Predictors of Transplant Regret: A Case–Control Study Nested Within a Prospective Cohort of HSCT Recipients
Janae L. Kirsch, James R. Cerhan, William J. Hogan, Holly C. Edwards, Christi A. Patten, Tabetha Brockman, Christine Hughes, Angela Dispenzieri, Stephen M. Ansell, Dennis A. Gastineau, Shawna L. Ehlers

TL;DR
This study found that not being in remission one year after a stem cell transplant is linked to transplant regret, but pre-transplant factors are not predictive.
Contribution
The study identifies post-transplant remission status as a novel predictor of transplant regret.
Findings
Patients who were not in remission one year post-transplant were 3.7 times more likely to experience regret.
No pre-transplant variables were found to predict transplant regret.
Poorer post-transplant outcomes were associated with higher rates of regret.
Abstract
To explore pre–hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) demographic, disease, and psychological factors predictive of future transplant regret and to determine post‐HSCT variables associated with regret. HSCT candidates participated in a prospective cohort study (June 2008–October 2013) examining health behaviors and HSCT outcomes, including completion of standardized surveys at pre‐HSCT (baseline) and 1‐year post‐HSCT. Cases were participants that endorsed regret at 1‐year post‐HSCT follow‐up, and controls were participants without regret at 1 year, matched on age, sex, and transplant type. For cases and controls, pre‐HSCT psychosocial evaluations were abstracted from the electronic health record and coded to determine the Psychosocial Assessment of Candidates for Transplantation score, psychosocial stressors, and mental health diagnoses. The association of selected factors with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life · Family Support in Illness · Cancer survivorship and care
