2025
DOI: 10.12998/wjcc.v13.i7.98000
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Late effects of the treatment of childhood cancer

Jelena Roganovic

Abstract: Excellent progress has been made in the last few decades in the cure rates of pediatric malignancies, with more than 80% of children with cancer who have access to contemporary treatment being cured. However, the therapies responsible for this survival can also produce adverse physical and psychological long-term outcomes, referred to as late effects, which appear months to years after the completion of cancer treatment. Research has shown that 60% to 90% of childhood cancer survivors (CCSs) develop one or mor… Show more

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