Abstract

Teenage and young adult (TYA) cancer patients are faced with the diagnosis during a challenging period of psychosocial development that may affect social outcomes in the long term. Therefore, we aimed to: (1) determine differences in social outcomes between long-term TYA cancer survivors and healthy controls and (2) identify factors associated with adverse social outcomes. We sent a questionnaire to TYA cancer survivors (aged 16-25 years at diagnosis, 5 years after diagnosis) registered in the Cancer Registry Zurich and Zug. Information on controls was obtained from the Swiss Health Survey 2012. We assessed educational achievement, employment status, marital status and life partnership (survivors only), and compared these outcomes between survivors and controls. We used logistic regression to identify sociodemographic and cancer-related factors associated with social outcomes. We included 160 TYA cancer survivors and 999 controls. Educational achievement of survivors differed significantly from controls (p = 0.012): more survivors than controls reported upper secondary education (33 vs 27%) and fewer survivors reported university education (12 vs 21%). No significant differences were found for employment (p = 0.515) and marital status (p = 0.357). The majority of survivors (91%) and controls (90%) were employed, and 37% of survivors were married, compared with 41% of controls. There were no cancer-related factors associated with having only basic education. Unemployment was associated with younger age at diagnosis (odds ratio [OR] 5.3, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.3-30.8) and self-reported late effects (OR 4.7, 95% CI 1.3-19.5). Survivors of younger age at diagnosis were more likely not to be married (OR 2.7, 95% CI 1.3-5.7) and not to have a life partner (OR 2.3, 95% CI 1.0-5.2). Our findings indicate that TYA cancer survivors completed applied higher education rather than a university education. Future studies including larger samples of TYA cancer survivors are needed to validate our findings and to explore the reasons for and satisfaction with the observed educational pathway.

Highlights

  • Teenage and young adult (TYA) cancer patients face the cancer diagnosis at the age of 16–24 years [1]

  • Unemployment was associated with younger age at diagnosis and selfreported late effects

  • Our findings indicate that TYA cancer survivors completed applied higher education rather than a university education

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Summary

Introduction

Teenage and young adult (TYA) cancer patients face the cancer diagnosis at the age of 16–24 years [1] This is a challenging period of psychosocial development [2,3,4] characterised by completing education, starting a professional career, gaining social independence and establishing romantic relationships [2,3,4,5,6]. Studies in the US including adolescent and young adult cancer survivors found that more than 50% of full-time workers/students encountered educational or work-related problems following the diagnosis [10], and a higher risk of divorce compared with healthy controls [11]. Understanding the long-term social impact of cancer on TYAs and identifying survivors at risk for adverse social outcomes is critical to developing country-specific support strategies to promote healthy psychosocial development [3, 13, 19]. We aimed to (1) determine differences in long-term social outcomes (educational achievement, employment status, marital status, and life partnership) between TYA cancer survivors and healthy controls, and (2) identify sociodemographic and cancer-related factors associated with adverse social outcomes

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