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Cancer is not a risk factor for severe COVID-19 in children, except in patients with recent allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation or comorbidities.

Pablo Velasco PuyóAlfredo TagarroSusana Garcia-ObregonOlatz VillateCinta MoraledaJorge HuertaEduardo J Bardón CanchoAnna Faura MorrosGalán-Gómez VíctorLaura Escobar FernándezFrancisco LendínezBlanca Herrero VelascoLaura Ureña HornoNerea Domínguez-PinillaJuan Francisco Pascual GazquezCristina Nova LozanoMarta Osuna-MarcoInés Marín-CruzIrene Gomez PastranaNagore Garcia de Andoin BarandiaranNerea Gallego MingoRaquel Portugal RodríguezAdela CañeteMarta Pareja LeónSara Castrillo BustamanteMaría Tallón GarcíaAlmudena Gónzalez-PrietoMaría Solé-RodríguezMacarena González CruzAntonio Soriano-ArandesMiriam MotaSantiago Pérez-HoyosLucas MorenoItziar AstigarragaAntonio Soriano-Arandes
Published in: Pediatric blood & cancer (2024)
The EPICO (Spanish general registry of COVID-19 in children)-SEHOP (Spanish Society of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology) platform gathers data from children with SARS-CoV-2 in Spain, allowing comparison between children with cancer or allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (alloHSCT) and those without. The infection is milder in the cancer/alloHSCT group than in children without comorbidities (7.1% vs. 14.7%), except in children with recent alloHSCT (less than 300 days), of which 35.7% experienced severe COVID-19. These data have been shared with the SEHOP members to support treatment and isolation policies akin to those for children without cancer, except for those with recent alloHSCT or additional comorbidities. This highlights the collaborative registries potential in managing pandemic emergencies.
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