Language

English

Publication Date

11-1-2025

Journal

Pediatric Blood & Cancer

DOI

10.1002/pbc.31964

PMID

40760718

PMCID

PMC12422796

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

9-11-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Author MSS

Abstract

Background: Navigating prognostic communication is challenging for clinicians caring for adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with poor-prognosis cancer. Presently, little is known about how AYA and parent preferences for prognostic disclosure evolve over time. This study explored communication preferences at key illness milestones of disease progression to inform individualized, person-centered approaches to optimize prognostic disclosure.

Procedure: Sixty-five participants, including 25 AYAs aged 12-25 years and 40 parents, were recruited at distinct illness timepoints-diagnosis, relapse/progression, Phase I/II trial enrollment, and bereavement-to participate in semi-structured interviews about their preferences for timing, style, and content of prognostic communication. Rapid analysis was conducted to generate and compare themes across timepoints.

Results: Preferences for early, ongoing, and repeated prognostic discussions were increasingly reported by AYAs and parents at advancing illness milestones, with bereaved parents particularly emphasizing the value of early disclosure in retrospect. Parents of living AYAs, though not bereaved parents, advised oncologists to consider excluding AYAs from prognostic conversations-a view rarely shared by AYAs themselves. AYAs and parents preferred oncologist-led communication and also advocated for the inclusion of multidisciplinary clinicians.

Conclusions: These findings highlight the dynamic nature of prognostic communication preferences across the illness trajectory and key variances between AYA and parents' preferences. Early and serial prognostic conversations are welcomed by many AYAs and parents, and multidisciplinary support may enhance communication satisfaction, particularly as preferences shift over time. Future research will investigate longitudinal interventions that recognize evolving communication preferences to personalize prognostic disclosure across pediatric cancer care.

Keywords

Humans, Adolescent, Child, Male, Female, Parents, Neoplasms, Prognosis, Adult, Young Adult, Patient Preference, Communication, Truth Disclosure, Disease Progression, Follow-Up Studies, adolescent and young adult, cancer, communication, parent, pediatric, prognosis

Published Open-Access

yes

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