Material Hardship as a Targetable Measure of Poverty in Pediatric Cancer

NIH RePORTER · NIH · K07 · $133,475 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY The objective of the proposed study is to reduce residual morbidity and mortality in pediatric cancer by laying the groundwork for the design of interventions targeting social determinants of health outcomes, specifically poverty. Sequential clinical trials have resulted in steady improvements in survival for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) through incremental advancements in risk stratification and risk-adapted therapy. Despite this achievement, approximately 20% of children with ALL will relapse and 10% will die of their disease making ALL the leading cause of childhood cancer death. One in five children in the United States lives in poverty. Emerging data demonstrate that despite highly standardized care, poverty-related survival disparities exist in childhood ALL in the United States. Mechanisms underlying this relationship have not been defined, nor have targetable domains of poverty been investigated. The hypothesis underlying this proposal is that improved child cancer outcomes are achievable by integrating remediable domains of poverty into risk stratification and developing poverty-targeted interventions. Household material hardship (HMH)—unmet concrete resource needs including food, housing or energy—is a dimension of poverty which predicts general pediatric health outcomes and can be remedied by intervention. Up to 30% of pediatric cancer families report HMH during the first 6 months of chemotherapy; its impact on child cancer outcomes is unknown. A majority of U.S. children diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the most common childhood cancer, will enroll on a clinical trial. This trial-based paradigm of discovery and care has allowed for steady improvements in biologically-based risk stratification and risk-adapted therapy. Social determinants of health as contributors to outcome have not been systematically incorporated into therapeutic trial design. This proposal leverages an existing clinical trials model of care to investigate the impact of a non-biologic driver of outcome. The specific hypothesis is that HMH impacts pediatric ALL relapse and survival through three mechanisms affecting chemotherapy delivery: (1) Decreased adherence to oral chemotherapy, (2) Inferior underlying child health status leading to chemotherapy toxicity and subsequent delays/dose reductions, and (3) Decreased access to care leading to higher acuity hospital admissions which delay chemotherapy receipt. Building on her pilot work and leveraging the cross-disciplinary expertise of her mentorship team in a mixed methods approach, Dr. Bona proposes to assess whether HMH is associated with inferior disease outcomes in pediatric ALL, and to identify potential mechanisms of action which can be targeted with future interventions. In Aims 1-3) Dr. Bona will embed a prospective survey study of HMH in a phase III multi-center clinical trial for children with newly diagnosed ALL to identify the association between HMH an...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10003968
Project number
5K07CA211847-05
Recipient
DANA-FARBER CANCER INST
Principal Investigator
Kira O. Bona
Activity code
K07
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$133,475
Award type
5
Project period
2016-09-20 → 2022-02-28