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Leeds Institute for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine (LICAMM), University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
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Leeds Institute for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine (LICAMM), University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
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Leeds Institute of Medical Research, University of Leeds, UK
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Leeds Institute for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine (LICAMM), University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
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survival from childhood cancer has led to the recognition that exposure to multimodal cancer therapy is associated with an increased risk of long-term morbidity and late mortality. Late-onset adverse sequelae in childhood brain tumour survivors (SCBT
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Amsterdam UMC, Emma’s Children’s Hospital, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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The number of patients surviving childhood cancer has continuously increased over the last five decades, mainly due to advances in cancer biology, treatment and supportive care (see Fig. 1 ( 1 )). This has led to a growing number of childhood
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to care ( 7 ). Up to half of them will develop endocrine or metabolic consequences. Figure 1 Relative risks for chronic health conditions in childhood cancer survivors (compared to their siblings) ( 9 ). Childhood cancer survivors