@article{33e8eafe17c64f5b9e2685c948d9ce15,
title = "Chemotherapy for acute lymphocytic leukemia: Cognitive and academic sequelae",
abstract = "Iatrogenic cognitive impairments have been reported for survivors of childhood leukemia after prophylactic central nervous system therapy with craniospinal radiation. To determine whether chemotherapy alone might be a source of central nervous system damage, we assessed in a cross-sectional design the cognitive and academic functioning of 48 children with acute lymphocytic leukemia who were at various stages in their treatment or who had completed treatment. The off-therapy patients who had completed a 3-year course of chemotherapy were more impaired in tasks of higher-order cognitive functioning than were those children whose leukemia had been newly diagnosed and those children whose diagnoses had been 1 years earlier. Off-therapy patients also had concomitant diagnosable learning disabilities in mathematics. We recommend appropriate liaison and special education placements, as well as continued evaluation of cognitive and learning functioning of children treated for moderate-risk acute lymphocytic leukemia who receive chemotherapy alone.",
author = "Brown, \{Ronald T.\} and Avi Madan-Swain and Ray Pais and Lambert, \{Richard G.\} and Sandra Sexson and Abdel Ragab",
note = "Funding Information: During the past several years, significant achievements have been made in the treatment of childhood leukemia, l Standard treatment for these children includes prevention of the proliferation of leukemia cells in the central nervous system. Typically, CNS prophylaxis has consisted of radiation therapy (either cranial or craniospinal) and chemotherapy administered intrathecally. Because of the severity of cognitive deficits associated with cranial radiation therapy, this modality is reserved for children treated for acute lymphocytic leukemia whose prognosis is poor, who had CNS disease at diagnosis, or who have had CNS relapse. 1 Current protocols for standard-risk patients do not include radiation.\textasciitilde{}, 2 Supported in full by a grant award from the U.S. Office of Education (No. H023C80121) and by the CURE Foundation. Submitted for publication April 23, 1992; accepted June 25, 1992. Reprint requests: Ronald T. Brown, PhD, Departments of Psychiatry and Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine, 1365 Clifton Rd., N.E., Atlanta, GA 30322.",
year = "1992",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1016/S0022-3476(05)80333-6",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "121",
pages = "885--889",
journal = "The Journal of Pediatrics",
issn = "0022-3476",
publisher = "Elsevier Inc.",
number = "6",
}