Metadata
Title
Can Parents Refuse a Potentially Lifesaving Transplant for Severe Combined Immunodeficiency?
Authors
Nickels AS; Myers GD; Johnson LM; Joshi A; Sharp RR; Lantos JD
Year
2016
Publication
Pediatrics
Abstract
If untreated, most children with severe combined immunodeficiency disorder (SCID) will die of complications of infection within the first 2 years of life. Early hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) is the current standard of care for this disease. Although potentially lifesaving, prognosis of HSCT in SCID is variable depending on a number of host and donor factors. Of the survivors, many develop secondary problems such as chronic graft-versus-host disease or even second malignancies. Posttransplant care is complex and requires great effort from parents to adhere to difficult treatment regimens. In this article, we address the difficult ethical question of what to do if parents choose not to have their child with SCID undergo HSCT but prefer palliative care.
Authors
Johnson LM | Joshi A | Lantos JD | Myers GD | Nickels AS | Sharp RR
MeSH
Adaptation, Psychological | Adolescent | Child | Cost of Illness | Epilepsy/pp [Physiopathology] | Epilepsy/px [Psychology] | Fatigue/et [Etiology] | Fatigue/px [Psychology] | Fear | Health Services Needs and Demand | Humans | Prejudice/px [Psychology] | Privacy/px [Psychology] | Sick Role | Social Adjustment | Social Isolation | Social Stigma | Social Support