Journal Article DKFZ-2026-00150

http://join2-wiki.gsi.de/foswiki/pub/Main/Artwork/join2_logo100x88.png
Endocrine and metabolic late-effects in childhood cancer survivors in Germany: the VersKiK-Study.

 ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;

2026
Oxford University Press Oxford

European journal of endocrinology nn, nn () [10.1093/ejendo/lvag010]
 GO

Abstract: Endocrine and metabolic diseases are known to be common late effects in childhood cancer survivors (CCS). We assessed the prevalence of these diseases in a large German CCS cohort, and a matched comparison population, using health claims data.The cohort study was based on record-linkage between the nationwide German Childhood Cancer Registry and claims data from 13 major German statutory health insurances.The monitored insurance period covered the years 2017-2021. We assessed the frequencies of endocrine and metabolic diseases among 11 863 5-year CCS, diagnosed 1991-2021, with continuous insurance coverage and a matched comparison group of 35 589 insured persons without a history of childhood cancer. We present prevalence and Prevalence Ratios (PR) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals (95%CI).At least one endocrine or metabolic disease was recorded in 31.3% of survivors (n=3716) and in 16.4% of the comparison group (n=5819, PR=1.9; 95%CI: 1.8-2.0). The frequency of diseases was higher among females than among males in both groups. The PR was 2.4 (95%CI: 2.3-2.5) for males and 1.6 (95%CI: 1.5-1.7) for females. The frequency of at least one disease increased with increasing attained age. The disease with the highest frequency among CCS was hypothyroidism (15.85%), the highest PR was estimated for patients with primary thyroid cancer (43.5; 95%CI: 24.2-78.1).Our study highlights the increased vulnerability of CCS to endocrine and metabolic diseases compared to the general population and underscores the need for risk-adapted surveillance during the whole survivorship trajectory.

Keyword(s): cancer registry ; cancer survivorship ; childhood cancer ; claims data ; follow-up care ; late effects

Classification:

Note: epub

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. CAYA Cancer Survivorship Forschung (C190)
Research Program(s):
  1. 313 - Krebsrisikofaktoren und Prävention (POF4-313) (POF4-313)

Appears in the scientific report 2026
Database coverage:
Medline ; BIOSIS Previews ; Biological Abstracts ; Clarivate Analytics Master Journal List ; Current Contents - Clinical Medicine ; Current Contents - Life Sciences ; Ebsco Academic Search ; Essential Science Indicators ; IF >= 5 ; JCR ; SCOPUS ; Science Citation Index Expanded ; Web of Science Core Collection
Click to display QR Code for this record

The record appears in these collections:
Document types > Articles > Journal Article
Public records
Publications database

 Record created 2026-01-20, last modified 2026-01-20



Rate this document:

Rate this document:
1
2
3
 
(Not yet reviewed)