Fear of Cancer Recurrence Among Parents of Children with Cancer Who Underwent Germline Genetic Testing.

Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is a significant but understudied concern among parents of childhood cancer survivors. This study quantitatively characterized parental FCR and explored potential demographic and clinical correlates among parents of children treated for cancer. Parents (N = 192) completed the Fear of Cancer Recurrence Inventory-Parent Short Form (FCRI-Parent) and provided demographic information. Clinical variables were obtained from medical chart review. Associations between FCR and demographic or clinical variables were analyzed using t-tests, ANOVAs, and Pearson's correlations. Parents reported a mean FCR score of 18.64 (SD = 8.73), with 42.2% of parents endorsing FCR above a score of 22. Parental FCR significantly varied by parent race, education, and spirituality. Higher FCR was also significantly negatively correlated with child age, time since diagnosis, and time since treatment completion. Parents of children with central nervous system tumors or hematological malignancies endorsed significantly higher FCR compared to parents of children with solid tumors. Findings build on previously identified psychosocial needs for parents of children treated for cancer by quantitatively describing parental FCR and exploring subgroups that may be at increased risk for FCR. Tailored interventions, including strategies that support spiritual coping, may help mitigate FCR among at-risk parents.
Cancer
Care/Management

Authors

Flesher Flesher, Armstrong Armstrong, Flynn Flynn, Sachner Sachner, Blake Blake, Jones Jones, Webster Webster, Humphrey Humphrey, Jurbergs Jurbergs, Hsu Hsu, Pan Pan, Nichols Nichols, Mandrell Mandrell, Howard Sharp Howard Sharp
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