applied.
All Guiding Questions:
Studies in resource-limited
settings such as
developing countries were
reviewed for comparability
with US settings.
PICOTSS
Inclusion
Exclusion
Study design
and other
limiters
All Guiding Questions:
All Guiding Questions:
English-language publications.
Evaluations reported only
in abbreviated format (e.g.,
Guiding Question 1, 2, 4, 5:
Primary studies reporting empirical data (including both
in a conference abstract)
quantitative and qualitative data).
with the exception of trial
records.
Guiding Question 1, 2:
Studies exclusively
Studies may have either report on distinct subgroups (e.g.,
reported in non-English
dividing the sample by geographic characteristic and reporting
data separately for rural and for urban participants) or studies may publications.
Systematic reviews were
report associations with participant characteristics (e.g., reporting
retained for reference
correlations with a factor of interest such as gender differences).
Guiding Question 3:
mining but are not eligible
Strategies had to have been suggested by an authoritative source for inclusion.
such as a clinical practice guideline or relevant professional
organization.
Guiding Question 4:
Studies with concurrent (e.g., randomized controlled trial) or
historic comparator (e.g., organizational pre-post studies). Studies
with results published in clinicaltrials.gov were included regardless
of whether a journal publication was available.
Guiding Question 5:
Ongoing and upcoming studies with a published protocol or
registered in a research registry.
P = population; I = independent variables and interventions; C = comparators; O = outcomes; T = timing; S = setting(s); S =
study design and other limiters; CCS = childhood cancer survivors
Screening and Abstraction
Literature screening and data abstraction were conducted in an online database designed for
systematic reviews (DistillerSR). Literature reviewers screened all citations at the title and
abstract level and citations determined to be potentially relevant to the Technical Brief were
obtained as full text. Excluded citations were assessed for relevance using a machine learning
algorithm in the database software that modeled the inclusion screening decisions of the human
reviewers. We applied a conservative cut-off identifying all citations that the algorithm was more
likely to include than to exclude. The algorithm confirmed the exclusion for the majority of
citations. All citations not confirmed by the machine learning algorithm were screened by a
second, independent human reviewer to avoid reviewer errors and bias.
Full text studies were screened by two independent reviewers against the explicit eligibility
criteria; any disagreements were resolved by group discussion and consensus. The literature
searches were updated during the peer review process for this report.
Data were abstracted by one reviewer and checked by an experienced content expert to
confirm accuracy of data collected for all included studies. Data were collected regarding:
• Publication type and country of publication
• Study participant characteristics, including cancer type and proportion of CCS
• Guiding Question addressed
• Disparity category and description
• Barrier category and description
• Outcome(s) assessed and type of analysis
• Proposed or evaluated strategy and description
• Study design and expected date of completion for ongoing studies
• Survivorship care domain (e.g., survivorship care service, care plan, model of care)
7
The outcomes of interest were categorized representing the following domains:
• Survivorship care domain (utilization of survivorship care services, care plans, or models
of care)
• Biomedical domain (intermediate health outcomes and adverse events; clinical or
physical late effects and morbidity; mortality)
• Psychosocial (psychological or health-related quality of life; education or employment;
substance use)
• Health services/economics (primary care, specialty care, or other care utilization; quality
and satisfaction with care; financial hardship, costs, resource utilization)
8
Findings
The brief was directed by five Guiding Questions, which documented and outlined our
findings of Key Informant input, grey literature resources, and published and unpublished
research. Figure 1 displays the number of studies included and excluded at each stage of the
evidence review process for all Guiding Questions.
Figure 1. Study flow diagram
Appendix B lists excluded studies and reasons for exclusion. A large number of publications
were retained as background. While not meeting inclusion criteria, the publications were cited in
the introduction and discussion and/or were retained for reference-mining to identify additional
studies where appropriate. A total of 110 studies reported in 161 publications were included to
frame the findings of this Technical Brief.12-172 Appendix C details the discussion with the Key
Informants. Appendix D provides evidence tables for each Guiding Question.
Figure 2 depicts the number of studies included by outcome domain and Guiding Question.
A large number of studies addressed barriers to care (N = 47), followed by disparities in care (N
= 26) and evaluated strategies (N = 27). Discussed less frequently were proposed strategies (N =
16) and future research directions (N = 8). Because an individual study could have addressed
multiple outcomes of interest, the total indicated in the figure does not sum to the total number of
included studies.
9
Figure 2. Studies by outcome domain and Guiding Question
Note: N = 110 studies; each individual study could have addressed multiple outcome domains and Guiding Questions (GQs).
Notably, most studies examined multiple outcome domains and more than one Guiding
Question. The most frequently studied were survivorship care (N = 95) and health services and
economic (N = 62) outcome domains; less frequently examined were psychosocial (N = 28) and
biomedical (N = 16) outcome domains. Among the studies that examined survivorship, health
services and economic, and psychosocial outcome domains, barriers to care (Guiding Question
2) were most frequently studied, followed by disparities in care (Guiding Question 1).
The following describes the results for the five Guiding Questions.
Guiding Question 1. What Are the Disparities in Survivorship Care for
Pediatric Cancer Survivors?
Key Informants provided insight and detail regarding disparities experienced by childhood
cancer survivors (CCS) concerning their survivorship care. Appendix C details the discussion
with the Key Informants. The primary themes of disparities or challenges faced by CCS included
a complex and multifactorial interplay of social determinants of health, such as socioeconomic
hardship (e.g., income, medical bills, debt), lower educational attainment, detrimental
employment factors (e.g., employment status, benefits, paid time off, sick leave), and inadequate
insurance coverage (e.g., under/uninsured, type of insurance, churns/transitions in insurance
coverage), and underserved minorities or groups (e.g., urban, rural, nonmetropolitan).
We identified 26 studies reporting on disparities in survivorship care and classified them by
disparity category. In addition to the disparities identified by the Key Informants, disparities by
biological sex, insurance, and race or ethnicity were commonly studied. The literature is
documented in Table 2.
10
Table 2. Research on disparities in childhood cancer survivor care
Disparity
Category
Number of Studies
Identified Studies
Biological Sex
N = 15
Barakat, 201218; Berg, 201620; Crom, 200747; de Fine Licht, 201750; Gardner, 201468; Holmes,
198676; McBride, 2011111; Michel, 2011116; Milam, 2015117; Nathan, 2016123; Oeffinger, 2004127; Ojha,
2014130; Streefkerk, 2019157; vanLaar, 2013164; Zheng, 2016172
N = 13
Barakat, 201218; Berg, 201620; Berkman, 201921; Crom, 200747; Daly, 201948; Gardner, 201468; May,
2017110; Milam, 2015117; Oeffinger, 2004127; Ojha, 2014130; Szalda, 2016160; Welch, 2017169; Zheng,
2016172
N = 11
Barakat, 201218; Berkman, 201921; Casillas, 201132; Crom, 200747; Daly, 201948; Gardner, 201468;
May, 2017110; Milam, 2015117; Oeffinger, 2004127; Ojha, 2014130; Zheng, 2016172
N=9
Barakat, 201218; Crom, 200747; Daly, 201948; McBride, 2011111; Michel, 2011116; Milam, 2015117;
Nathan, 2016123; Oeffinger, 2004127; Sutradhar, 2015158
N=8
Crom, 200747; Johnson, 200485; McBride, 2011111; Mendoza, 2018113; Milam, 2015117; Nathan,
2016123; Oeffinger, 2004127; Zheng, 2016172
N=5
Crom, 200747; Johnson, 200485; Michel, 2011116; Milam, 2015117; Oeffinger, 2004127
N=3
Crom, 200747; Michel, 2011116; Oeffinger, 2004127
N = 14
Crom, 200747; de Fine Licht, 201750; Gardner, 201468; Kazak, 199991; Michel, 2011116; Milam,
2015117; Nathan, 2016123; Oeffinger, 2004127; Reppucci, 2017136; Streefkerk, 2019157; Sutradhar,
2015158; vanLaar, 2013164; Welch, 2017169; Zheng, 2016172
Insurance
Race or
Ethnicity
Underserved or
Rural
Income
Education
Employment
Other
Overall, the most commonly studied groups that experience disparities were based on
biological sex (N = 15), insurance (N = 13), and race or ethnicity (N = 11). The least studied
disparities were those based on education (N = 5) and employment (N = 3). The other category
of disparities predominantly captured age and year at diagnosis, age and marital status at study,
diagnosis, and type of cancer treatment received and intensity, among other variables.
Figure 3 depicts assessed disparity categories and evaluated outcome domains in the included
studies. Within types of disparities, the evidence showed that the more frequently studied
disparities tied to the survivorship care outcome domain (survivorship care services, care plans,
or models of care) were among biological sex and insurance (bolded arrows signifying ≥ 10
studies). The next most commonly examined type of disparities in the survivorship care outcome
domain outcome was among racial or ethnic minorities, income, underserved or rural, and
education disparities (the solid lines represent 5-9 studies). It is important to note that variables
indicating examination of disparities in the literature could have been either independent or
dependent variables, based on the individual study. Additionally, variables commonly
categorized as social determinants of health (e.g., income, education, employment) were parsed
out individually rather than considering these holistically to better understand disparities in care.
11
Figure 3. Disparities in care mapped to outcome domains
The second most assessed domain was the health services and economic domain. Study
outcomes in the health services and economic domain included utilization of primary, specialty,
or other care; quality and satisfaction with care; or financial hardship, costs, and resource
utilization. Biological sex was most frequently documented in the literature among outcomes in
the health services and economic domains (e.g., ≥ 10 studies). Outcomes in the biomedical and
psychosocial domains were less frequently addressed (displayed by the dashed arrows in Figure
3 indicating 1 to 4 studies). Only six studies assessed either biomedical or psychosocial
outcomes caused by one of the eight disparity types. Potential disparities examined by gender
minorities (assessed by how someone identifies or expresses themselves) were not examined in
any included studies; however, biological sex was the most frequently examined as a group that
experiences disparities.
Guiding Question 2. What Are the Barriers to Survivorship Care for
Pediatric Cancer Survivors Who Experience Disparities?
Key Informants also discussed barriers to survivorship care faced by CCS. Key Informants
conveyed that barriers experienced by the patient and, by extension, their caregiver or family and
local environment included a lack of knowledge or knowledge gaps in the need for life-long
survivorship care; the inability to prioritize survivorship care in the midst of other life needs, a
lack of adequate financial or employment resources (e.g., money for copayments or coinsurance,
time off work, childcare); patient autonomy; the presence of cultural, language, and literacy
difficulties; and mistrust in providers and the medical community, in general.
The primary themes of barriers impacting survivorship care can be organized by levels of
care delivery (patient; caregiver, family, or local environment; provider; health system; and
payer). Our literature searches identified 47 studies that assessed barriers to care in CCS. Table 3
stratified the identified studies by barrier level.
12
Table 3. Research on barriers to pediatric cancer survivorship care
Barrier Level
Number of Studies
Identified Studies
Patient
N = 36
Ahn, 201712; Aziz, 200617; Berg, 201620; Berkman, 201921; Casillas, 201031; Casillas, 201132;
Cherven, 201438; Crom, 200747; Eshelman-Kent, 201163; Frederick, 201766; Frobisher, 200867;
Gardner, 201468; Granek, 201272; Holmes, 198676; Howard, 201877; Iwai, 201782; Jereb,
200084; Keats, 201992; Kirchhoff, 201494; Knighting, 202097; Kuhlthau, 201699; Maeda, 2010106;
Michel, 2011116; Milam, 2015117; Mouw, 2017120; Novakovic, 1997126; Oeffinger, 2004127;
Quillen, 2017133; Rosenberg-Yunger, 2013139; Sadak, 2012140; Sadak, 2017142; Sadak, 2020141;
Szalda, 2016160; vanLaar, 2013164; Vetsch, 2017165; Warner, 2014168
N = 10
Ahn, 201712; Casillas, 201031; Cherven, 201438; DiNofia, 201757; Jereb, 200084; Keats, 201992;
Michel, 2011116; Milam, 2015117; Oeffinger, 2004127; Vetsch, 2017165
N = 17
Aziz, 200617; Casillas, 201132; de Moor, 200751; Eshelman-Kent, 201163; Henderson, 201074;
Iyer, 201783; Jereb, 200084; Keats, 201992; Li, 1976104; Michel, 2011116; Mouw, 2017120;
Oeffinger, 2004127; Sadak, 2017142; Sima, 2014150; Vetsch, 2017165; Warner, 2014168; Wadhwa,
2019{#5365}
N = 11
Aziz, 200617; de Moor, 200751; Eshelman-Kent, 201163; Howard, 201877; Mendoza, 2018113;
Mouw, 2017120; Oeffinger, 2004127; Sadak, 2019143; Sherman, 2004147; Vetsch, 2017165;
Warner, 2014168
N=4
Hays, 199273; Mouw, 2017120; Oeffinger, 2004127; Sadak, 2012140
Caregiver,
Family, or Local
Environment
Provider
Health System
Payer
The most frequently cited barrier was at the level of the patient (N = 36). Displayed in Figure
4 are the most commonly studied types of barriers to CCS’ survivorship care, such as knowledge
of the need for life-long survivorship care (N = 20) and financial or employment resources(N =
19), followed by trust in providers or the medical community (N = 18). Barriers identified at the
patient level were commonly studied among all barrier types identified (e.g., ≥ 10 studies) with
the exception of prioritization of survivorship care (N = 9); less frequently studied were barriers
at the level of the caregiver, family, or local environment. All barrier types were commonly
studied impacting the survivorship care domain outcome (e.g., ≥ 10 studies), which includes
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care. The types of barriers to care that
impacted outcomes in the health services and economic domain (including utilization of primary,
specialty, or other care; quality and satisfaction with care; or financial hardship, costs, and
resource utilization) most frequently included knowledge of the need for life-long survivorship
care (N = 13), financial or employment resources (N = 15), and trust in providers or medical
community (N = 11). The biomedical and psychosocial outcome domains were less frequently
reported as being impacted by patient or caregiver, family, or local environment barriers to care.
13
Figure 4. Patient, caregiver, family, and local environment barriers and assessed outcomes
At the provider, health system, and payer levels, barriers identified by our Key Informants
included lack of adequate resources to deliver needed care; potential geographic obstacles and
related lack of availability of specialized services; a difficulty or lack transitioning a CCS from
pediatric to adult care; the lack of insurance coverage or reimbursement for complex services
provided; and a lack of knowledge or comfort regarding follow-up care guidelines and/or
recommended care; and lack of adequate in-network providers and specialists required to address
long term health outcomes. Key Informants specifically discussed that payers may not be aware
of follow-up care guidelines and/or recommended care for CCS, and this could lead to the
barriers to accessing survivorship care.
The identified research literature discussed below mirrored the Key Informants’ discussion
regarding provider, health system, and payer level barriers to care (N = 23; see Figure 5).
14
Figure 5. Provider, health system, and payer barriers to survivorship care connection to outcomes
by domain
Overall, the second most frequently cited barrier to survivorship care for CCS were at the
provider (N = 17) and health system (N = 11) levels and the most commonly studied barrier
types were knowledge or comfort in ability to provide care and geographic, transportation, or
local availability of services (N = 12, respectively). The barrier types that were frequently cited
as impacting the survivorship care outcome domain (encompassing survivorship care services,
care plans, or models of care) and the health services and economic outcome domain
predominantly studied were those barriers due to knowledge or comfort in the ability to provide
needed care (≥ 10 studies).
Guiding Question 3. What Are Proposed Strategies for Addressing Those
Barriers?
Proposed strategies to address disparities in and barriers to survivorship care were also
discussed with Key Informants. The primary themes identified by Key Informants included
improving dissemination and education of long-term follow-up guidelines to primary care
providers and payers; combining forces with fellow advocacy groups that focus on chronic
lifelong conditions that span from pediatrics to adulthood (e.g., diabetes) to increase awareness
and resources for CCS; designing a risk-stratification tool for long-term follow-up surveillance
(including prioritization and preference of follow-up provider); and instituting health policy
changes that support providers via adequate education and reimbursement.
Through discussion with the Key Informants and grey literature searches, we identified a
total of sixteen proposed strategies endorsed by different organizations and entities with an
interest in CCS (see Table 4). All organizations acknowledged disparities regarding pediatric
cancer survivorship care but the level of detail and specific recommendations regarding how to
alleviate barriers experienced by CCS varied. In 1996, the International Society of Paediatric
Oncology suggested that initiatives not only focus on clinical care, but also on educating the
public, informing policy change, and educating CCS about future concerns (such as financial or
15
social issues as a result of their cancer diagnosis and treatment).109 And, in 2003, the National
Cancer Policy Board of what is now the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and
Medicine proposed a comprehensive policy agenda to improve healthcare delivery, invested in
education and training, and expanded research to improve the long-term outlook for CCS.80
However many of the aims of these proposed strategies still remain as gaps today.
Table 4. Guiding Question 3: Proposed strategies
Author, Year
Study Name/Trial ID
Country
Cancer
Origin
Proportion of
CCS
Masera, 1996109
International Society
of Paediatric
Oncology
Multiple
countries
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
National Cancer
Policy Board, 200380
National Academies of
Sciences,
Engineering, and
Medicine
USA
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
Goldsby, 200471
International Society
of Paediatric
Oncology
Multiple
countries
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
Skinner, 2005151
United Kingdom
Children’s Cancer
Study Group: Late
Effects Subcommittee
UK
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
Skinner, 2006152
UK Children’s Cancer
Study Group
(UKCCSG) Late
Effects Group (LEG)
UK
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
Children’s Oncology
Group Nursing
Discipline, 200741
USA
Multiple
cancer
origin
50% or more
American Academy of
Pediatrics, 200914
USA
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
16
Strategy Type
Strategy Title
Strategy Description
Clinical Practice Guideline
SlOP Working Committee on Psychosocial Issues
in Pediatric Oncology: Guidelines for Care of LongTerm Survivors
Establish a specialty clinic oriented to the preventive
medical and psychosocial care of long-term survivors
which includes public education and advocacy.
Policy Statement
Childhood Cancer Survivorship: Improving Care
and Quality of Life
Comprehensive policy agenda that links improved
healthcare delivery, investments in education and
training, and expanded research to improve the longterm outlook for survivors of childhood cancer.
Meeting Summaries and Recommendations
International Society of Paediatric Oncology 2003
meeting summary of the Symposium on LongTerm Follow-up Guidelines
Four models of survivorship care were endorsed with
strengths and limitations.
Clinical Practice Guideline
Therapy Based Long Term Follow Up: Practice
Statement: United Kingdom Children’s Cancer
Study Group (Late Effects Group)
Exposure-based clinical practice guidelines for
pediatric cancer survivors.
Clinical Practice Guideline
Long-Term Follow-Up of People Who Have
Survived Cancer During Childhood
Ideal survivorship strategy will be one that captures the
largest number of long-term survivors by ensuring that
appropriate clinical and psychosocial care, health
education, and health promotion advice are all
delivered in an appropriate manner at an appropriate
location, while taking advantage of important research
opportunities that will benefit future generations of
survivors.
Meeting Summaries and Recommendations
Establishing and Enhancing Services for
Childhood Cancer Survivors: Long-term follow-up
program resource guide
Healthcare organizations and providers should deliver
care and alleviate barriers to survivorship care for
pediatric survivors.
Clinical Practice Guideline
Long-Term Follow-Up Care for Pediatric Cancer
Survivors
Follow up care for pediatric cancer survivors
concerning detecting serious late effects and
promoting healthy lifestyles.
Author, Year
Study Name/Trial ID
Country
Cancer
Origin
Proportion of
CCS
Late Effects Taskforce
of the Dutch
Childhood Oncology
Group, 2010103
Netherlands
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
Scottish
Intercollegiate
Guidelines Network,
2013146
UK
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
American Academy of
Pediatrics, 201415, 16
USA
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
Esherich, 201761
Working Group on
Adolescents, Young
Adults, and Transition
(Arbeitsgemeinschaft
Adoleszenten, junge
Erwachsene,
Transition)
Germany
Multiple
cancer
origin
Less than 50%
Children’s Oncology
Group, 201842
USA
Multiple
cancer
origin
50% or more
Cancer Leadership
Council, 201925, 26
USA
Multiple
cancer
origin
Less than 50%
Denlinger, 202053
National
Comprehensive
Cancer Network
USA
Multiple
cancer
origin
Less than 50%
International Guideline
Harmonization Group,
202081
Multiple
countries
Multiple
cancer
origin
50% or more
Children's Cancer
Cause, 202037, 39, 40
USA
Multiple
cancer
origin
100%
17
Strategy Type
Strategy Title
Strategy Description
Clinical Practice Guideline
Guidelines for Follow-Up after Childhood Cancer
More Than 5 Years After Diagnosis
Exposure-based clinical practice guidelines for
pediatric cancer survivors.
Clinical Practice Guideline
Long term follow up of survivors of childhood
cancer Exposure- and risk- based clinical practice
guidelines for pediatric cancer survivors.
Policy Statement
Standards for Pediatric Cancer Centers
Strategies for helping survivors transition to primary
care with emphasis on pediatric cancer centers.
Meeting Summaries and Recommendations
Building a National Framework for Adolescent and
Young Adult Hematology and Oncology and
Transition from Pediatric to Adult Care: Report of
the Inaugural Meeting of the Working Group of the
German Society for Pediatric Oncology and
Hematology
Establish a solid infrastructure for transition nationwide
so that transition in care can start during adolescence.
Clinical Practice Guideline
Long-Term Follow-Up Guidelines for Survivors of
Childhood, Adolescent, and Young Adult Cancers
Exposure-based clinical practice guidelines for
pediatric cancer survivors.
Policy Statement
Improve the Delivery of Survivorship Care
Encouraged Congress to explore how to define and
finance distinct episodes of survivorship care and
encouraged the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Innovation to carefully consider what to base payment
for survivorship care on.
Clinical Practice Guideline
National Comprehensive Cancer Network Clinical
Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Survivorship
Clinical practice guidelines for cancer survivors,
including focus on screening for cardiovascular,
psychosocial, and chronic pain late effects and receipt
of immunizations to prevent infections for pediatric
survivors.
Clinical Practice Guideline
Long-Term Follow-Up Guidelines
Surveillance recommendations regarding what
surveillance modalities should be used, at what
frequency surveillance should be performed, and what
interventions are available if abnormalities are found.
Policy Statement
Childhood Cancer Survivorship Proposal
Endorsed testing of a comprehensive new model of
care and survivorship care plan initiative (Child and
Survivorship Transition Model), which uses local
service delivery and state payment for those covered
by Medicaid, coupled with the Children’s Oncology
Group record – Summary of Cancer Treatment
(Comprehensive) and a survivorship care plan;
endorsed improving access to survivorship care via
Author, Year
Study Name/Trial ID
Country
Cancer
Origin
Proportion of
CCS
Strategy Type
Strategy Title
Strategy Description
digital technology, improved data collection, and
addressing barriers to clinical trial participation for
survivors.
CCS = childhood cancer survivors
At the International Society of Paediatric Oncology annual meeting in 2004, a spectrum of
models of care with four types were endorsed ranging from least intensive or involved (survivor
is given the responsibility to seek their own follow-up care) to most intensive or involved (new
genre of family physicians/internists with knowledge of pediatric cancer late effects and local
physicians working in close cooperation with the specialty follow-up clinic).71 The Children’s
Oncology Group (COG), the United Kingdom Children’s Cancer Study Group: Late Effects
Subcommittee, the Late Effects of Childhood Cancer task force of the Dutch Childhood
Oncology Group, and the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network all endorse exposurebased clinical practice guidelines targeting CCS for the surveillance, prevention, management,
and treatment of late effects.42, 103, 146, 151 Furthermore, the International Guideline Harmonization
Group (IGHG) is working to bring together international experts to develop consistent, effective,
and efficient recommendations for CCS.81 The American Academy of Pediatrics and National
Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) have endorsed specific strategies to minimize the
burden of disparities and alleviate barriers to care for CCS.14, 53 The NCCN Clinical Practice
Guidelines in Oncology: Survivorship frequently reference assessing barriers to care with the
patient; however, the only reference regarding how to address barriers to care was pertaining to
barriers to physical activity.53
More recently, organizations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Working
Group on Adolescents, Young Adults, and Transition (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Adoleszenten, junge
Erwachsene, Transition) in Germany, and the COG Nursing Discipline have endorsed specific
strategies to deliver care to CCS, including the use of a survivorship care plan and transition
clinics to assist CCS’ and their families with transitioning from pediatric to adult care settings.15,
41, 61
In 2019, the Cancer Leadership Council, representing a variety of cancer-related
organizations, suggested that Congress explore how to define and finance distinct episodes of
survivorship care and encouraged the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation to carefully
consider what to base payment for survivorship care on.26 More recently, the Children’s Cancer
Cause endorsed the creation of a new demonstration project called the Child and Survivorship
Transition Model, which would allow testing of a new model of care and survivorship care plan
initiative with local service delivery and state payment for those covered by Medicaid.39 As
endorsed, the model would address barriers to survivorship care including staffing capacity,
electronic medical records, interoperability of medical records, and legal constraints regarding
confidentiality.39 Furthermore, the Children’s Cancer Cause endorsed improving access to
survivorship care via digital technology (e.g., telehealth, integration of existing survivorship
platforms), improved data collection (e.g., focus on insurance, survivorship care planning, and
longitudinal studies), and addressing barriers to clinical trial participation for survivors (e.g.,
required coverage for routine costs for those insured by Medicaid, alleviating the burden of
incidental costs such as food, housing, and transportation).39
18
Guiding Question 4. What Published and Unpublished Studies
Have Assessed These Strategies?
Key Informants were also asked about studies that have evaluated strategies to decrease or
alleviate disparities and barriers to survivorship care. It was evident from the discussion that
content experts thought there is only very limited information in the research literature
(published or unpublished) that have assessed strategies to overcome barriers to pediatric cancer
survivorship care. The Key Informants also mentioned that older research does not necessarily
reflect the contemporary US or CCS populations and thus has limited applicability or relevance
now. Key Informants proposed reasoning for why strategies have not been assessed, including
lack of data, the heterogeneous nature of CCS, and difficulties obtaining funding and support to
study these strategies.
Our searches identified 27 studies reporting on an evaluation of a strategy to alleviate
disparities and barriers to pediatric cancer survivorship care (see Table 5). The strategies were
categorized by survivorship care domain, which included establishing survivorship care plans (N
= 11; e.g., receipt of a document outlining treatment exposure, risk, and follow-up care needs),
implementing models of care (N = 11; e.g., arrangements with providers to provide care),
specific survivorship care services (N = 9; type of care received), and other, unique approaches
(N = 6).
Table 5. Research on evaluated strategies to overcome disparities and barriers to pediatric cancer
survivorship care
Survivorship
Care Domain
Number of Studies
Identified Studies
Survivorship
care plan
N = 11
Bashore, 201619; Blaauwbroek, 201223; Casillas, 201934; Hudson, 202078; Iyer, 201783; KadanLottick, 201888; Kunin-Batson, 2016100; Landier, 2015102; Oeffinger, 2011129; Santacroce, 201086;
Williamson, 2014170
N = 11
Bashore, 201619; Blaauwbroek, 200824; Costello, 201745; Ducassou, 201758; Eilertsen, 200459;
Ford, 201364; Hudson, 202078; Iyer, 201783; Kadan-Lottick, 201888; Reynolds, 2019137; Williamson,
2014170
N=9
Casillas, 201730; Casillas, 201934; Casillas, 202035; Costello, 201745; Devine, 202055; Oeffinger,
2019128; Raj, 2018134; Santacroce, 201086; Schwartz, 2019144
N=6
Casillas, 201934; Crom, 200747; de Moor, 201152; Iyer, 201783; Rose; Felker, 2019138; Schwartz,
2018145
Model of care
Survivorship
care service
Other
All identified studies are documented in detail in Appendix D and displayed visually in
Figure 6. Almost all of the evaluated strategies (N = 24) have been published in the last ten
years. With the exception of the studies targeting providers (N = 3), all of the evaluated strategies
have been examined using cohorts of patients diagnosed with a variety of pediatric malignancies
(N = 25). Analytic studies (N = 8) and randomized controlled trials (N = 7) made up the majority
of identified study designs. Most studies evaluated interventions involving survivorship care
plans or models or care (N = 11, respectively), followed by survivorship care service (N = 9) and
other (N = 6). Studies almost always targeted the patient (≥ 10 studies) rather than providers or
organizations. Figure 6 depicts the available literature.
19
Figure 6. Study design, care domain, and primary target of evaluated strategies
The majority of evaluated strategies assessed survivorship care as a primary or secondary
outcome of interest (N = 21). Other outcome domains less frequently cited included: health
services and economics (N = 9),psychosocial (N = 6), and biomedical (N = 5) domains.
Among the randomized controlled trials (N = 7) and clinical trials (nonrandomized, quasiexperimental studies; N = 3), models of care (N = 6) and survivorship care services (N = 4) were
frequently examined either on their own or in combination. The primary targets of the
interventions among the randomized controlled trials and clinical trials were patients in all
studies; however, two studies had primary targets of both patients and providers and one study
targeted patients and family members. Of the ten randomized controlled trials and clinical trials,
six used education interventions and/or intervened by giving tools for empowerment. Less
frequently studied were interventions providing access to care (N = 2) or psychosocial support
(N = 1).
Among the cohort (N = 3), pre-post (N = 4), time series (N = 1), post-only (N = 1), and
analytic (N = 8) studies, models of care were most frequently evaluated (N = 8), followed by
survivorship care plans and survivorship care services (N = 5, respectively). The primary targets
of these studies were almost always patients (N = 14); less frequently targets of the intervention
were providers (N = 5) and family members (N = 3). Three of the five provider focused studies
examined interventions only involved the providers themselves (e.g., no patients). Of these 17
studies, most evaluated educational interventions (N = 9; all but two of these involved the
patient), followed by access to care interventions (N = 6), giving tools for empowerment (N = 3),
and psychosocial support (N = 2).
Technology
A total of 10 studies evaluated strategies that used technological-based interventions, all of
which involved the patient, two involving both the patient and family and one involving the
patient and provider. An evaluation of a Web-based informational intervention reported no
20
improvement in cancer-related knowledge or anxiety surrounding health beliefs.100 In another
study, CCS reported satisfaction, benefits, and ease of use regarding self-management of their
health and use of survivorship care plan as a result of a text messaging pilot.144 In another text
messaging intervention, CCS reported improved survivorship care knowledge, healthcare selfefficacy, and increased positive attitudes towards survivorship care.34 An intervention using a
photonovela among Hispanic/Latino CCS, reported improvement in confidence related to
survivorship care, effects on cancer stigma among family members, and improved knowledge of
survivorship care among family members.35 One study found that text messaging was an
acceptable way to communicate with CCS regarding both reminders about upcoming
survivorship care needs and tailored suggestions for resources available in the community.30
Survivors felt that communicating via text message could help alleviate barriers to care, enhance
self-management, and assist CCS in reaching their health goals. Similar sentiments from patients
were found in a study using telemedicine to facilitate transition of survivorship care from
pediatric oncologists to adult primary care providers.45 This service improved patient knowledge
of survivorship care needs and overall satisfaction; the only negative comments addressed
difficulties with the equipment.
The remaining two studies evaluated a Web-based platform. In one study, SurvivorLink
provided a personal health record that was securely stored and electronically shared with the
patients’ providers.170 The strongest predictor of registering and using the platform was having
attended a survivorship clinic. Providing both an electronic and paper-based survivorship care
plan that could be shared electronically with providers showed that most survivors and providers
found the website user-friendly and the care plan availability helpful.23 The majority of survivors
reported that their knowledge of late effects had improved and they had become more aware of
how survivorship care can be beneficial. One study reported positive effects for a Web-based
psychosocial intervention called “A Survivor’s Journey” for pediatric brain tumor survivors and
caregivers.134 One study found that encouragement by CCS’ oncologist or regular doctor to quit
smoking resulted in an increase in the number of cessation attempts.52
Education
In a recent study, a self-management and peer mentoring intervention found a positive
relationship regarding transition readiness and grit.55 An evaluation of an educational
intervention targeting CCS who attend a survivorship clinic reported female survivors reported
higher knowledge than male survivors.47 In a sample of female CCSS participants, motivational
interviewing showed improved use of screening mammography.128 Additionally, survivorship
care plans mailed to high-risk survivors appeared to be feasible and effective to deliver
information regarding late effects and surveillance needs and resulted in improved compliance
with guideline-concordant survivorship care.129 Similarly, a distance-delivered intervention of
two personalized telephone counseling sessions increased cardiomyopathy screening among atrisk survivors, therefore improving compliance with guideline-concordant survivorship care.78
Two evaluated strategies used educational approaches in an effort to improve outcomes in
the survivorship care domain. One assessed the usefulness of a workbook to assist CCS in
transition readiness and reported that the most helpful sections of the workbook were
information regarding medical history, provider information, and insurance.19 A risk-based
education intervention among CCS already engaged in a survivorship clinic found an increase in
awareness of personal health risk in CCS after three sessions.102
21
Three studies evaluated the effect of an intervention addressing healthcare providers. One
followed up on survivorship care plans that had been mailed to CCS’s primary care providers
that the most significant barrier to providing survivorship care was the provider’s lack of
knowledge and level of comfort.83 After completing an educational intervention, pediatric
cardiologists’ reported increased knowledge of CCS’ needs for surveillance, risk due to
treatment received, potential cardiac dysfunction as time since treatment increases,
cardioprotective methods, use of a Web-based risk-assessment tool to estimate risk in CCS
experiencing heart failure before the age of 40, and that African American CCS are at particular
increased risk of late effects impacting their cardiovascular health.138 Lastly, residents’
knowledge, skills, and comfort discussing topics related to survivorship care improved after
receiving CCS-focused curriculum.145
Shared Care, Collaboration, and Location-Based Strategies
Four studies used shared care models of survivorship care. One examined the effect of shared
care between an oncologist and primary care provider and found that those who used the shared
care model experienced an improvement in CCS adherence to survivorship care.58 However,
empowering CCS with the distribution of a survivorship care plan and implementation by
primary care providers, in comparison to a traditional approach to survivorship care using a
survivorship clinic model, resulted in lower adherence to guideline-recommended care and
identification of late effects.88 A phone-based coping skills training that also discussed plans for
surveillance among CCS (primary target) and their parents’ (secondary target) found that
outcomes improved including post-traumatic growth; however, among those that were in the
comparison group, outcomes remained the same or decreased.86 Lastly, survivors and local
primary care providers participated in a shared care model over three years.24 Advantages of
locally-delivered primary care using this shared care model were less travel required for the
patient, shorter waiting times for appointments, better patient familiarity with the clinical setting,
and less stigmatization.24
Three studies evaluated collaboration- or location-based strategies to improve survivorship
care. One reported that collaboration among CCS, family members, and health professionals in
the family’s home community is beneficial and valuable for survivorship care adherence.59 A
second reported a higher compliance rate with COG-recommended guidelines in cancer-center
based facilities compared to primary care or community-based facilities.137 However, the third
study found no significant differences in CCS knowledge regarding their cancer diagnosis or
potential risk for future health problems (including psychosocial or emotional struggles) among
those who attended specialized survivorship clinics when compared to those seen in a
nonspecialized clinic.64
Guiding Question 5. What Are Future Directions for Research in
Addressing Barriers to Survivorship Care for Pediatric Cancer Survivors?
All Key Informant discussions concluded with dialogue surrounding future directions for
research to address barriers and disparities to survivorship care among CCS. The primary themes
for future directions for research included:
• Developing patient and family-endorsed measures of social determinants of health that
are amenable to intervention
22
•
Use of technology and advanced analytic methods to predict and automate risk
stratification (low-, intermediate-, or high-risk) for CCS during and after their treatment
in order to facilitate transitions and long-term access to care and support
• Identifying where effective patient and provider relationships can be emphasized,
including identification of care teams and formalized planning for transitions of care
• Creating a data commons for data sharing and promoting interoperability; and,
• Increasing awareness among funders that pediatric cancer survivorship research is
essential, needs financial support, and would benefit from the removal of barriers to
submitting grant applications (e.g., exclusion of CCS in funding opportunity
announcement and requests for applications).
Our literature searches identified eight ongoing studies assessing strategies that targeted
reducing disparities and barriers to survivorship care for CCS (Table 6). Studies addressing
Guiding Question 5 addressed survivorship care service (N = 4; e.g., type of care received),
survivorship care plan (N = 4; e.g., receipt of a document outlining treatment exposure, risk, and
follow-up care needs), models of care (N = 2; e.g., arrangements with providers to provide care),
and other (N = 1).
Table 6. Ongoing studies to assess strategies targeting reducing disparities and barriers
Survivorship
Care Domain
Number of Studies
Identified Studies
Survivorship
care service
Survivorship
care plan
Model of care
N=4
Chow, 202043; Devine, 201956; Escoffery, 201962; Marchak, 2020107
N=4
Devine, 201956; Escoffery, 201962; Hill-Kayser, 202075; Marchak, 2020107
N=2
Denzler, 2020 54; McClellan, 2015112
N=1
Daniel, 201549
Other
Half of the ongoing studies are randomized controlled trials (N = 4) and the remaining are
pre-post (N = 1), post-only (N = 1), and cross-sectional analytic studies (N = 2). Survivorship
care services and care plans (N = 4, respectively) are the most frequently addressed domain of
care, with the primary target most often being the patient (N = 5) or patient and provider together
(N = 2).
Similar to Guiding Question 4, half of the ongoing studies evaluate patient education
approaches (N = 4). The remaining studies evaluate the patient being given tools for
empowerment (N = 2), access to care (N = 2), and the provider being given tools for
empowerment (N = 1). Providers were only cited as one of the primary targets of an intervention
when coupled with a patient intervention (N = 2), and no ongoing studies were identified that
focus their interventions on family members, health systems, or payers.
Figure 7 depicts the identified studies.
23
Figure 7. Study design, care domain, and primary target of ongoing studies assessing strategies
mapped to outcomes by domain
Currently, four studies are underway and planned to be completed between 2021 and 2023.43,
54, 62, 107
Two evaluate a patient-targeted education intervention, one with and one without a
survivorship care plan, both of which focus on survivorship care service as an outcome.43, 107
Notably, only one study was designed to directly address disparities in survivorship care, and
uses a sample of patients predicted to be at high-risk based on their treatment exposure.43 One
study investigates which long-term follow-up care model (or parts of the model) are the best fit
for Swiss CCS, while evaluating transition readiness, facilitators to transition readiness, and
adherence to survivorship care.54 This study also compares the transition models across the three
participating centers.54 One study uses a Web-based, patient-controlled personalized health
record (SurvivorLink) to evaluate survivorship care services.62 Two studies indicated completion
by the end of 2020, both evaluate an online survivorship care plan.56, 75 One of these studies
examines the feasibility and acceptability of an online survivorship care plan for adult CCS.75
The other study empowers patients through an online self-management skills and peer mentoring
intervention to remove barriers to survivorship care.56
Two of the seven ongoing studies have yet to report their findings and have passed their
expected completion date.49, 112 One of these studies examines a model of care by providing
transition support from oncology to adult primary care by a nurse navigator in combination with
follow-up care with a primary care provider who is knowledgeable about late effects for CCS.112
The other is focused on skin examination using a dual-approach of providing education to the
patient and provider and tools for empowerment to the provider.49 More detail is documented in
Appendix D, Table D4.
24
Summary and Implications
This review of the literature, in conjunction with feedback from Key Informants and grey
literature, documents disparities, barriers, and strategies to overcome potential barriers to care
among childhood cancer surviors (CCS).
What Are the Disparities in Survivorship Care for Pediatric Cancer
Survivors?
A total of 26 studies investigated disparities in survivorship care for pediatric cancer
survivors. Disparities by biologic sex and insurance were most frequently addressed. Disparities
by educational attainment and employment status were less frequently documented in the
literature. The survivorship care and health services and economic domains were more
commonly studied in relation to disparities for CCS; however, biomedical and psychosocial
outcome domains were less frequently studied with disparities. The literature documents that
pediatric cancer survivors are experiencing disparities in survivorship care. These survivors are
likely at higher risk of poor long-term health outcomes, psychosocial distress, lower social and
work productivity, and early mortality compared to other survivors.
What Are the Barriers to Survivorship Care for Pediatric Cancer Survivors
Who Experience Disparities?
A total of 47 studies were identified that have assessed specific barriers to receipt of
survivorship care, and many studies overlapped in describing disparities and barriers. Barriers
can be organized at the level of the patient; caregiver, family member, or community; at the level
of the provider; at the level of the health system; and at the level of the payer. Barriers at the
level of the patient have been most frequently assessed thus far. For example, CCS may not
recall (or have never been told about) their need for life-long survivorship care – and in fact, this
was one of the most frequently examined barriers to survivorship care identified through our
reviews. Furthermore, lack of adequate financial or employment resources was studied equally as
much, and trust in providers or the medical community was closely behind and are commonly
studied with the survivorship care and health services and economic outcome domains.
Barriers to care at the provider and health system levels are also associated with CCS’ ability
to improve outcomes related to survivorship care, biomedical, psychosocial, and health services
and economic domains. Most commonly studied are barriers at the level of the provider,
including resources needed to deliver care; geographic, transportation, or local availability of
services; and knowledge or comfort in ability to provide needed care were noted – all of which
significantly act as barriers to survivorship care.
What Are Proposed Strategies for Addressing Those Barriers?
Along with the results from the published studies that have identified barriers and disparities,
the need for strategies aimed at addressing these barriers are frequently acknowledged. We found
a total of 16 organizations that acknowledged disparities regarding pediatric cancer survivorship
care. However, specific recommendations regarding how to alleviate barriers experienced by
CCS are limited. Although additional data and research are clearly needed, initial strategies
based on the current literature include: increasing access to care, improving health insurance
enrollment and coverage, enhancing continuity of care, knowledge of the need for survivorship
care, knowledge of long-term follow-up guidelines, and implementation of risk-stratified care.
25
What Published and Unpublished Studies Have Assessed These
Strategies?
We only found 27 published studies evaluating the effectiveness of strategies to reduce
barriers and disparities to pediatric survivorship care. Studies have predominantly focused on
addressing barriers at the patient level, most frequently evaluating education-based interventions,
followed by access to care and empowerment interventions. Only a few assessed overcoming
barriers at the provider level. A minority of evaluated interventions involved a family member,
coupled with patient- and provider-based studies, using education or psychosocial interventions.
Only one was designed to specifically address disparities in survivorship care. We did not find
any studies assessing strategies addressing barriers at the healthcare system or payer levels. Until
we have a better understanding of what will be effective in overcoming barriers to survivorship
care at all levels that impact CCS outcomes, disparities may persist.
What Are Future Directions for Research in Addressing Barriers to
Survivorship Care for Pediatric Cancer Survivors?
Eight ongoing studies were identified that included directions for future research in
addressing barriers to survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors. Despite the number of
studies reporting disparities and barriers, few studies evaluate approaches to overcoming barriers
and lessening disparities. Only one identified ongoing study was explicitly designed to address
disparities in survivorship care. Identifying and eliminating barriers to care for patients and
families is an important first step; however, studies are still needed to determine potential
differential impacts once barriers are removed. This includes documenting efforts that address
institutional policies and practices that may reinforce inequities. Currently, it is possible for
researchers to utilize existing cohorts to compare survivorship care across health systems,
examine the use of alternative methods of care delivery and reimbursement models (e.g., virtual
or telehealth services), etc.. With the passage of the Childhood Cancer Survivorship, Treatment,
Access, and Research (STAR) Act, it is now possible to envision more innovative approaches
such as those recommended by Key Informants, including the creation and shared utilization of a
large data commons (possibly via the Childhood Cancer Data Initiative), use of advanced
analytic techniques (e.g., identify patients and notify providers of surveillance needs
automatically through the electronic medical record), and targeting intervention not only at the
patient or provider level, but also at the health services and payer level (e.g., examining
technology and telemedicine interventions, and improving coverage and reimbursement to
incentivize equitable survivorship care; see Appendix C, Table C5).
26
Next Steps
Based on the research findings and their implications, we have outlined suggestions to
resolve disparities and barriers impacting childhood cancer survivorship care in a PICOS
(population, independent variables/interventions, comparators, outcomes, and study design)
framework.
Population
The majority of published pediatric cancer survivorship research comes from the Childhood
Cancer Survivor Study (CCSS), a large cohort of survivors of pediatric cancer. The scope of
survivorship care represented by the CCSS includes identification of late health effects form
cancer and treatment, fertility outcomes, psychosocial assessments, and the recognition and
screening for subsequent malignant neoplasms. While the CCSS is a robust survivorship cohort
and has been instrumental in the identifying the needs of pediatric cancer survivors, its
generalizability to the overall population of childhood cancer survivors (CCS), including
underrepresented groups, and those treated with more modern therapies is limited. More
specifically, the proportion of racial or ethnic minorities in the CCSS is reflective of the general
demographic composition of the U.S. from the 1970s-1990s, and both have diversified greatly
over the past twenty years.173 Notably, all disparities examined by the CCSS were also assessed
among other studies, typically using smaller cohorts.
Survivorship care is impacted by various social determinants of health (e.g., racial or ethnic
minority status, income, rural and underserved populations, insurance status or type, sexual or
gender minorities, and education level), and interplays between barriers at the patient, family,
provider, health system, and payer levels. While many of the social determinants of health can
directly impact access to and successful receipt of care, our understanding of why racial and/or
ethnic minorities face disparities is unclear and likely highly complex. As a result, diverse
samples of survivors, including with adequate representation of racial and ethnic minorities, are
needed to gain more insight into barriers experienced by populations that experience health
disparities and considerable thought and support should be aimed at funding creative ways to
overcome these barriers, given the fragmented nature of the US healthcare system.
Another issue among published research is that it is largely clinic or hospital-based and/or
comprised of convenience samples. These data largely represent CCS who are already or
partially engaged in the healthcare system. Identification of cohorts via a cancer registry
represent one strategy for recruiting samples that are more representative (e.g., populationbased), with greater numbers of participants who are under-represented in the current literature
(e.g., ethnic/racial minorities, rural populations, those not in follow-up care). Other strategies for
representative cohort recruitment include the use of social media or networks of nonprofit
organizations that provide support for CCS. Our Key Informants also stressed that survival from
primary cancer treatment is also closely associated with many of the same issues pertaining to
social determinants of health (although during cancer treatment, there is more support for
patients and families). Thus, the study of survivors of pediatric cancer has already selected a
biased sample for patients with more favorable social determinants. It is not until we address
disparities at the primary cancer treatment level, does the picture of how to alleviate disparities
and barriers to survivorship care become complete.
Parent, families, caregivers, and local community members are vital to the outcomes of the
cancer experience for survivors and are known to provide support for CCS follow-up care.
27
However, little is known about their roles longer term. Thus, the impact of community-, family-,
and peer-support on longer term outcomes merits further examination to identify potential
facilitators of care (versus solely a focus on barriers/inhibitors) and interventions are needed to
foster these protective relationships.
Independent Variables/Interventions and Comparators
Many studies have examined disparities in survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors,
most frequently including biologic sex, insurance, and race or ethnicity. Less frequently studied
are disparities by education or employment; furthermore, disparities by sexual identity or among
gender minorities have not yet been studied in the pediatric cancer survivorship literature. This
underscores the importance of designing studies that examine disparities in survivorship care
with a careful attention paid to interventions and comparisons for these populations. Most current
studies that address barriers do so at the patient level. But, as this report outlines, multiple other
levels exist, in which barriers inherently affect certain subgroups of survivors more-so than
others. Next steps need to include interventions that address barriers at the provider, healthcare
system, and payer levels, in addition to interventions targeting the caregivers, family members,
and local environment. Our Key Informants highlighted some potential interventions that could
be evaluated as next steps to overcome barriers and improve survivorship care delivery and
usage, including the application of technology (e.g., social media, telehealth) and innovative
methods to identify and classify patients for risk-stratification, in order to better direct patients to
the level of care required based on their cancer, treatment and comorbidities. Because of
practical or logistic barriers, the use of telemedicine or virtual visits with a survivorship care
provider during a time that is convenient for the patient (e.g., outside of typical work hours) is
worth examining. Key Informants also discussed CCS-focused nonprofit organizations
potentially partnering with other chronic disease-focused nonprofits to raise their voice regarding
similar disparities and barriers to care.
Key to all CCS interventions focused on survivorship care is that they are tailored to the local
culture and community of the survivor and they should address barriers on multiple levels (e.g.,
not everything needs to use a patient education approach). Comprehensive, innovative
approaches using interventions to impact the provider, health system, and payer are needed,
ideally first with pilot projects to implement experimental models in order to eventually establish
a feasible standard of care. For example, an intervention could be designed to empower primary
care providers with adequate tools to respond to the needs of CCS. Using individual states as
policy laboratories, an intervention in a group of states via partnership with state-based
professional organizations to encourage continuing education regarding pediatric cancer
survivorship care could be evaluated with the goal of improving the receipt of guidelineconcordant care. Notably, insurance and reimbursement constrains serve as barriers at many
levels including the patient, provider, health system, and payer, and viable interventions are
needed to alleviate these barriers. For example, at the payer level, again using states as policy
laboratories, federal subsidies could be used to incentivize payers and health systems to provide
guideline-concordant survivorship care targeting disparate CCS subgroups to engage these
populations in the health system. These proposed interventions would require different ideal
comparator groups dependent on the level of intervention, such as 1) those receiving or
delivering usual care for interventions at the patient or provider level, 2) contrasting healthcare
delivery systems for interventions at the healthcare delivery level, and 3) insurance providers that
may provide varying levels of coverage and reimbursement for interventions at the payer level.
28
Finally, it is not proven that enhanced survivorship care mitigates or prevents the incidence
or severity of late effects, and as a result, alternative models merit examination (e.g., improving
the precision of risk-based modeling using big data to understand the impact of survivorship care
provided through primary care providers or utilizing telemedicine). Given the complex landscape
of the US healthcare system and the heterogeneous nature of CCS, it is difficult to decipher the
best approach for comparator groups across all studies. “One size does not fit all” - for example,
it is difficult to compare the CCSS cohort to a local, clinic-based cohort of patients given the
limitations discussed above. Likewise, it is also difficult to compare outcomes from a public
health system providing a high level of indigent care to a private, for-profit clinic-based sample.
Outcome
In addition to traditional health and utilization measures, assessment of how to best alleviate
or decrease some of the more practical or logistical aspects of barriers to care (e.g., parking fees,
transportation, childcare, time off work, out-of-pocket costs for what insurance does not cover)
warrant further investigation. Biomedical and psychosocial outcome domains are less frequently
examined in reference to disparities and barriers to survivorship care. This may be because
biomedical and psychosocial outcomes are more distal and mediated or moderated by access to
care; however, further investigation may be warranted to better understand the relationship
between access to survivorship care and biomedical and psychosocial outcomes.
More recently, there has been discussion in the pediatric cancer survivorship community
regarding striking the right balance of surveillance for late effects, to avoid over-surveillance and
under-surveillance. In particular, debate surrounding real impact that is has on CCS’ survival and
quality of life is key. However, more information is needed about what critical outcomes are for
CCS and their families and how to measure them in a reliable and valid way that captures
variation in disparate subgroups of CCS.
Finally, there is a need to invest in, and test interventions that address health promoting
facilitators of desired outcomes (e.g., peer support, occupational therapy). By focusing solely on
barriers or strategies to mitigate negative outcomes (e.g., disparities) we may miss additional
opportunities to promote positive outcomes and ultimately achieve health equity.174
Study Design
Ideally, randomized controlled trials would allow strong evidence statements about the
effectiveness of proposed interventions. To incorporate diverse cohorts with varying levels of
access to care and social and cultural representation, other approaches may be suitable to
advance our knowledge. For example, cluster randomized studies that intervene at the provider
level or natural experiments focused on health system or payer interventions could provide
much-needed insight. Furthermore, there is a need for collaboration (e.g., multi-site studies) to
reach sufficient sample sizes. In addition, longitudinal studies that examine disparities and
barriers over time are needed to enhance our understanding of how they impact long-term
outcomes for CCS. Finally, an economics-based approach using cost-effectiveness or costbenefit analyses conducted with representative, actual cost data from various levels will provide
important information. Examining a variety of perspectives will help to truly understand the
costs and benefits, including the patient, family, provider, health system, and payer perspectives.
29
Conclusion
Pediatric cancer survivors face a variety of barriers to care, and these barriers often lead to
disparities in care. This report highlights the strengths and limitations of the literature
surrounding disparities and barriers to pediatric cancer survivorship care. Disparities by biologic
sex and insurance were most frequently addressed; while barriers at the level of the patient and
provider were most commonly examined. We identified few studies specifically designed to
ameliorate disparities among pediatric cancer survivorship care. Given the growing number of
CCS, the lifelong impact of cancer, and the growing population, careful attention should be paid
to how studies are designed to examine the effectiveness of intervention on reducing barriers and
eliminating disparities among CCS. Pediatric cancer is a rare diagnosis, and effectively and
efficiently studying an understudied sub-group needs support to encourage and sustain research
in disparities and barriers to pediatric cancer survivorship care.
30
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Abbreviations and Acronyms
AHRQ
AMC
ASCO
CCDI
CCS
CCSS
COE
COG
EPC
GIN
GQ
IGHG
LEG
NCCN
NCI
NIH
PAE
PCP
PICOTSS
SES
SEADS
STAR Act
UKCCSG
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Academic Medical Centers
American Society for Clinical Oncology
Childhood Cancer Data Initiative
Childhood cancer survivor(s)
Childhood Cancer Survivor Study
Center of Excellence
Children’s Oncology Group
Evidence-based Practice Center
Guidelines International Network
Guiding Question
International Guideline Harmonization Group
Late Effects Group
National Comprehensive Cancer Network
National Cancer Institute
National Institutes of Health
Patient Activation and Education
Primary Care Providers
Population, independent variables/intervention, comparator, outcomes,
timing, setting, and study design/other limiters
Socioeconomic status
Supplemental Evidence And Data for Systematic review
Childhood Cancer Survivorship, Treatment, Access, and Research Act
UK Children’s Cancer Study Group
45
Appendix A. Methods
This appendix summarizes the methods used for this technical brief. While the draft report is
undergoing peer review, we will undertake an updated search so that the final report is current
and includes the most up-to-date information.
Search Strategy and Sources
For this brief, we searched a variety of sources and applied several measures to reduce
potential reviewer errors and bias. This section describes the search strategies for published and
unpublished studies. The search strategies for the individual databases were developed, executed,
and documented by an experienced EPC librarian and were peer-reviewed by an experienced
methodologist. Furthermore, we sought input from Key Informant content experts and a
Supplemental Evidence And Data for Systematic review (SEADS) portal was available, in
addition to a Notice released by the Federal Register for this review to ensure that all relevant
evidence has been considered.
Grey Literature
To search for grey literature, we screened the websites of relevant professional organizations
listed below. The following terms were used to search grey literature websites: childhood OR
pediatric cancer survivor AND (disparit* OR barrier*), alone or in combination. The grey
literature sources included:
• Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
• National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine
• National Cancer Institute
• Children’s Oncology Group
• American Cancer Society
• American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network
• American Academy of Pediatrics
• American Society of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology
• American Society of Clinical Oncology
• National Comprehensive Cancer Network
• Leukemia and Lymphoma Society
• St. Baldrick’s Foundation
• American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy
• Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplantation Research
• International Guideline Harmonization Group for Late Effects of Childhood Cancer
• Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation
• CureSearch
ECRI Guidelines Trust
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
childhood OR pediatric cancer survivor
A-1
Guidelines International Network (GIN)
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
childhood OR pediatric cancer survivor
NIH RePORTER
Date: 10/8/2020
Text search
Limit to: publications from 1995-2020
Terms:
"childhood cancer survivor" and disparities
"childhood cancer survivor" and barriers
“childhood cancer survivor" and care and barriers
“childhood cancer survivor" and care and disparities
“adolescent cancer survivor”
“pediatric cancer survivor”
National Cancer Institute Research-Tested Intervention Programs
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
Childhood cancer survivor
ClinicalTrials.gov
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
AREA[ConditionSearch] Cancer
AND
(neonate OR neonatal OR newborn OR newborns OR infant OR baby OR babies OR nursery OR
nurseries OR toddler OR toddlers OR preschool OR pre school OR child OR children OR
childhood OR kid OR kids OR juvenile OR juveniles OR minor OR minors OR youth OR
youths OR youngster OR youngsters OR girl OR girls OR boy OR boys OR elementary school
OR elementary schools OR grade school OR grade schools OR preadolescent OR preadolescents
OR preadolescence OR pre adolescent OR pre adolescents OR pre adolescence OR preteen OR
preteens OR preteenager OR preteenagers OR pre teen OR pre teens OR pre teenager OR pre
teenagers OR middle school OR middle schools OR middle schooling OR adolescent OR
adolescents OR adolescence OR teen OR teens OR teenager OR teenagers OR high school OR
high schools OR high schooling OR pediatric OR pediatrics OR PICU OR NICU OR young
adult OR young adults)
AND
(social determinants of health OR socioeconomic OR access to healthcare OR Barriers to
healthcare OR ((Black OR African American OR Alaskan Native OR native American OR white
OR Asian OR Native Hawaiian OR Pacific Islander OR Hispanic OR Hispanics OR Latino OR
Latina OR LatinX OR Latinos OR Latinas OR Blacks OR African Americans OR Alaskan
Natives OR native Americans OR whites OR Asians OR Native Hawaiians OR Pacific Islanders
OR health OR medic OR medicine OR medical OR insurance OR insurances OR education OR
educations) AND (inequity OR inequities OR disparity OR disparities OR inequality OR
A-2
inequalities)) OR ((social OR sociological OR sociology) AND (factor OR factors OR trait OR
traits OR attribute OR attributes OR characteristic OR characteristics OR phenomenon OR
phenomena )))
AND
(Survivor OR survivors OR survivorship OR surveillance OR aftercare OR post-treatment OR
post treatment OR post-treatments OR post treatment OR follow up care OR follow-up care OR
Long term follow up OR long-term follow-up)
PROSPERO and Open Science Framework
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
“Cancer” OR “Oncolog*” OR “tumor” OR “tumors”
AND
“child” OR “Childhood” OR “kid“ OR “kids“ OR “juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR
“minors“ OR “youth“ OR “youths“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR “boys“
OR “preadolescent“ OR “preteen*“ OR “pre teen*” OR “adolescent“ OR “teen” or “teenager”
OR “pediatric*“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”
AND
“survivor” OR “survivorship” or “survivors” OR “aftercare” OR “post treatment” OR “follow
up”
AND
“barriers” OR “barrier” OR “disparity” OR “disparities” OR “inequality” OR “unequal”
Published Literature
We searched the research databases PubMed, CINAHL, and PsycINFO using the specified
terminology below for each Guiding Question. PubMed indexes biomedical literature, CINAHL
includes nursing literature, and PsycINFO is a resource for behavioral and social science
research. We also searched the trial registry, clinicaltrials.gov, and NIH RePORTER for ongoing
studies. Increasingly, authors provide results in trial records, and particularly for new
interventions, trial registries are an important source of research information. PROSPERO, an
international database of systematic reviews, was searched using the strategy listed below. We
reference-mined these published systematic reviews to ensure that all relevant studies were
identified (e.g., rather than summarizing the reviews, we used them as sources to identify
available research studies). Open Science Framework was queried for registered protocols of
relevance using the terms listed below. We also searched ClinicalTrials.gov and NIH
RePORTER for ongoing research using search terms specified below.
PubMed
Guiding Question 1 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
(“Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Medical Oncology”[Mesh] OR “Oncology Service, Hospital”[Mesh]
OR “Oncology Nursing”[Mesh] OR “Cancer Care Facilities”[Mesh] OR “National Cancer
Institute (U.S.)”[Mesh] OR “American Cancer Society”[Mesh] OR “antineoplastic*” OR “antiA-3
neoplastic*” OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR
“tumor” OR “tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR
“carcinomas”)
AND
(“child”[MeSH] OR “adolescent”[MeSH] OR "Minors"[Mesh] OR "Pediatrics"[Mesh] OR
"Pediatricians"[Mesh] OR "Hospitals, Pediatric"[Mesh] OR "Intensive Care Units,
Pediatric"[Mesh] OR "Intensive Care, Neonatal"[Mesh] OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“ OR
“newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR “nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR “toddler“
OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR “child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“ OR
“juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR “youth“ OR “youths“ OR “youngster“
OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR “boys“ OR “elementary school*” OR
“grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*” OR “preteen*“ OR “pre teen*” OR
“middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high school*” OR “pediatric*“ OR “PICU“
OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(“Social Determinants of Health”[MeSH] OR “Health Status Disparities”[MeSH] OR
“Sociology, Medical”[MeSH] OR “Healthcare Disparities”[MeSH] OR “Sociological
Factors”[MeSH] OR “social determinants of health” OR “socioeconomic” OR “access to
healthcare” OR “Barriers to healthcare” OR ((“Black” OR “African American” OR “Alaskan
Native” OR “native American” OR “white” OR “Asian” OR “Native Hawaiian” OR “Pacific
Islander” OR “Hispanic” OR “Hispanics” OR “Latino” OR “Latina” OR “LatinX” OR “Latinos”
OR “Latinas” OR “Blacks” OR “African Americans” OR “Alaskan Natives” OR “native
Americans” OR “whites” OR “Asians” OR “Native Hawaiians” OR “Pacific Islanders” OR
“health*” OR “medic*” OR “insurance” OR “insurances” OR “education*”) AND (“inequit*”
OR “disparit*” OR “inequal*”)) OR ((“social*” OR “sociolog*” OR “sociology*”) AND
(“factor” OR “factors” OR “trait” OR “traits” OR “attribute” OR “attributes” OR “characteristic”
OR “characteristics” OR “phenomen*”)))
AND
(“Survivors”[Mesh] OR “Survivorship”[Mesh] OR "Population Surveillance"[Mesh] OR
"Aftercare"[Mesh] OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR ”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR
“aftercare” OR “post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR “post-treatments” OR “post treatment”
OR “follow up care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long term follow up” OR “long-term followup”)
Guiding Question 2 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
(“Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Medical Oncology”[Mesh] OR “Oncology Service, Hospital”[Mesh]
OR “Oncology Nursing”[Mesh] OR “Cancer Care Facilities”[Mesh] OR “National Cancer
Institute (U.S.)”[Mesh] OR “American Cancer Society”[Mesh] OR “antineoplastic*” OR “antineoplastic*” OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR
“tumor” OR “tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR
“carcinomas”)
AND
(“child”[MeSH] OR “adolescent”[MeSH] OR "Minors"[Mesh] OR "Pediatrics"[Mesh] OR
"Pediatricians"[Mesh] OR "Hospitals, Pediatric"[Mesh] OR "Intensive Care Units,
A-4
Pediatric"[Mesh] OR "Intensive Care, Neonatal"[Mesh] OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“ OR
“newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR “nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR “toddler“
OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR “child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“ OR
“juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR “youth“ OR “youths“ OR “youngster“
OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR “boys“ OR “elementary school*” OR
“grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*” OR “preteen*“ OR “pre teen*” OR
“middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high school*” OR “pediatric*“ OR “PICU“
OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(“Survivors”[Mesh] OR “Survivorship”[Mesh] OR "Population Surveillance"[Mesh] OR
"Aftercare"[Mesh] OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR ”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR
“aftercare” OR “post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR “post-treatments” OR “post treatment”
OR “follow up care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long term follow up” OR “long-term followup”)
AND
("Health Services Accessibility"[Mesh] OR "Standard of Care"[Mesh] OR "Case
Managers"[Mesh] OR “access to healthcare” OR “access to health care” OR “healthcare access”
OR “health care access” OR “health service access” OR “health services access” OR “access to
health service” OR “access to health services” OR “Barriers to healthcare” OR “standard of
care” OR “standards of care” OR “care standard” OR “care standards” OR “case manager” OR
“case managers” OR “facilitator” OR “facilitators”)
Guiding Question 3-5 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
(“Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Medical Oncology”[Mesh] OR “Oncology Service, Hospital”[Mesh]
OR “Oncology Nursing”[Mesh] OR “Cancer Care Facilities”[Mesh] OR “National Cancer
Institute (U.S.)”[Mesh] OR “American Cancer Society”[Mesh] OR “antineoplastic*” OR “antineoplastic*” OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR
“tumor” OR “tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR
“carcinomas”)
AND
(“child”[MeSH] OR “adolescent”[MeSH] OR "Minors"[Mesh] OR "Pediatrics"[Mesh] OR
"Pediatricians"[Mesh] OR "Hospitals, Pediatric"[Mesh] OR "Intensive Care Units,
Pediatric"[Mesh] OR "Intensive Care, Neonatal"[Mesh] OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“ OR
“newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR “nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR “toddler“
OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR “child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“ OR
“juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR “youth“ OR “youths“ OR “youngster“
OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR “boys“ OR “elementary school*” OR
“grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*” OR “preteen*“ OR “pre teen*” OR
“middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high school*” OR “pediatric*“ OR “PICU“
OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(“Survivors”[Mesh] OR “Survivorship”[Mesh] OR "Population Surveillance"[Mesh] OR
"Aftercare"[Mesh] OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR ”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR
“aftercare” OR “post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR “post-treatments” OR “post treatment”
A-5
OR “follow up care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long term follow up” OR “long-term followup”)
AND
("Follow-Up Studies"[Mesh] OR "Longitudinal Studies"[Mesh] OR “follow-up study” OR
“follow-up studies” OR “follow up study” OR “follow up studies” OR “followup study” OR
“followup studies” OR “longitudinal study” OR “longitudinal studies”)
Guiding Question 4 Strategy Experimental Studies
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
childhood cancer survivor*
Filters: Clinical Trial, Randomized Controlled Trial, English
CINAHL
Guiding Question 1 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
(MH "Neoplasms+" OR MH "Oncology+" OR MH "Oncology Care Units" OR MH "Oncologic
Nursing+" OR MH "Oncologic Care+" OR MH “Cancer Care Facilities” OR MH "National
Cancer Institute (U.S.)" OR MH "American Cancer Society" OR “antineoplastic*” OR “antineoplastic*” OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR
“tumor” OR “tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR
“carcinomas”)
AND
(MH "Child+" OR MH "Minors (Legal)" OR MH "Adolescence+"OR MH "Pediatrics+" OR
MH "Hospitals, Pediatric" OR MH "Intensive Care Units, Pediatric+" OR MH "Pediatric
Units+" OR MH "Pediatricians" OR MH "Pediatric Nursing+” OR MH "Neonatal Intensive
Care Nursing" OR MH "Intensive Care Units, Neonatal" OR MH "Intensive Care, Neonatal+"
OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“ OR “newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR
“nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR “toddler“ OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR
“child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“ OR “juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR
“youth“ OR “youths“ OR “youngster“ OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR
“boys“ OR “elementary school*” OR “grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*”
OR “preteen*“ OR “pre teen*” OR “middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high
school*” OR “pediatric*“ OR “PICU“ OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(MH "Social Determinants of Health" OR MH "Health Status Disparities" OR MH "Healthcare
Disparities" OR “social determinants of health” OR “socioeconomic” OR “access to healthcare”
OR “Barriers to healthcare” OR ((“Black” OR “African American” OR “Alaskan Native” OR
“native American” OR “white” OR “Asian” OR “Native Hawaiian” OR “Pacific Islander” OR
“Hispanic” OR “Hispanics” OR “Latino” OR “Latina” OR “LatinX” OR “Latinos” OR “Latinas”
OR “Blacks” OR “African Americans” OR “Alaskan Natives” OR “native Americans” OR
“whites” OR “Asians” OR “Native Hawaiians” OR “Pacific Islanders” OR “health*” OR
“medic*” OR “insurance” OR “insurances” OR “education*”) AND (“inequit*” OR “disparit*”
OR “inequal*”)) OR ((“social*” OR “sociolog*” OR “sociology*”) AND (“factor” OR “factors”
A-6
OR “trait” OR “traits” OR “attribute” OR “attributes” OR “characteristic” OR “characteristics”
OR “phenomen*”)))
AND
(MH “Survivors” OR MH “Survivorship” OR MH "Population Surveillance" OR MH "After
care" OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR ”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR “aftercare” OR
“post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR “post-treatments” OR “post treatment” OR “follow up
care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long term follow up” OR “long-term follow-up”)
Guiding Question 2 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
(MH "Neoplasms+" OR MH "Oncology+" OR MH "Oncology Care Units" OR MH "Oncologic
Nursing+" OR MH "Oncologic Care+" OR MH “Cancer Care Facilities” OR MH "National
Cancer Institute (U.S.)" OR MH "American Cancer Society" OR “antineoplastic*” OR “antineoplastic*” OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR
“tumor” OR “tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR
“carcinomas”)
AND
(MH "Child+" OR MH "Minors (Legal)" OR MH "Adolescence+"OR MH "Pediatrics+" OR
MH "Hospitals, Pediatric" OR MH "Intensive Care Units, Pediatric+" OR MH "Pediatric
Units+" OR MH "Pediatricians" OR MH "Pediatric Nursing+” OR MH "Neonatal Intensive
Care Nursing" OR MH "Intensive Care Units, Neonatal" OR MH "Intensive Care, Neonatal+"
OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“ OR “newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR
“nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR “toddler“ OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR
“child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“ OR “juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR
“youth“ OR “youths“ OR “youngster“ OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR
“boys“ OR “elementary school*” OR “grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*”
OR “preteen*“ OR “pre teen*” OR “middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high
school*” OR “pediatric*“ OR “PICU“ OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(MH “Survivors” OR MH “Survivorship” OR MH "Population Surveillance" OR MH "After
care" OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR ”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR “aftercare” OR
“post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR “post-treatments” OR “post treatment” OR “follow up
care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long term follow up” OR “long-term follow-up”)
AND
(MH "Health Services Accessibility+" OR “access to healthcare” OR “access to health care” OR
“healthcare access” OR “health care access” OR “health service access” OR “health services
access” OR “access to health service” OR “access to health services” OR “Barriers to
healthcare” OR “standard of care” OR “standards of care” OR “care standard” OR “care
standards”)
Guiding Question 4 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
(MH "Neoplasms+" OR MH "Oncology+" OR MH "Oncology Care Units" OR MH "Oncologic
Nursing+" OR MH "Oncologic Care+" OR MH “Cancer Care Facilities” OR MH "National
A-7
Cancer Institute (U.S.)" OR MH "American Cancer Society" OR “antineoplastic*” OR “antineoplastic*” OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR
“tumor” OR “tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR
“carcinomas”)
AND
(MH "Child+" OR MH "Minors (Legal)" OR MH "Adolescence+"OR MH "Pediatrics+" OR
MH "Hospitals, Pediatric" OR MH "Intensive Care Units, Pediatric+" OR MH "Pediatric
Units+" OR MH "Pediatricians" OR MH "Pediatric Nursing+” OR MH "Neonatal Intensive
Care Nursing" OR MH "Intensive Care Units, Neonatal" OR MH "Intensive Care, Neonatal+"
OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“ OR “newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR
“nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR “toddler“ OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR
“child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“ OR “juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR
“youth“ OR “youths“ OR “youngster“ OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR
“boys“ OR “elementary school*” OR “grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*”
OR “preteen*“ OR “pre teen*” OR “middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high
school*” OR “pediatric*“ OR “PICU“ OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(MH "Social Determinants of Health" OR MH "Health Status Disparities" OR MH "Healthcare
Disparities" OR “social determinants of health” OR “socioeconomic” OR “access to healthcare”
OR “Barriers to healthcare” OR ((“Black” OR “African American” OR “Alaskan Native” OR
“native American” OR “white” OR “Asian” OR “Native Hawaiian” OR “Pacific Islander” OR
“Hispanic” OR “Hispanics” OR “Latino” OR “Latina” OR “LatinX” OR “Latinos” OR “Latinas”
OR “Blacks” OR “African Americans” OR “Alaskan Natives” OR “native Americans” OR
“whites” OR “Asians” OR “Native Hawaiians” OR “Pacific Islanders” OR “health*” OR
“medic*” OR “insurance” OR “insurances” OR “education*”) AND (“inequit*” OR “disparit*”
OR “inequal*”)) OR ((“social*” OR “sociolog*” OR “sociology*”) AND (“factor” OR “factors”
OR “trait” OR “traits” OR “attribute” OR “attributes” OR “characteristic” OR “characteristics”
OR “phenomen*”)))
AND
(MH “Survivors” OR MH “Survivorship” OR MH "Population Surveillance" OR MH "After
care" OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR ”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR “aftercare” OR
“post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR “post-treatments” OR “post treatment” OR “follow up
care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long term follow up” OR “long-term follow-up”)
AND
(MH "Experimental Studies+")
PsycInfo
Guiding Question 1 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Neoplasms") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Oncology") OR “antineoplastic*” OR “anti-neoplastic*”
OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR “tumor” OR
“tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR “carcinomas”)
AND
A-8
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT("Adolescent Development") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Pediatrics") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Pediatricians") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Neonatal Intensive Care") OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“
OR “newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR “nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR
“toddler“ OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR “child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“
OR “juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR “youth“ OR “youths“ OR
“youngster“ OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR “boys“ OR “elementary
school*” OR “grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*” OR “preteen*“ OR “pre
teen*” OR “middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high school*” OR “pediatric*“
OR “PICU“ OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT("Social Discrimination") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Health Disparities") OR “social determinants of health”
OR “socioeconomic” OR “access to healthcare” OR “Barriers to healthcare” OR ((“Black” OR
“African American” OR “Alaskan Native” OR “native American” OR “white” OR “Asian” OR
“Native Hawaiian” OR “Pacific Islander” OR “Hispanic” OR “Hispanics” OR “Latino” OR
“Latina” OR “LatinX” OR “Latinos” OR “Latinas” OR “Blacks” OR “African Americans” OR
“Alaskan Natives” OR “native Americans” OR “whites” OR “Asians” OR “Native Hawaiians”
OR “Pacific Islanders” OR “health*” OR “medic*” OR “insurance” OR “insurances” OR
“education*”) AND (“inequit*” OR “disparit*” OR “inequal*”)) OR ((“social*” OR “sociolog*”
OR “sociology*”) AND (“factor” OR “factors” OR “trait” OR “traits” OR “attribute” OR
“attributes” OR “characteristic” OR “characteristics” OR “phenomen*”)))
AND
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Survivors") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Aftercare") OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR
”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR “aftercare” OR “post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR
“post-treatments” OR “post treatment” OR “follow up care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long
term follow up” OR “long-term follow-up”)
Guiding Question 2 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Neoplasms") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Oncology") OR “antineoplastic*” OR “anti-neoplastic*”
OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR “tumor” OR
“tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR “carcinomas”)
AND
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT("Adolescent Development") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Pediatrics") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Pediatricians") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Neonatal Intensive Care") OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“
OR “newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR “nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR
“toddler“ OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR “child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“
OR “juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR “youth“ OR “youths“ OR
“youngster“ OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR “boys“ OR “elementary
A-9
school*” OR “grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*” OR “preteen*“ OR “pre
teen*” OR “middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high school*” OR “pediatric*“
OR “PICU“ OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Survivors") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Aftercare") OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR
”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR “aftercare” OR “post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR
“post-treatments” OR “post treatment” OR “follow up care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long
term follow up” OR “long-term follow-up”)
AND
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Health Care Access") OR “access to healthcare” OR
“access to health care” OR “healthcare access” OR “health care access” OR “health service
access” OR “health services access” OR “access to health service” OR “access to health
services” OR “Barriers to healthcare” OR “standard of care” OR “standards of care” OR “care
standard” OR “care standards”)
Guiding Question 4 Strategy
Date: 10/8/2020
Terms:
Methodology Filters used: Clinical Trial, Clinical Case Study, Empirical Study, Experimental
Replication, Followup Study, Longitudinal Study, Prospective Study, Retrospective Study,
Nonclinical Case Study, Qualitative Study, Quantitative Study, Treatment Outcome
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Neoplasms") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Oncology") OR “antineoplastic*” OR “anti-neoplastic*”
OR “anti neoplastic*” OR “oncolog*” OR “neoplasm” OR “neoplasms” OR “tumor” OR
“tumors” OR “cancer” OR “cancers” OR “malignan*” OR “carcinoma” OR “carcinomas”)
AND
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT("Adolescent Development") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Pediatrics") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Pediatricians") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Neonatal Intensive Care") OR “neonat*“ OR “newborn“
OR “newborns“ OR “infan*“ OR “baby“ OR “babies“ OR “nursery“ OR “nurseries“ OR
“toddler“ OR “toddlers“ OR “preschool*“ OR “pre school*” OR “child*“ OR “kid“ OR “kids“
OR “juvenile“ OR “juveniles“ OR “minor“ OR “minors“ OR “youth“ OR “youths“ OR
“youngster“ OR “youngsters“ OR “girl“ OR “girls“ OR “boy“ OR “boys“ OR “elementary
school*” OR “grade school*” OR “preadolescen*“ OR “pre adolescen*” OR “preteen*“ OR “pre
teen*” OR “middle school*” OR “adolescen*“ OR “teen*“ OR “high school*” OR “pediatric*“
OR “PICU“ OR “NICU“ OR “young adult” OR “young adults”)
AND
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Survivors") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Aftercare") OR ”Survivor” OR ”survivors” OR
”survivorship” OR “surveillance” OR “aftercare” OR “post-treatment” OR “post treatment” OR
“post-treatments” OR “post treatment” OR “follow up care” OR “follow-up care” OR “Long
term follow up” OR “long-term follow-up”)
AND
A-10
(MAINSUBJECT.EXACT("Social Discrimination") OR
MAINSUBJECT.EXACT.EXPLODE("Health Disparities") OR “social determinants of health”
OR “socioeconomic” OR “access to healthcare” OR “Barriers to healthcare” OR ((“Black” OR
“African American” OR “Alaskan Native” OR “native American” OR “white” OR “Asian” OR
“Native Hawaiian” OR “Pacific Islander” OR “Hispanic” OR “Hispanics” OR “Latino” OR
“Latina” OR “LatinX” OR “Latinos” OR “Latinas” OR “Blacks” OR “African Americans” OR
“Alaskan Natives” OR “native Americans” OR “whites” OR “Asians” OR “Native Hawaiians”
OR “Pacific Islanders” OR “health*” OR “medic*” OR “insurance” OR “insurances” OR
“education*”) AND (“inequit*” OR “disparit*” OR “inequal*”)) OR ((“social*” OR “sociolog*”
OR “sociology*”) AND (“factor” OR “factors” OR “trait” OR “traits” OR “attribute” OR
“attributes” OR “characteristic” OR “characteristics” OR “phenomen*”)))
Results: 6,857
A-11
Appendix B. Excluded Studies
1. 2008 SNRS abstracts -- M. Southern
Online Journal of Nursing Research.
2008;8(4):9-. PMID: 105496452. Language:
English. Entry Date: 20090807. Revision
Date: 20150711. Publication Type: Journal
Article. Outcome
8. RESEARCH BRIEFS. P&T: A PeerReviewed Journal for Managed Care &
Formulary Management. 2018;43(11):696700. PMID: 133446789. Language: English.
Entry Date: 20181211. Revision Date:
20190715. Publication Type: Article.
Outcome
2. 2008 SNRS abstracts -- W - Z. Southern
Online Journal of Nursing Research.
2008;8(4):14-. PMID: 105496459.
Language: English. Entry Date: 20090807.
Revision Date: 20150711. Publication Type:
Journal Article. Study design
9. The global burden of childhood and
adolescent cancer in 2017: an analysis of the
Global Burden of Disease Study 2017.
Lancet Oncology. 2019;20(9):1211-25. doi:
10.1016/S1470-2045(19)30339-0. PMID:
138390099. Corporate Author: GBD 2017
Childhood Cancer Collaborators. Language:
English. Entry Date: 20200617. Revision
Date: 20200701. Publication Type: journal
article. Outcome
3. 2008 SNRS abstracts -- L. Southern
Online Journal of Nursing Research.
2008;8(4):8-. PMID: 105496451. Language:
English. Entry Date: 20090807. Revision
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Appendix C. Key Informant Interviews
Findings from the Key Informant interviews are detailed in the tables below, by Guiding Question. Discussions by individual Key
Informants are separated by the “---” line.
Table C1. Key Informant interviews for Guiding Question 1: What are the disparities in survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors?
Question
What Types of Disparities Impact Survivorship Care for
Pediatric Survivors?
Preliminary
Feedback
(included as
prompt on
slide)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
What Disparities Do You Think Are Most
Significant in Impacting Pediatric Cancer
Survivorship Care?
1. Access to care (including recommended
prevention, surveillance, and treatment), subspecialty providers, rehabilitation services
2. Transitions in care, including changes in
insurance, primary care providers (PCP), and
other health care teams that may
disproportionately impact vulnerable, low SES,
racial/ethnic minority groups
Socioeconomic status (SES)
Employment
Insurance: under/uninsured, type of insurance,
inconsistency/transitions in insurance
Access to care, rehabilitation services, green space for
physical activity/health food options
Caregiver, family, and community dynamics
Relationship to the health system, including providers
Transitions in care from pediatric to adult settings
C-1
Which Domains of
Disparities Should Be
Distinguished?
1. Medical
2. SES
3. Cultural
KI Feedback
All of these issues are intertwined and dramatically impact
survivors; parent insurance lapses at age 26 and visits/scans
could get postponed and can be very expensive if paid out of
pocket; mental health issues and social isolation are big
problems, life may never go back to “normal” and it never does.
--Even when barriers are reduced (e.g., free care, room & board,
transportation), there are still other issues that can prevent
survivorship care (e.g., other children to care for, job
requirements); this becomes even more complicated as they
transition to adult care, there is much less outreach to help them
get care; we need a better understanding of what is going on in
their personal lives that prevent care.
We are successful in keeping kids insured. However,
community-based public health insurance (state-based), can be
lacking in support. St. Jude may foster co-dependency, because
their experience at St. Jude cannot be replicated easily in other
places/communities.
--We need a better understanding of the different aspects of low
SES, it is not just education and income – there are other issues
to consider such as paid time off/sick leave; health literacy,
health finance, and insurance literacy.
--Health-related social needs/determinants (e.g., food insecurity,
housing).
--Geography, which relates to SES and insurance barriers.
--Expertise more in disparities in upfront treatment/therapy;
enormous dearth of data in survivors in children; more
disadvantaged or vulnerable populations never actually become
survivors, so overall goals need to also look at upstream barriers
to cancer treatment.
Very large dearth of data in regard to survivorship care
disparities in each of the domains: certainly, are CCS
publications – health related QOL by race/ethnicity; thinking of
insurance, underinsurance, and loss of insurance; SES is
particularly important, very few data on SES and disparities in
pediatric survivorship care.
In pediatric oncology, we have failed to include family reported
measures at baseline– don’t have access to SES of family at
diagnosis to be able to track outcomes. SES data that are
available are cross-sectional at time of CCSS cohort enrollment
C-2
Knowledge of providers (or home community);
access and coverage in the health care plan; feel
that pediatric guidelines are lacking data and
dissemination for what is available; opportunities to
partner w/ NCCN/ASCO may be helpful
--Mentioned the COG guidelines but acknowledged
that end-users do not necessarily have high
utilization; however, evidence supporting the
beneficial impact of screening is limited.
--We need to reach/educate adult primary care
providers; but has had challenges
dissemination/publishing in adult/primary care
journals.
--Sometimes the patient has to work on “bridging the
gap” with their PCPs.
--SES is likely to be one of the more important
exposures driving disparities in survivorship care –
research is sorely needed
SES (by multiple measures) is a main driver of
these access disparities
How SES interfaces with access to care – think of
this at the patient/family level– are they available
and understandable by the family–
language/literacy; risk/benefit analyses to get to
these appointments/access care with all the
resources needed to get to an appointment
(childcare, time off work, food insecurity, etc.)
Age related barriers (parent bringing a 5-year-old,
versus 20-year-old)
Regional availability: Are they even there? Does
insurance cover it?
No further discussion.
Question
What Types of Disparities Impact Survivorship Care for
Pediatric Survivors?
What Disparities Do You Think Are Most
Significant in Impacting Pediatric Cancer
Survivorship Care?
Which Domains of
Disparities Should Be
Distinguished?
and not necessarily at time of diagnosis, which would be
important to know.
There is data on number of subspecialty providers based on
distance and correlated to adherence to survivorship guidelines.
Not robust data on caregiver, family and community dynamics;
transitions, large drop off cliff when get to adult providers, lots of
data out there.
--Health care system; pediatric cancer survivors have had majority
of care in academic medical centers (AMC), and very little
(versus young/older adults) in community setting/private practice.
Thus, the system itself is an ameliorating factor. Place of initial
treatment makes a difference because survivorship care is more
likely at major centers. Place of treatment is a source of
disparity. Where do they get survivorship care? Do the pediatric
providers do this? What happens as the survivor ages (is
adulthood at 18 or 21)? Where do they go for care at older
ages? Issues related to access to care across the cancer care
continuum matters (e.g., insurance). SES challenges in the
family also matter (can the family prioritize survivorship care?),
employment status, insurance coverage, etc.
Table C2. Key Informant interviews for Guiding Question 2: What are the barriers to survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors who
experience disparities?
Question
What Are the Most Influential Barriers to Pediatric Cancer Survivorship
Care?
How Do Those Barriers Change as CCS Transition From Pediatric to Adult
Survivorship Care?
Survey Monkey
feedback (included
as prompt on slide)
1.
2.
3.
4.
Lack of awareness of community providers and survivors.
Lack of reimbursement for survivorship care, particularly care that
addresses psychosocial needs.
Loss of psychosocial support more routinely provided in pediatric centers,
particularly with care coordination of medically complex patients.
Access to care (insurance, geographic, employment-based insurance)
changes during this transition, responsibility shifts from parent/family to
self, shifts in care teams from pediatric to adult medicine providers.
C-3
How Do Barriers to Survivorship Care Vary by Subgroups of
Pediatric Cancer Survivors?
How Do Barriers Affecting Specific Subgroups Change Over
Time, Specifically as They Transition From Pediatric to Adult
Care?
1. Particularly vulnerable subgroups include those with (or at high
risk for) for multimorbidity; may have more difficulty replicating
quality of comprehensive multidisciplinary care provided at a
pediatric center.
2. Relationship/familiarity and trust with pediatric providers may
not exist with adult providers.
3. Access to adult medicine providers may shift due to
employment and SES status of the individual.
Question
What Are the Most Influential Barriers to Pediatric Cancer Survivorship
Care?
How Do Those Barriers Change as CCS Transition From Pediatric to Adult
Survivorship Care?
KI Feedback
Low prevalence in the general population. One experience with 1 patient, will
not inform the clinician about the next cancer survivor. Another complicating
issue is the age range of the survivor. As a young adult, it is difficult to selfadvocate in a complicated system, with intermittent care. Some young adults
don’t care or prioritize this.
--In pediatric settings, there are usually easier access to specialists and
integrative care is easier. Otherwise, PCPs have to negotiate access. Care for
medical conditions is easier than care for mental health issues.
--Most influential barriers – complex and multifactorial – reimbursement and
vulnerable patients (less likely to adhere to care/guidelines) – if no
reimbursement and a provider is pressed for time- could drive disparities.
--Health system itself probably the biggest barrier; during treatment, pediatric
patients are well-taken care of and “overprotected” by our system and this goes
away when therapy is completed.
Transition to adulthood with PC where they can be followed long term is key;
PCPs need to be on the forefront of this, but they face huge challenges (e.g.,
system-limiting factors and resources).
Anything beyond surveillance is difficult, especially for more complex cases –
the system may limit where these patients are seen for follow-up care; but, is
this what is best for the patient? This care may be highly fragmented.
Vulnerable groups in 2 buckets – 1) those that have barriers from SES or
educational level (biggest barrier are SES related) and 2) patients really
complex needs and need multidisciplinary care (biggest barrier is our health
care system).
C-4
How Do Barriers to Survivorship Care Vary by Subgroups of
Pediatric Cancer Survivors?
How Do Barriers Affecting Specific Subgroups Change Over
Time, Specifically as They Transition From Pediatric to Adult
Care?
Those in rural areas. It is a big deal for them to enter a city.
Insurance may not matter as much because a provider may not be
in their area.
--Broader issue than access to adult medicine providers that could
shift due to employment and SES – subgroups w/ certain types of
jobs that don’t offer insurance or paid sick leave may be particularly
disadvantaged; health insurance coverage and sick leave through
an employer will make a difference.
--People with neurocognitive issues. Those with significant disability
may have more support than those with “mild” disabilities (who are
more “on their own”)
--Underlying, these vulnerable populations could already have
disadvantages- these are magnified when the transition happens.
Lower SES population (more likely to be racial/ethnic minorities),
underemployed, underinsured, lack of resources, cost shifting from
day to day fires (food, electricity, etc.). Survivors will age out of
public insurance programs.
Trust – different depending on the setting – new cancer versus
surveillance later.
Language – if family is not English speaking or uncomfortable health
literacy, then can be an enormous barrier – you may not understand
the guidelines.
Things that may enhance survivorship care – not familiar with data,
but anecdotally – family or patient resilience – warrants examination.
Table C3. Key Informant interview for Guiding Question 3: What are proposed strategies for addressing those barriers?
Question
What Strategies To Address Barriers to
Survivorship Care That Lead to Disparities Are
Most Promising?
Preliminary
Feedback
(included as
prompt on
slide)
1.
2.
3.
4.
Development and dissemination of health
surveillance recommendations have helped link
survivors to resources and address unmet needs
Policy changes aimed at reducing barriers to
accessing preventive services and eliminating
pre-existing clauses to care has been important
Policy changes are also needed to properly
reimburse clinicians for comprehensive care
coordination
For cancer survivorship care in general,
incorporating primary care and multidisciplinary
care teams will be important moving forward
Do Those Strategies Need To Be
Implemented Using Different
Approaches for Subgroups of
Survivors?
1. More medically or psychosocially
complex survivors benefit the most
from care coordination by dedicated
staff.
A. Risk-stratification of care is
essential; depending on cancer
type, age at diagnosis, etc.
C-5
Which Professional Bodies Have Proposed
Strategies?
1.
2.
Children’s Oncology Group
American Society of Clinical Oncology
KI Feedback
Eliminating preexisting conditions clauses helped
reduced barriers, yes, but there are many others – in
states that did not expand Medicaid, challenges are
likely significant – would suggest expanding
--Think about what CCS have in common with other
children w/ illnesses to leverage broader platform; if
there are issues that are common among other
groups, if you could expand the base, could raise the
prominence of the issue
--Policy level - Under or un-insurance
Policies that have improved insurance at at-risk
populations (for example, the Patient Protection and
Afforable Care Act) – potentially have an impact to
access the care recommended
Not familiar with policy changes around
reimbursement
Having a comprehensive document that summarizes
their cancer care and recommended guidelines, can
increase adherence among PCPs
These are available, but rarely ever studied
It is expensive to take care of late effects – can be
many years/decades – an intervention that helps
insurance companies see that it is cost effective and
provide the guidelines for insurance companies to
follow
--It has to go past what you have in “A”. It is important to
have follow-up guidelines for providers. It is easy to
follow guidelines at major health centers. However,
the majority of survivors will not be seen at specialty
centers. PCPs will not easily use these guidelines
(e.g., does the PCP have the resources to carry them
out? If they discover an issue, does the PCP and/or
patient have the resources to follow through?).
A risk-adapted follow-up plan can be undermined by
the system (e.g., care is essential, but
resources/reimbursement are inadequate; capitated
payment for PC is a disincentive for
adequate/expensive survivorship care). Without the
following policy changes, there won’t be enough
resources:
1. Insurance coverage of survivorship care
Maybe “strategies to address barriers”
for children w/ chronic conditions could
help raise prominence for pediatric
providers
--Not robust data on what disparities exist
to begin with – hard to talk about
implementing strategies
There needs to be more robust
examination of disparities and at a
certain time continuum – this needs to be
defined first
Comprehensive survivorship care –
survivorship clinic versus adhering to
survivorship guidelines and how that
changes over time and how it varies over
age group (child versus young adult)
For example, you demonstrate that CCS
from low income homes or material
hardship are less likely to adhere – the
reason why – (time off work versus
childcare) – then that could be tackled.
--Risk-stratification is essential; guidelines
are written by exposure, disease site,
and age; but, how do you take this
information and best use/implement this
in a health system? We need to create
risk buckets (e.g., low, intermediate,
high), and then develop models of care
based on those buckets. To treat all
survivors as one is not realistic.
Consider adding access to care,
comorbidities, SES, social determinants
of health, etc. to the risk stratification
criteria using technology; potentially in
existing cohorts (there was a recent NCI
supplement focused on this). The CCSS
is a limited cohort for this type of work,
because other institutions do not have
the same resources.
Once developed, this algorithm can
provide a better risk assessment that can
facilitate the creation of more accurate
C-6
COG – has made a significant effort to make
sure each CCS has a treatment summary and
guidelines for surveillance/management.
Regarding strategies for more nuanced barriers
(language, income, insurance) – not familiar with
that from COG or ASCO.
Question
What Strategies To Address Barriers to
Survivorship Care That Lead to Disparities Are
Most Promising?
2.
Reimbursement for risk-stratified survivorship
care
3. Provide opportunities for the
uninsured/underinsured via surveillance (e.g.,
adequate reimbursement and resources at
safety net clinics).
The answer cannot be survivorship clinics at all
pediatric hospitals. At AMCs, oncologists can see
adult survivors of pediatric cancers, but most
institutions do not have the funds to do this. Even in
the best of circumstances, the survivor needs to still
walk in the door, and have insurance that covers their
survivorship care.
Do Those Strategies Need To Be
Implemented Using Different
Approaches for Subgroups of
Survivors?
guidelines which can then reduce
disparities between survivors.
We should do a better job of measuring
financial toxicity; if done more
systematically, the algorithm may do a
better job of identifying risk.
We can’t define a perfect system that is
not attainable.
Which Professional Bodies Have Proposed
Strategies?
Table C4. Key Informant interviews for Guiding Question 4: What published and unpublished studies have assessed these strategies?
Question
How Effective Are Strategies That You Are Familiar With?
Survey Monkey
feedback (included
as prompt on slide)
1.
KI Feedback
There has been a lot of research, but not as much on
current/conventional risk factors (racial/ethnic minorities, low
SES); our US (and cancer) population is more heterogeneous
now than US (and cancer) population 20-30 years ago.
--We suffer from an absence of detailed information; prospective
data is rare; CCS treated outside of large pediatric centers is
unknown, we know much less about those who are not enrolled
in survivorship cohorts (or not in care), particularly rural
survivors; this is exacerbated by the relative rarity of the disease.
--Some in the adult oncology literature that has talked about risk
stratification, but not been in practice; UK guidelines are the
furthest along (then Australia); but no systematic reviews on
whether risk stratification works or doesn’t work, but there is
evidence that adherence facilitates early detection.
Limited, high-level evidence of effectiveness of the
strategies used by COG (e.g., does adherence to guideline
recommended health surveillance reduce mortality/improve
quality of life; most definitely, there is evidence that
adherence facilitates early detection)
C-7
What Confounding Factors Pose a Challenge to Interpreting
Research and Evaluation Studies?
1. Relative rarity of pediatric cancer
2. Heterogeneous cancer subtypes and treatment (that keeps
evolving)
3. Very delayed onset of health events in relation to treatment
4. Need for collaboration to have meaningful numbers in
cohorts to address confounders of outcomes
These 4 are the 4 biggest. One of the greatest challenges.
Almost impossible to comprehensively study this.
--Additional issue – simply lack data (or lack of access to this data)
to appropriately do these analyses. We don’t have data on
SES/health literacy/culture/financial literacy/language at time of
treatment.
--Who is going to fund a study that will look these issues? (due to
low power, and length of time needed). Anything outside of the
CCSS is commonly deemed as redundant, but other cohorts
(looking at different issues) should be funded. This would be
expensive, but there may be benefits if the different cohorts have
some overlap.
Table C5. Key Informant interviews for Guiding Question 5: What are future directions for research in addressing barriers to
survivorship care for pediatric cancer survivors?
Question
Preliminary
Feedback
(included as
prompt on
slide)
What Are the Most Important Gaps in
Our Current Knowledge of Disparities
and Barriers to Survivorship Care, and
How Would You Recommend Filling
Those?
1. How to address information needs of
community clinicians (at point of care)
to expedite quality survivorship care
2. How to educate/empower survivors to
self-advocate for care
3. How to address the need for
development of easily accessible
resources (app or in EMR)
How Can Future Research Be
Designed To Minimize the
Confounding Factors Influencing
Barriers, and Ultimately, Disparities?
Are You Aware of Any Important Ongoing
Studies Addressing Disparities or Barriers
in Pediatric Survivorship Care?
1.
1.
2.
3.
Data sharing and collaboration
across institutions and nations is
important to assure diversity of
population and characterize needs
of clinically heterogeneous
survivors
C-8
Medical
SES
Cultural
KI Feedback
Some CCS don’t even realize that you can
apply for disability; connecting people to
resources to help survivors advocate for
their care/other needs is important.
--Identifying the “healthcare neighborhood”
will be important for survivors and what are
the POC-related to those neighborhoods;
are there teams in these neighborhoods;
need to understand who is involved in
transitions in care.
--How to define SES – we don’t know what
the right social determinants are. Kira’s bias
is to utilize measurements that are
amenable to INTERVENTION. So, we can
take the next step. For example, use zip
code to link to poverty level – not a highly
impactful measure because can’t change.
However, primary language would be a
possible one – providing
materials/education in a patient’s primary
language.
Another is Health literacy – providing
materials in a way patients and families can
understand.
Income perspective – parent reported
income is important – because state and
federal programs may be available
Concrete materials screen – food insecurity
measuring (2-point question screener)
Having a 1-page social determinants of
health screener – available and validated in
adults, could be utilized for pediatric
patients – could be a starting point.
--Answer has to be in technology. We have to
focus on technological answers that can
facilitate the survivor, oncologist and PCP.
Community clinicians are extremely busy
and don’t have the ability to do the
survivorship care plan. Educating and
empowering survivors is great, but if there
isn’t someone on the provider end with
Setting is important and variable; some
orgs, like St. Jude, is integrative
whereas other are more treatment
focused and less dedicated to
survivorship; one size does not fit all
settings – those with limited treatments,
have limited risks (brain survivors have
higher needs and related services); our
healthcare systems need to be flexible
to the variable needs of CCS.
--Lack of a data commons that we can all
submit to – this is a big barrier to
advancing the science. Getting access
to data is a year-long process – can
delay moving care delivery forward.
Less access to robust research or
consortiums among providers that are at
smaller/less-connected centers
Not aware of multi center interventions
Studies are single institution.
C-9
Most studies are just describing the disparities,
not addressing them.
--US healthcare is different, but how do
survivorship outcomes differ with other
countries.
--UK has established levels of care that
determine the provider type survivor will see;
other groups are increasingly using riskstratification for care, but most have access to
PSP; Study looking at Passport through
Pancare (giving survivorship care plan). Most
other countries are struggling with transitioning
from oncology to primary/community care,
similar to the US; but access to care is more
difficult in the US.
--Perhaps telehealth can provide better care,
utilizing experts remotely, possibly using
pandemic to help push this forward?
--Provider survey on pandemic services is being
implemented. Could there be Centers of
Excellence that provide services to anyone
remotely? This can improve care more broadly
that can be universally disseminated.
--Agree that this is a great idea, especially to help
w/ barriers related to transportation for those
living in a rural area; thinking about how we can
take advantage of some of the positive
outcomes of the pandemic
--Many of the telehealth rules are still evolving,
know that there is a desire to maintain
telehealth especially for those w/ chronic
conditions to maintain access, but there’s also
awareness that these types of visits could be
abused or fraudulent; questions about
reimbursement for telehealth (figuring out
whether these visits really are commensurate is
needed); this wide-spread adoption has been
great, but need to figure out the best practices
and incentives for telehealth use; Center of
Question
What Are the Most Important Gaps in
Our Current Knowledge of Disparities
and Barriers to Survivorship Care, and
How Would You Recommend Filling
Those?
adequate resources, then it can be
incredibly frustrating.
App or EMR – can this help and provide a
solution; technology, using risk stratification
to create an automated survivorship care
plan using low, intermediate, and high-risk
buckets and recommending and facilitating
the appropriate model of care is best; this
could all be followed using apps and
dashboards. For example, low risk patients
may be seen using telehealth (direct to
patient to remove barriers to care); high risk
seen by specialist + PCP; COVID is
increasing telehealth direct to patient and
this can be an essential strategy going
forward.
How Can Future Research Be
Designed To Minimize the
Confounding Factors Influencing
Barriers, and Ultimately, Disparities?
Are You Aware of Any Important Ongoing
Studies Addressing Disparities or Barriers
in Pediatric Survivorship Care?
Excellence (COE) type model can provide
access to the needed expertise but issue of
referral to that program is a problem, from the
health plan side, COEs are used to only allow
care at one of these types of centers, which
could create a barrier – it’s a balance of
suggesting the use of COE but using when
necessary – need clear guidelines of when
survivorship care should only be done at COE
--Grant recently proposed was not funded;
reviewers thought it was not a problem. We do
have a pilot with rural providers for survivorship
care using telehealth; this is an IMPORTANT
area and an RFA on this would be ideal. Some
RFAs exclude pediatric survivors. The CCSS is
amazing, but there is too much emphasis on
this resource (versus other work focused on
disparities/barriers). We do have
barriers/disparities that funders/reviewers do
not appreciate. Survivorship is NOT the same
as pediatric cancer treatment.
C-10
Appendix D. Evidence Tables
Table D1. Guiding Question 1: Disparities in care
Author, Year
Country
Related Publications
Proportion of CCS
Disparities Analyzed
Cancer Origin
Study Name/Trial ID
Barakat, 201218
USA
Racial/ethnic minorities, Underserved or rural populations, Sex (biological),
Insurance (under/uninsured, type of insurance coverage, churns/transitions in
coverage)
Sex (biological), Insurance (under/uninsured, type of insurance coverage,
churns/transitions in coverage)
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
N/A
Berg, 201620
USA
N/A
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Berkman, 201921
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
N/A
Casillas, 201132
USA
Brain/CNS
Proportion of CCS: 50% or more
LIVESTRONG
Survivorship Center of
Excellence Network
Crom, 200747
N/A
de Fine Licht, 201750
Adult Life after Childhood
Cancer in Scandinavia
(ALiCCS)
Gardner, 201468
USA
Holmes,
USA
Multiple
countries
USA
Racial/ethnic minorities, Underserved or rural populations,Insurance
(under/uninsured, type of insurance coverage, churns/transitions in coverage)
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Sex (biological), Other: age at hospitalization, age at cancer diagnosis, type
of cancer diagnosis, country (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, or Sweden)
Multiple cancer origin
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Racial/ethnic minorities, Sex (biological), Insurance (under/uninsured, type of
insurance coverage, churns/transitions in coverage), Other: Age at diagnosis,
age at study, time since treatment completion
Sex (biological)
UK
Multiple cancer origin
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Income, Education
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
N/A
Johnson, 200485
N/A
Racial/ethnic minorities, Income, Underserved or rural populations, Sex
(biological), Employment, Insurance (under/uninsured, type of insurance
coverage, churns/transitions in coverage), Other: Age, marital status
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
N/A
198676
Racial/ethnic minorities
Multiple cancer origin
Klosky, 200896; Hudson,
200279
After Completion of
Therapy (ACT) Clinic
Daly, 201948
Racial/ethnic minorities, Insurance (under/uninsured, type of insurance
coverage, churns/transitions in coverage)
Multiple cancer origin
D-1
Author, Year
Country
Related Publications
Proportion of CCS
Disparities Analyzed
Cancer Origin
Study Name/Trial ID
Kazak, 199991
USA
Alderfer, 200913; Kazak,
200490
Multiple cancer origin
Surviving Cancer
Competently Intervention
Program (SCCIP)
May, 2017110
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
N/A
McBride, 2011111
Canada
Multiple cancer origin
Proportion of CCS: 100%
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
N/A
Michel, 2011116
Switzerland
Multiple cancer origin
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Michel, 2016114; Lupatsch,
2016105; Gianinazzi,
201470; University of Bern,
200722; Vetsch, 2016166;
Michel, 2017115
2018118;
Miller,
Miller,
2017119; Cousineau,
201946; Slaughter,
2020153; Tobin, 2020161;
Sleight, 2019155;
Slaughter, 2020154
Racial/ethnic minorities, Insurance (under/uninsured, type of insurance
coverage, churns/transitions in coverage)
Income, Underserved or rural populations, Sex (biological)
Multiple cancer origin
Childhood, Adolescent,
and Young Adult Cancer
Survivors (CAYACS)
Research Program
Mendoza, 2018113
Swiss Childhood Cancer
Survivor Study
Milam, 2015117
Other: Poor family functioning as measured by Family Assessment Device
scale
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Income
Underserved or rural populations, Sex (biological), Education, Employment,
Other: Treatment reported late effects, age at study, parental education;
cultural background (migration background and language region), diagnosis,
treatment, type of treating hospital, relapse, parent-reported late effects,
parent's age at study, child's age at study, time since diagnosis
Multiple cancer origin
USA
Racial/ethnic minorities, Income, Underserved or rural populations, Sex
(biological), Education, Insurance (under/uninsured, type of insurance
coverage, churns/transitions in coverage), Other: Prior survivorship care,
higher treatment intensity, younger age at survey; parents' age, cancer
treatment hospital site, treatment intensity; receipt of survivorship care in
prior two years, treatment intensity, current age; Mobility
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Project Forward 1
D-2
Author, Year
Country
Related Publications
Proportion of CCS
Disparities Analyzed
Cancer Origin
Study Name/Trial ID
Nathan, 2016123
Canada
Marr, 2017108
Pediatric Oncology Group
of Ontario Networked
Information System
Oeffinger, 2004127
Kirchhoff, 201393; Casillas,
201533; Nathan, 2008122;
Caplin, 201728; Casillas,
201129; Castellino, 200536;
Geller, 201969; Kaste,
200989; Kirchhoff, 201895;
Nipp, 2017125; Recklitis,
2010135; Yeazel, 2004171;
Ford, 202065; Park,
2017131; Smith, 2010156;
Park, 2012132; Krull,
201198; Nathan, 2010124;
Kadan-Lottick, 200287;
Kurt, 2012101
Childhood Cancer
Survivor Study
Ojha, 2014130
Behavioral Risk Factor
Surveillance System
Reppucci, 2017136
SuRFF Program at the
Cohen Children’s Medical
Center of New York
Streefkerk, 2019157
DCOG-LATER
Income, Underserved or rural populations, Sex (biological), Other: Age at
diagnosis, year of diagnosis, treatment intensity, radiation, prior recurrence
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Multiple
countries
Proportion of CCS: 100%
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Racial/ethnic minorities, Income, Underserved or rural populations, Sex
(biological), Education, Employment, Insurance (under/uninsured, type of
insurance coverage, churns/transitions in coverage), Other: Current age;
severe, disabling, or life-threatening chronic condition; presence of
neurocognitive problems and antidepressant use; cancer diagnosis; marital
status, receipt of a survivorship care plan, survivorship care in prior two
years, written treatment summary, and those in chronic pain
Multiple cancer origin
Racial/ethnic minorities, Sex (biological), Insurance (under/uninsured, type of
insurance coverage, churns/transitions in coverage)
Multiple cancer origin
USA
Other: Current age
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Netherlands
Sex (biological), Other: Age at diagnosis, decade of diagnosis, diagnosis,
treatment modality, stem cell transplant, comorbid conditions
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
D-3
Author, Year
Country
Related Publications
Proportion of CCS
Disparities Analyzed
Cancer Origin
Study Name/Trial ID
Sutradhar, 2015158
Pediatric Oncology Group
of Ontario Networked
Information System
(POGONIS)
Szalda, 2016160
Szalda,
Canada
Multiple cancer origin
USA
2017159
Multiple cancer origin
UK
Proportion of CCS: 100%
N/A
Welch, 2017169
USA
Multiple cancer origin
Proportion of CCS: 100%
N/A
Insurance (under/uninsured, type of insurance coverage, churns/transitions in
coverage)
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Cancer Survivorship
Program at Children’s
Hospital of Philadelphia
van Laar, 2013164
Consortium for New
England Childhood
Cancer Survivors
Zheng, 2016172
Underserved or rural populations, Other: Diagnosis, age at diagnosis,
treatment with radiation, treatment intensity (ITR, Cyclophosphamideequivalent dose, Doxorubicin-equivalent dose), continuity of care, annual
physical examination
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Sex (biological), Other: Age
Insurance (under/uninsured, type of insurance coverage, churns/transitions in
coverage),Other: Age (adult at follow-up); enrolled on a clinical trial; type of
leukemia
Leukemia
USA
Racial/ethnic minorities, Income, Sex (biological), Insurance
(under/uninsured, type of insurance coverage, churns/transitions in
coverage), Other: Diagnosis, treatment, enrolled on a clinical trial, relapsed
disease, travel time to hospital
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
D-4
Table D2. Guiding Question 2: Barriers to care
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Ahn, 201712
Korean Childhood Cancer
Survivors
Korea
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient
Category: Patient/Provider knowledge, Health literacy, Other: Age
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Cultural, language, and
literacy factors
Aziz, 200617
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: NR
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient, Provider, Health system
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Insurance
coverage
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Geographic or transportation factors, local availability of services;
Insurance coverage/reimbursement; Other: Lack of institutional
value, capacity for care, difficulty in communication with
community physicians, and survivor-driven barriers
Berg, 201620
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Insurance coverage, Health literacy
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Financial or
employment resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or
coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Patient autonomy; Trust in
providers/medical community
Berkman, 201921
N/A
USA
Analytic study
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Brain/CNS
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Insurance coverage
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Financial or
employment resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or
coinsurance, time off work, childcare)
Casillas, 201031
N/A
USA
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient
Category: Patient/Provider knowledge, Cultural, Health literacy,
Other: cancer experience as traumatic for family, don't want to
think about late effects, stigma of cancer
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Cultural,
language, and literacy factors
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-5
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Casillas, 201132
LIVESTRONG
Survivorship Center of
Excellence Network
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 50% or more
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient, Provider
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Knowledge of need for life-long survivorship
care; Trust in providers/medical community; Other: health care
self-efficacy
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Geographic or
transportation factors, local availability of services
Cherven, 201438
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient
Category: Patient/Provider knowledge, Health literacy, Other:
Parents' education level
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care
Crom, 200747
Klosky, 200896; Hudson,
200279
After Completion of
Therapy (ACT) Clinic
USA
Analytic study
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Insurance
coverage, Other: Employment Status
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Financial or
employment resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or
coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Other: Acuity of
survivorship visit; social work consult also scheduled
de Moor, 200751
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Provider, Health system
Category: Access to care, Other: Health system characteristics
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Geographic or transportation factors, local availability of services;
Other: Staffing and time constraints to offer smoking cessation
services
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-6
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
DiNofia, 201757
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment
Category: Cultural, Other: parent perspective
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Financial or employment
resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or coinsurance, time
off work, childcare); Patient autonomy; Trust in providers/medical
community; Other: flexible scheduling, include parents, availability
and access to a variety of providers (e.g., mental health), access
to primary care physician, access to vocational training, survivor
feeling ready to transition, parent feeling ready to transition,
gradual introduction of transition
Eshelman-Kent, 201163
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient, Provider, Health system
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Financial or employment
resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or coinsurance, time
off work, childcare); Trust in providers/medical community
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Geographic or transportation factors, local availability of services;
Insurance coverage/reimbursement; Knowledge or comfort in
ability to provide survivorship care; Other: Conflict between COG
recommendations for risk-based care and adult provider
recommendations; perceived lack of interest in caring for
survivors from adult health care providers
Frederick, 201766
N/A
USA
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Patient autonomy; Trust in
providers/medical community; Other: Education preferences,
family role in transition, survivor expectation of providers, and
knowledge deficits
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-7
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Frobisher, 200867
British Childhood Cancer
Survivorship Study
UK
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Other: Employment,
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Financial or
employment resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or
coinsurance, time off work, childcare)
Gardner, 201468
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Insurance
coverage
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Financial or
employment resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or
coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Other: Use of prescription
medication, have a primary care provider, see primary care
provider less than once per year, count of the number of barriers
to psychosocial support services, personal preference of provider
type and social norm (mental health professional, pastor, support
group)
Granek, 201272
N/A
Canada
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Other:
Identification with being a cancer survivor (cancer identity, cancer
a thing of the past); emotional components (fear and anxiety,
gratitude/having perspective)
Hays, 199273
N/A
USA
Survey, Analytic study
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Payer
Category: Insurance coverage
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Insurance
coverage/reimbursement
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-8
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Henderson, 201074
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: NR
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Provider
Category: Patient/Provider knowledge
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Geographic or
transportation factors, local availability of services; Knowledge or
comfort in ability to provide survivorship care; Other: Familiarity
with available guidelines, years of practice, number of patients
seen per week, prior training in the care of childhood cancer
survivors, practice location, available long-term follow-up clinic,
routine referral of survivors to other physicians, and indicators of
whether they were very comfortable (e.g., Likert score of 5 or
higher) with survivors 21 years, older than 21 years but less than
30 years, and 30 years
Holmes, 198676
N/A
USA
Survey, Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Insurance coverage, Other: Life insurance
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Other: Ability
to get needed coverage
Howard, 201877
N/A
Canada
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient, Health system
Category: Access to care
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Trust in
providers/medical community
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Geographic or transportation factors, local availability of services;
Transition from pediatric to adult care; Knowledge or comfort in
ability to provide survivorship care
Iwai, 201782
N/A
Japan
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Other:
Financial concerns, employment issues
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Financial or
employment resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or
coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Patient autonomy; Cultural,
language, and literacy factors; Trust in providers/medical
community
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-9
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Iyer, 201783
N/A
USA
Survey, Interview
Proportion of CCS: 50% or more
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Provider
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Transition from
pediatric to adult care; Knowledge or comfort in ability to provide
survivorship care; Other: Unsure of which provider is responsible
for which late effects/comorbid conditions
Jereb, 200084
N/A
Slovenia
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient, Provider
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Other: Reluctance to give up on their patients
Keats, 201992
N/A
Canada
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient, Provider
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Patient
autonomy; Trust in providers/medical community; Other:
Perceived lack of sharing of medical information among providers
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Knowledge or comfort in ability to provide survivorship care
Kirchhoff, 201494
N/A
USA
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Insurance
coverage, Health literacy
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Knowledge of need for life-long survivorship
care; Financial or employment resources (e.g., money to spend
on co-pays or coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Trust in
providers/medical community; Other: Current primary health-care
experiences (provider recently moved, provider retired/relocated);
cancer-related communication with primary care providers (limited
to no communication with primary care providers); Knowledge and
impressions about survivorship care (care plans need to include
longitudinal detailed plans about where to go for specific types of
health care needs and where they can go that accepts their
insurance and tells them how much the care will cost)
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-10
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Knighting, 202097
N/A
UK
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Financial or employment
resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or coinsurance, time
off work, childcare); Patient autonomy; Cultural, language, and
literacy factors; Trust in providers/medical community
Kuhlthau, 201699
National Health Interview
Survey
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Financial or
employment resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or
coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Other: Delayed medical
care; forgone medical care
Li, 1976104
N/A
USA
Survey, Analytic study
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Provider
Category: Access to care, Insurance coverage
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Transition from
pediatric to adult care, Knowledge or comfort in ability to provide
survivorship care
Maeda, 2010106
N/A
Japan
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 50% or more
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Health
literacy
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Knowledge of need for life-long survivorship
care; Financial or employment resources (e.g., money to spend
on co-pays or coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Cultural,
language, and literacy factors
Mendoza, 2018113
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Health system
Category: Access to care, Insurance coverage
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Insurance
coverage/reimbursement
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-11
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Michel, 2011116
Michel, 2016114; Lupatsch,
2016105; Gianinazzi,
201470; University of Bern,
200722; Vetsch, 2016166;
Michel, 2017115
Swiss Childhood Cancer
Survivor Study
Switzerland
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient, Provider
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Cultural,
Health literacy
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Other: Distressed versus nondistressed survivors; Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ)
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Geographic or transportation factors, local availability of services;
Transition from pediatric to adult care; Insurance
coverage/reimbursement; Knowledge or comfort in ability to
provide survivorship care
Milam, 2015117
Miller, 2018118; Miller,
2017119; Cousineau,
201946; Slaughter,
2020153; Tobin, 2020161;
Sleight, 2019155;
Slaughter, 2020154
Project Forward 1
USA
Survey, Analytic study
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Cultural,
Insurance coverage
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Knowledge of need for life-long survivorship
care,Financial or employment resources (e.g., money to spend on
co-pays or coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Patient
autonomy; Cultural, language, and literacy factors; Other: Higher
health care self-efficacy (being uninsured was financial driver);
parents' mental health/psychosocial status
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-12
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Mouw, 2017120
N/A
USA
Interview
Proportion of CCS: NR
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient, Provider, Health system, Payer
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Cultural,
Insurance coverage, Health literacy
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Financial or employment
resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or coinsurance, time
off work, childcare); Patient autonomy; Cultural, language, and
literacy factors
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Geographic or transportation factors, local availability of services;
Transition from pediatric to adult care; Insurance
coverage/reimbursement; Knowledge or comfort in ability to
provide survivorship care; In-network providers; Other: Providerdriven patient education; adequate funding to support survivorship
clinic activities
Novakovic, 1997126
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 50% or more
Bone cancer
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Insurance coverage
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Financial or
employment resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or
coinsurance, time off work, childcare)
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-13
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Oeffinger, 2004127
Kirchhoff, 201393; Casillas,
201533; Nathan, 2008122;
Caplin, 201728; Casillas,
201129; Castellino, 200536;
Geller, 201969; Kaste,
200989; Kirchhoff, 201895;
Nipp, 2017125; Recklitis,
2010135; Yeazel, 2004171;
Ford, 202065; Park,
2017131; Smith, 2010156;
Park, 2012132; Krull,
201198; Nathan, 2010124;
Kadan-Lottick, 200287;
Kurt, 2012101
CCSS
Multiple countries
Survey, Interview,
Analytic study
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient, Provider,
Health system, Payer
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Cultural,
Insurance coverage, Health literacy, Other: Late effects; financial
hardship (medical, psychosocial, and behavioral)
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Knowledge of need for life-long survivorship
care; Financial or employment resources (e.g., money to spend
on co-pays or coinsurance, time off work, childcare); Patient
autonomy; Cultural, language, and literacy factors; Trust in
providers/medical community; Other: Prepared list of concerns for
routine care visit, asked about screening during visit, heard about
ABCDE rule for melanoma
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Geographic or transportation factors, local availability of services;
Insurance coverage/reimbursement; In-network providers
Quillen, 2017133
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Financial or employment
resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or coinsurance, time
off work, childcare); Trust in providers/medical community
Rosenberg-Yunger,
2013139
N/A
Canada
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Health
literacy
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Knowledge of need for life-long survivorship
care; Trust in providers/medical community
Sadak, 2012140
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient, Payer
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Insurance
coverage, Health literacy
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Patient autonomy
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Transition from
pediatric to adult care; Insurance coverage/reimbursement
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-14
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Sadak, 2017142
N/A
USA
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin, Other: focused
on providers not CCS
Level: Patient, Provider
Category: Patient/Provider knowledge, Insurance coverage
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Transition from
pediatric to adult care
Sadak, 2019143
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: Unclear
Other: Focused on facilities, not
individual CCS
Level: Health system
Category: Other: Size of the transition program
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Geographic or
transportation factors, local availability of services; Transition from
pediatric to adult care
Sadak, 2020141
N/A
USA
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Knowledge of the need for life-long survivorship
care; Financial or employment resources; Patient autonomy;
Cultural, language, and literacy factors; Trust in providers/medical
community; Other: Transition practices should be flexible and
individually tailored (optimal age to transition must be flexible);
effective communication is critical to a successful transition;
survivors desire continuity during the transition (reliable transfer of
medical information to new providers is key, consistent provider(s)
during the transition is helpful); comprehensive care means care
that also addresses psychosocial wellbeing (educational
messages on health insurance are timely and very much needed,
support during life transitions is a necessary component of
psychosocial support)
Sherman, 2004147
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Health system
Category: Access to care
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist)
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-15
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Sima, 2014150
N/A
USA
Survey
Proportion of CCS: NR
Other: provider-focused
Level: Provider
Category: Patient/Provider knowledge
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Resources to
deliver needed care or respond to needs (PCP or specialist);
Geographic or transportation factors, local availability of services;
Transition from pediatric to adult care; Knowledge or comfort in
ability to provide survivorship care; Other: Awareness and interest
in the medical problems of adult CCS
Szalda, 2016160
Szalda, 2017159
Cancer Survivorship
Program at CHOP
USA
Survey, Analytic study
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Insurance
coverage
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Patient autonomy; Cultural, language, and
literacy factors; Trust in providers/medical community
Van Laar, 2013164
N/A
UK
Survey
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Patient
Category: Access to care
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Other: less waiting time
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-16
Author, Year
Country
Methodology
Proportion of CCS
Cancer Origin
Barrier Level
Barrier Category
Barrier Type
Vetsch, 2017165
Signorelli, 2019148;
Nandakumar, 2018121;
Signorelli, 2017149
ANZCHOG Survivorship
Study
Australia and New
Zealand
Survey, Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Level: Caregiver/family/local environment, Patient, Provider,
Health system
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Cultural,
Insurance coverage, Health literacy
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge of
need for life-long survivorship care; Financial or employment
resources (e.g., money to spend on co-pays or coinsurance, time
off work, childcare); Patient autonomy; Cultural, language, and
literacy factors; Trust in providers/medical community; Other: Low
confidence in PCPs' ability to deliver survivorship care; age,
cognitive difficulties
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Geographic or
transportation factors, local availability of services, Transition from
pediatric to adult care; Insurance coverage/reimbursement;
Knowledge or comfort in ability to provide survivorship care;
Other: Dependence on pediatric providers; inconsistent transition
practices, lack of resources for research, multidisciplinary team,
location of nearby providers, helpful patient education materials
(facilitator)
Wadhwa, 2019167
N/A
USA
Proportion of CCS: 50% or more
Survey
Other: primary care providers
Level: Provider
Category: Patient/Provider knowledge
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Knowledge or
comfort in ability to provide survivorship care
Warner, 2014168
N/A
USA
Interview
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Related Publications
Study Name/Trial ID
D-17
Level: Patient, Provider, Health system
Category: Access to care, Patient/Provider knowledge, Insurance
coverage, Other: Quality of care
Patient or caregiver/family/community barrier type: Prioritization of
survivorship care; Financial or employment resources (e.g.,
money to spend on co-pays or coinsurance, time off work,
childcare); Trust in providers/medical community
Provider, health system, or payer barrier type: Knowledge or
comfort in ability to provide survivorship care
Table D3. Guiding Question 4: Evaluated strategies
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Bashore, 201619
N/A
Pre-Post
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Care plan, Model of care
Intervention category: Education, Given
tools for empowerment
Evaluation regarding the usefulness of
a workbook to assist survivors to
become ready to transition to adult
care.
Primary target: Patient
Blaauwbroek, 200824
N/A
CT
UK
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Model of care
Intervention category: Access to
care,Given tools for empowerment
Survivor and local primary care provider
satisfaction with shared care model:
year 1 - all survivors had survivorship
care visit with primary care provider at
long-term follow-up clinic at start of
study; year 2 - follow-up one year later
with primary care provider (given
survivorship care plan); and year 3 survivors returned to the survivorship
clinic and saw a primary care provider,
discussed risk-stratified care needs in
the future
Primary target: Patient, Provider
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
transition in care
Authors’ conclusion: The majority of the participants
reported the sections of the workbook on their medical
history, provider information, and insurance were the most
helpful. After completing the workbook intervention,
survivors reported higher mean scores on readiness to
transition and being ready to make the changes to
transition.
Outcomes: Health services/Economics: Quality and
satisfaction with care
Authors’ conclusion: Most survivors and primary care
providers were satisfied with this shared-care model; clear
advantages of follow-up care given by local family doctors
rather than by hospital staff include less patient travel,
shorter waiting times, better patient familiarity with
surroundings (e.g., the doctor’s practice), and less
stigmatization; as survivors age and possibly develop
additional chronic illnesses, access to care in the context of
total health needs is more useful.
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-18
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Blaauwbroek, 201223
N/A
Analytic study
Netherlands
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Care plan
Intervention category: Given tools for
empowerment
Web-based survivorship care plan given
to survivors and primary care providers.
Primary target: Patient
Casillas, 201730
N/A
Analytic study
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Survivorship care service
Intervention category: Education
Develop and examine the acceptability,
feasibility, and usability of a text
messaging system for improving the
receipt of survivorship care; text
messages delivered programmed
reminders to schedule and attend
survivorship appointments, tailored
suggestions for community resources
for cancer survivors, and messages
prompting participant feedback
regarding appointments and resources.
Primary target: Patient
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
survivorship care plan
Authors’ conclusion: Most survivors and primary care
providers found the survivorship care plan user-friendly
(both online and printed versions); most survivors thought
their knowledge of late effects had improved and nearly all
survivors had become more aware of the benefits of followup.
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Survivorship care
Authors’ conclusion: Text messaging system is an
acceptable form of communication, the screening
reminders and feedback prompts feasible for improving the
receipt of survivorship care, and the tailored suggestions
for community resources usable for connecting survivors to
relevant services; survivors shared that this has the
potential to mitigate barriers in coordinating survivorship
care, encourage active self-management of survivorship
care, and help survivors reach personal survivorship health
behavior goals beyond late effect screening.
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-19
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Casillas, 201934
N/A
RCT
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Knowledge of survivorship care, survivorship care selfefficacy, attitude towards survivor-focused care
Authors’ conclusion: The text-messaging group had
increased survivorship care knowledge compared to the
control group (current standard-of-care educational
materials); the peer navigation group had increased
survivorship care self-efficacy compared to the control
group. Both intervention groups showed increased
attitudes towards seeking survivor-focused care compared
to the control group.
Casillas, 202035
N/A
Pre-Post
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Survivorship care service,
Care plan, Other: Knowledge of
survivorship care, survivorship care
self-efficacy, attitude towards survivorfocused care
Intervention category: Education, Given
tools for empowerment
Evaluation of text-messaging and peer
navigation interventions were compared
to standard-of-care survivorship
educational materials to increase
survivors' (1) late effects knowledge
and (2) knowledge, attitudes, and selfefficacy towards seeking survivorfocused care; no clear provider target
because the educational materials
provided to patients could be delivered
by anyone on the care team
Primary target: Patient
Strategy: Survivorship care service
Intervention category: Education
Single-arm pilot study evaluated a novel
intervention (a photonovela) on its
ability to educate Latino AYA survivors
and their family members and engage
them in survivorship care; a health
advocate led each photonovela
intervention session. The patient targets
were CCS and their parents
Primary target: Patient, Family
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-20
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Educate Latino survivors and their family and engage them
in survivorship care
Authors’ conclusion: The photonovela intervention was
effective in improving survivorship care confidence of
Latino AYA survivors and their families both at the followup and booster assessments. Additionally, the intervention
had small to medium effect on family members on higher
mean scores for cancer stigma from baseline to booster
assessment, but also improved knowledge for family
members from baseline to booster.
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Costello, 201745
N/A
Analytic study
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Survivorship care service,
Model of care
Intervention category: Access to care
Pediatric oncologists and adult primary
care providers used telemedicine to
help aid childhood cancer survivors with
their transition in follow-up care to their
primary care provider.
Primary target: Patient, Provider
Crom, 200747 Klosky,
200896; Hudson, 200279
After Completion of
Therapy (ACT) Clinic
RCT
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
de Moor, 201152 Emmons,
201360
NCT00588107
Analytic study
USA
Proportion of CCS: NR
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Other: Knowledge of late
effects
Intervention category: Education
Assess the efficacy of an educational
intervention targeting survivorship clinic
attendees' health knowledge about
cancer treatment and risks, health
perceptions, and health behavior
practice at baseline and follow-up one
year later.
Primary target: Patient
Strategy: Other: Access to survivorship
care/primary care providers were
included as covariates
Intervention category: Education,
Psychosocial
Website and print materials intervention
for smoking cessation for childhood,
adolescent, and young adult cancer
survivors
Primary target: Patient
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
telemedicine of survivorship visit with oncologist and PCP;
Health services/Economics: Primary care, specialty care,
or other care utilization: telemedicine of survivorship visit
with oncologist and PCP
Authors’ conclusion: Use of telemedicine technology for
transition visit increased knowledge, comfort and abilities,
and patient satisfaction in survivorship care. Negative
comments from CCS were primarily related to equipment
difficulties.
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Attenders versus non-attenders at survivorship visits;
Health services/Economics: Primary care, specialty care,
or other care utilization: Difficulty obtaining care; Health
services/Economics: Financial hardship, costs, and
resource utilization; Other: Health knowledge of late effects
Authors’ conclusion: Female survivors in the intervention
group (standard of care plus the educational intervention)
reported higher health knowledge than male survivors at
one year follow-up.
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-21
Outcomes: Biomedical: Late effects and morbidity,
Psychosocial: Substance use
Authors’ conclusion: Encouragement to quit smoking by
one’s regular doctor or oncologist was associated with a
making more quit attempts.
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Devine, 202055
NCT02699996
CT
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Survivorship care service
Intervention category: Education, Given
tools for empowerment
Self-management (5 online educational
modules) and peer mentoring (6 video
conference or phone calls) intervention
to promote self-management of followup care; the main target was the
survivor and the secondary target was
the peer mentor.
Primary target: Patient
Ducassou, 201758
N/A
Cohort
France
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Model of care
Intervention category: Access to care
Shared care program between primary
care provider and oncologist
Primary target: Patient
Eilertsen, 200459
N/A
Analytic study
Norway
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Model of care
Intervention category: Education
Held a collaborative meeting between
the child, their parents, and the
professionals in the family’s home
community and the pediatric unit.
Primary target: Patient, Family, Provider
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Feasibility; Psychosocial: Psychological; Health
services/Economics: Primary care, specialty care, or other
care utilization: Barriers to care, transition readiness;
Health services/Economics: Quality and satisfaction with
care
Authors’ conclusion: Significant positive relationship with
transition readiness using multiple measures including
knowledge, beliefs/expectations, goals/motivation;
positively associated w/ grit; negatively associated w/
FOCUS instrument (measures barriers to care).
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
shared care (oncologist and PCP); Health services/
Economics: Primary care, specialty care, or other care
utilization: shared care (oncologist and PCP)
Authors’ conclusion: Personalized and incentive-based
guidance was very useful in helping survivors adhere to
follow-up care.
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Survivorship care
Authors’ conclusion: Health professionals regard
collaboration with CCS, family, and other professionals as
being valuable and important for follow-up care for CCS.
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-22
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Ford, 201364
N/A
Cohort
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Model of care
Intervention category: Access to care
Survivorship clinic attendance.
Primary target: Patient
Hudson, 202078
NCT01003574
(Evaluation of
Cardiovascular Health
Outcomes Among
Survivors (ECHOS))
RCT
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Iyer, 201783
N/A
Analytic study
USA
Proportion of CCS: 50%
or more
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Care plan, Model of care
Intervention category: Education, Given
tools for empowerment
Distance-delivered intervention of two
sessions of tailored telephone
counseling delivered by an advanced
practice provider (treatment group) to
see if this would increase the proportion
of at-risk survivors who completed
cardiomyopathy screening; the control
group received the mailed survivorship
care plan only.
Primary target: Patient
Strategy: Care plan, Model of care,
Other: Primary care provider knowledge
of survivorship care plan
Intervention category: Access to care
Survivorship care plans, preferences,
and barriers from the perspective of
primary care provider and CCS
Primary target: Provider
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
knowledge of the need for life-long survivorship care;
Psychosocial: Psychological
Authors’ conclusion: No significant differences in survivors
knowledge about their cancer diagnosis, perceptions of risk
of future health problems, or psychological or emotional
problems reported by those in long-term survivorship clinic
versus those in non-specialized clinic.
Outcomes: Biomedical: Late effects and morbidity
Authors’ conclusion: Intervention significantly increased the
likelihood of cardiomyopathy screening among at-risk
survivors of childhood cancer; this method of intervention
provides evidence that distance-delivered survivorship
services could help reach at-risk populations.
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-23
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Survivorship care plans, barriers, and preferences
regarding care; Health services/Economics: Primary care,
specialty care, or other care utilization
Authors’ conclusion: Primary care providers generally felt
uncomfortable using the survivorship care plan and
providing survivorship care, the biggest barrier was lack of
knowledge.
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Kadan-Lottick, 201888
Yale University, 2010163
NCT02816866
RCT
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Care plan, Model of care
Intervention category: Access to care,
Given tools for empowerment
Distribution of survivorship care plan to
patient and primary care providers (both
primary targets); to be implemented by
either primary care provider or
survivorship clinic provider.
Primary target: Patient, Provider
Kunin-Batson, 2016100
NCT01593618
RCT
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Care plan
Intervention category: Education
Web-based educational intervention for
adolescent and young adult survivors of
childhood cancer that provided their
survivorship care plans electronically to
improve cancer-related knowledge and
psychosocial functioning.
Primary target: Patient
Landier, 2015102
N/A
Time series
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Care plan
Intervention category: Access to care,
Education
Survivorship clinic and tailored
education regarding risk for late effects.
Primary target: Patient
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Survivorship care plan taken to oncologist or PCP; Health
services/Economics: Primary care, specialty care, or other
care utilization: Survivorship care plan taken to oncologist
or PCP
Authors’ conclusion: Empowering childhood cancer
survivors with survivorship care plan to be implemented by
their primary care provider is not sufficient to meet
consensus follow-up recommendations compared to those
who attend survivorship clinic; those who had a
survivorship care plan and attended follow-up care with
primary care reported much lower adherence to guidelinerecommended surveillance tests and less identification of
late complications of therapy.
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Knowledge of cancer diagnosis, history, and treatment;
Psychosocial: Psychological
Authors’ conclusion: The web-based intervention was not
statistically better in improving cancer-related knowledge
compared to the standard of care (face-to-face
counseling); anxiety and health beliefs were associated
with survivors’ knowledge about cancer, including
knowledge of steps survivors could take to mitigate risks
for late effects.
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Awareness of health risks in survivorship
Authors’ conclusion: Risk-based education in a
survivorship clinic significantly increases awareness of
personal health risk through three sessions.
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-24
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Oeffinger, 2011129
N/A
CT
Multiple countries
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Lymphoma
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Screening echocardiogram and/or mammogram;
Biomedical: Late effects and morbidity
Authors’ conclusion: Mailed survivorship care plans were
found to be a feasible and effective way to deliver cancer
treatment summaries and screening recommendations for
high-risk survivors to encourage risk-based surveillance for
late effects.
Oeffinger, 2019128
NCT01579552
(EMPOWER Study)
RCT
Multiple countries
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Raj, 2018134
N/A
Analytic study
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Brain/CNS
Strategy: Care plan
Intervention category: Given tools for
empowerment
Mailed survivorship care plan to highrisk survivors who were not receiving
recommended cancer or cardiac
surveillance (primary target) in hopes
that they would communicate with their
local primary care provider (secondary
target); also sought to evaluate the use
of a web-based virtual information
center for survivors (primary target) and
clinicians (secondary target).
Primary target: Patient
Strategy: Survivorship care service
Intervention category: Education
Mailed informational packet and
participated in a motivational interview
from trained counselors to examine the
impact on screening mammography by
12 months after the intervention.
Primary target: Patient
Strategy: Survivorship care service
Intervention category: Psychosocial
To evaluate the development of a webbased psychosocial intervention ("A
Survivor’s Journey") for pediatric brain
tumor survivors and caregivers on
improvement in psychosocial
functioning for the survivor.
Primary target: Patient, Family
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-25
Outcomes: Biomedical: Late effects and morbidity; Health
services/Economics: Primary care, specialty care, or other
care utilization: Mammography screening
Authors’ conclusion: At a one-year follow-up, women in the
intervention group were significantly more likely than those
in the control group to report a mammogram (intervention
was more successful among women age 25 to 39 years
than among those age 40 to 50 years).
Outcomes: Psychosocial: Psychological
Authors’ conclusion: Feedback from survivors, their
parents, and care providers all favored the web-based
delivery of this intervention and supported the need for
accessible interventions that are customizable to the
unique needs of survivors; survivors and caregivers
favored interventions that can be delivered remotely (e.g.,
do not require additional visits).
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Reynolds, 2019137
N/A
Cohort
Canada
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Model of care
Intervention category: Access to care
Survivorship care at specialized longterm follow-up care facilities versus at
primary-care facilities.
Primary target: Patient
Rose-Felker, 2019138
N/A
Pre-Post
USA
Proportion of CCS: NR
Other: not specified
Strategy: Other: Educational
intervention targeting pediatric
cardiologists
Intervention category: Education
Educational intervention using pre/post
test to assess knowledge of
surveillance needs for childhood cancer
survivors among pediatric cardiologists
Primary target: Provider
Santacroce, 201086
HEROS PLUS AYA
RCT
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Survivorship care service,
Care plan
Intervention category: Psychosocial
Coping skills training intervention via
telephone and discussed plans for
future monitoring with survivors (main
target) and parents (secondary)
Primary target: Patient, Family
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
survivorship care at oncologist (versus PCP); Health
services/Economics: Primary care, specialty care, or other
care utilization: survivorship care at primary care provider
(versus oncologist)
Authors’ conclusion: Cancer-center based models reported
higher rates of compliance with exposure-based medical
late effect screening guidelines, cancer-specific follow-up
behaviors, and the reporting of fewer physical complaints
than the community-based providers.
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
pediatric cardiologists; Biomedical: Late effects and
morbidity
Authors’ conclusion: Post-intervention, there was an
improvement in pediatric cardiologist knowledge including
childhood cancer survivors surveillance, treatment related
risk, risk of cardiac dysfunction with time since treatment,
the role of dexrazoxane in cardioprotection, that a webbased risk-assessment tool to estimate the risk of
congestive heart failure in survivors by age 40 exists and
can be used, and that African-Americans childhood cancer
survivors are at increased risk for late cardiotoxicity.
Outcomes: Psychosocial: Psychological; Other:
Psychosocial outcomes for survivors and parents
Authors’ conclusion: Post-intervention, outcomes for
HEROS (standard of care for long-term follow up care)
AYA and parents remained the same or deteriorated; while
outcomes for HEROS PLUS (standard of care plus
telephone-delivered psychosocial care) AYA and parents
improved in Posttraumatic Growth Inventory.
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
D-26
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Strategy and Intervention Approach
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Authors’ Conclusion
Schwartz, 2018145
N/A
Pre-Post
USA
Proportion of CCS: NR
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Other: Educational
intervention targeting pediatric residents
Intervention category: Education
Examined residents’ knowledge, clinical
skills, and attitudes towards cancer
survivorship topics before and after
receiving curriculum.
Primary target: Provider
Schwartz, 2019144
AYA STEPS (AYA Selfmanagement via Texting,
Education, and Plans for
Survivorship)
Post-only
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Williamson, 2014170
SurvivorLink
Analytic study
USA
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Strategy: Survivorship care service
Intervention category: Education
Creation and initial use of the AYA
STEPS (Adolescent and Young Adult
Self-management via Texting,
Education, and Plans for Survivorship)
mobile app to encourage adherence to
survivorship care plans.
Primary target: Patient
Strategy: Care plan, Model of care
Intervention category: Given tools for
empowerment
Creation of a personal health record,
stored a health document, and
electronically shared their health record
with a provider.
Primary target: Patient
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
pediatric residents' knowledge and clinical skills related to
caring for childhood cancer survivors
Authors’ conclusion: The post-curriculum evaluation
showed a significant improvement in residents’ knowledge,
clinical skills, and comfort in discussing topics relevant to
survivorship care; residents also reported that they would
recommend it to other residency programs.
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Survivorship care plan
Authors’ conclusion: Survivors reported that the app and
the embedded tailored messages related to their health
and survivorship care plan were easy to use and generally
satisfying and beneficial; final results of the RCT
(approximately 200 participants) is pending.
Study Name/Trial ID
Design
Country
Notes: CCS childhood cancer survivor
D-27
Outcomes: Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of
survivorship care services, care plans, or models of care:
Survivorship care engagement via use of SurvivorLink
Authors’ conclusion: Having attended survivorship clinic is
the most significant predictor of registering and using
SurvivorLink, a patient-controlled communication tool
where survivors can electronically store and share
documents with healthcare providers.
Table D4. Guiding Question 5: Ongoing studies
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Intervention Type
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Chow, 202043
Chow, 202044
NCT03104543
[Communicating Health
Information and Improving
Coordination With Primary
Care (CHIIP)]
RCT
USA
Expected completion:
03/01/2022
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Daniel, 201549
NCT02046811
RCT
USA
Expected completion:
01/01/2018
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Survivorship care service
Printed, mailed survivorship care plan
with personalized health history (e.g.,
absolute and relative risk estimates of
ischemic heart disease and
cardiomyopathy/heart failure compared
with the general population, based on
each participant's prior childhood
cancer treatment exposures),
recommendations, and clinically
meaningful results from the baseline
home visit (e.g., average blood
pressure, lipid profile, diabetes
screening, body mass index).
Other: Self examination
Patient activation and education (PAE)
including text messaging, print and
web-based tutorials; PAE plus
physician activation (PAE+MD) adding
physician activation/educational
materials about survivors' increased
skin cancer risk and conducting fullbody skin exams; PAE plus physician
activation, plus teledermoscopy
(PAE+MD+TD) adding participant
receipt of a dermatoscope intended to
empower them to photograph suspect
moles or lesions for review by the study
dermatologist
Study Name/Trial ID
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Design
Country
Expected completion
D-28
Biomedical: Late effects and morbidity; Psychosocial:
Psychological; Health services/Economics: Primary care,
specialty care, or other care utilization
Health services/Economics: Primary care, specialty care,
or other care utilization: skin examination by survivor or
provider
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Intervention Type
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Denzler, 2020 54
NCT04284189 (After Care
of Childhood Cancer
Survivors Switzerland)
Analytic study
Switzerland
Expected completion:
August 2021
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Devine, 201956
NCT04075734
RCT
USA
Expected completion:
09/30/2020
Escoffery, 201962
Emory University, 2020162;
SurvivorLink, 202027
NCT03543852
RCT
USA
Expected completion:
05/01/2023
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Model of care
Investigate which long-term follow-up
care model (or which parts of the
models) have the best fit for Swiss
childhood cancer survivors (primary
target); evaluate transition readiness,
identify facilitators factors for transition
and adherence to follow-up care, and
compare the transition models of the
three participating centers.
Survivorship care service, Care plan
Managing Your Health, an online selfmanagement skills and peer mentoring
intervention, which focuses on
overcoming survivor barriers to selfmanagement of their survivorship care.
Study Name/Trial ID
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Design
Country
Expected completion
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Survivorship care service, Care plan
Patient-controlled electronic personal
health record and system (SurvivorLink)
D-29
Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of survivorship care
services, care plans, or models of care
Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of survivorship care
services, care plans, or models of care: Knowledge of
survivorship care needs, self-efficacy for survivorship care
planning, attitudes towards survivorship care;
Psychosocial: Psychological; Health services/Economics:
Primary care, specialty care, or other care utilization:
Communication from survivor to PCP
Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of survivorship care
services, care plans, or models of care: survivorship care
plan
Author, Year
Proportion of CCS
Intervention Type
Related Publications
Cancer Origin
Description of Survivorship Care
Strategy
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Leukemia, Lymphoma
Care plan
Test the feasibility and acceptability of
an online survivorship care plan
generator for adult survivors of pediatric
cancers.
Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of survivorship care
services, care plans, or models of care: feasibility of online
platform for survivorship care plan
Proportion of CCS: 100%
Multiple cancer origin
Survivorship care service, Care plan
Examination of electronic educational
materials on survivors' (main target)
knowledge about late effects, perceived
benefits, self-efficacy, and intentions to
engage in lifelong survivorship care.
Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of survivorship care
services, care plans, or models of care: Knowledge about
late effects, perceived benefits, self-efficacy, and intentions
to engage in lifelong survivorship care; Psychosocial:
Psychological
Proportion of CCS: NR
Multiple cancer origin
Model of care
Follow-up with a primary care physician
in the adult setting who is
knowledgeable about late effects of
childhood cancer treatment; transition
support and education was provided by
a transition nurse navigator.
Survivorship Care Domain: Utilization of survivorship care
services, care plans, or models of care: survivorship care
clinic
Study Name/Trial ID
Assessed Outcome Domain and Measure
Design
Country
Expected completion
Hill-Kayser, 202075
NCT02559219
(SmartALACC)
Analytic study
USA
Expected completion: NR;
study complete as of
04/24/2020, publication of
results pending
Marchak, 2020107
NCT04257058
Pre-Post
USA
Expected completion:
04/01/2023
McClellan, 2015112
N/A
Post-only
USA
Expected completion: NR
D-30