Pediatric and Childhood Cancers: Hope for Families and Patients

Today, cancer is not only treatable but curable in a large number of children with the disease. That means long-term survival, says Dr. Alexander Chou, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and assistant attending pediatrician at 麻豆高清. 鈥淜ids who were diagnosed at a young age are going off to college, getting married and having children of their own.鈥

Childhood cancers are fairly rare compared to adult cancers, but for Dr. Chou, there are still too many kids with leukemia, lymphoma and brain tumors鈥攖he three most common types of cancer that afflict children.

鈥淚t鈥檚 scary for a parent to hear that their child has cancer,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut right now, there鈥檚 a ton of hope, due to advances made in the past 5 to 10 years in the following areas:

  • our understanding of certain cancer-promoting genes;
  • medications that target specific types of cancer;
  • our ability to control the side effects of chemotherapy, such as nausea, vomiting and hair loss; and
  • medications that destroy cancer cells while sparing healthy tissues.

However, with all the strides we鈥檝e made in understanding the biology of cancer and the genes associated with the disease, only about 10 percent of childhood cancers are found to be hereditary. We still don鈥檛 know what causes most childhood cancers.鈥

Genetic testing

Dr. Chou doesn鈥檛 recommend routine genetic testing for healthy children. But if a child is diagnosed with cancer, it may be helpful to conduct a genetic test to see whether one of the cancer-causing genes is present. 鈥淗aving that information could help us take care of your child and your whole family, including your other children. We work closely with our genetic counselors and geneticists to provide the best information to families.

鈥淭he one thing I want families to understand is that there鈥檚 nothing you did or didn鈥檛 do that caused your child to have cancer,鈥 he adds.

A solid support system

By the time you count all the health-care providers, family members, friends and community members who rally around the child with cancer, you鈥檝e got a village-sized support system.

鈥淵oung cancer patients need a team to travel with them on the arduous journey between diagnosis and cure,鈥 he says, referring not only to doctors, nurses and other health-care personnel, but family, friends and people who are engaged in the child鈥檚 community. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe in isolating kids when they鈥檙e diagnosed or receiving treatment. We have wonderful social workers, psychologists, chaplains and child life specialists on hand at Weill Cornell, but at the end of the day, the child will need a solid support system to make it through cancer treatment. That goes for the entire family as well.鈥

In addition to friends and relatives, the family鈥檚 support network may also include neighbors, the child鈥檚 teachers, members of the family鈥檚 faith community and members of other communities in which they take part, Dr. Chou says. Even young former cancer patients can lend moral support to children going through treatment, offering proof that they too can emerge healthy and whole on the other side of their treatment ordeal.

Multidisciplinary care

Dr. Chou describes the health-care professionals who deliver high-quality, collaborative care to every child being treated for cancer at 麻豆高清鈥攁 multidisciplinary team that includes physicians, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, social workers, psychologists, physical therapists and occupational therapists.

As chemotherapy may place a burden on the body鈥檚 various organs and organ systems, a variety of pediatric subspecialists may also participate in the child鈥檚 care: pediatricians who focus on infectious disease, gastroenterology and cardiology, and those who specialize in lung disease and liver disease. 鈥淲e strive to meet every need that may arise, with every member of the child鈥檚 medical team under one roof,鈥 he says.

Cancer care philosophy

Asked to describe his philosophy, Dr. Chou delineates the 4-pronged approach that guides the way he and his colleagues care for their young patients. For them, treatment must be:

  • Individualized. Each patient is different. We take care of each child individually.
  • Compassionate. We take into account every patient鈥檚 preferences鈥攎edically, emotionally, psychologically and spiritually.
  • Holistic. A large, multidisciplinary team comes together to take care of the whole child.
  • Data-driven. We base our treatment decisions on the most up-to-date techniques and research findings.

A story of hope

Today, he reiterates, there鈥檚 hope for beating cancer once and for all. 鈥淲e鈥檙e taking cancers that were previously considered incurable and making them curable. The process isn鈥檛 easy. Children and their families go through a lot in pursuit of a cure, but the hope is there.

鈥淲e know more and more about the biology behind some of the cancers kids get,鈥 he continues, 鈥渁nd because of that, we can individualize patients鈥 therapy plans based on the nature of the child鈥檚 tumor. We鈥檝e got new, targeted chemotherapy and immunotherapy agents. There are new, minimally invasive surgical techniques that improve recovery time and minimize pain. We鈥檝e got new radiation therapy techniques that target the tumor while minimizing damage to surrounding tissues. For children with cancer and their families, the age of personalized medicine has arrived.鈥

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