The impact of chemotherapy on cognitive function: a multicentre prospective cohort study in testicular cancer
Purpose The causal link between chemotherapy and cognitive impairment is unclear. We studied testicular cancer patients’ objective and subjective cognitive function longitudinally, comparing a surgery group with a surgery + chemotherapy group, addressing prior methodological issues using a computeri...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Supportive care in cancer 2020-07, Vol.28 (7), p.3081-3091 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
The causal link between chemotherapy and cognitive impairment is unclear. We studied testicular cancer patients’ objective and subjective cognitive function longitudinally, comparing a surgery group with a surgery + chemotherapy group, addressing prior methodological issues using a computerized test to limit assessment issues, and controlling for confounding variables.
Methods
Prospectively, of 145 patients from 16 centres with sufficient data,
n
= 61 receiving surgery + chemotherapy (etoposide and cisplatin ± bleomycin, BEP/EP; or single agent carboplatin) were compared to
n
= 41 receiving surgery alone. CogHealth assessed six objective cognitive tasks. The Cognitive Failures Questionnaire assessed self-perceived cognitive dysfunction. The Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale assessed psychological influences. Linear mixed models compared changes from baseline (
<
6 months post-surgery/pre-chemotherapy) to follow-up (12–18 months post-baseline), controlling covariates.
Results
There were no significant interaction effects for five objective cognitive function tasks suggesting that changes over time were not due to group membership. However, psychomotor function (controlling for age) and physical well-being were significantly worse for the chemotherapy versus the surgery group at baseline, with groups converging by follow-up. Groups showed no differences in subjective cognitive dysfunction. The chemotherapy group showed higher anxiety, poorer functional well-being and worse fatigue compared to the surgery-only group at baseline, but not by follow-up. For both groups, emotional well-being, functional well-being and anxiety significantly improved over time.
Conclusion
No substantive differences in objective or subjective cognitive dysfunction in either group persisted 12–18 months post-baseline. Patients undergoing chemotherapy for testicular cancer differ from findings in breast cancer populations.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov
Identifier: ACTRN12609000545268 |
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ISSN: | 0941-4355 1433-7339 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00520-019-05095-3 |