University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, USA.
Am J Clin Oncol. 2010 Dec;33(6):533-43. doi: 10.1097/COC.0b013e3181b9cf1b.
Several small scale clinical trials indicated a possible relationship between chemotherapy administration and the increased risk of cognitive impairments in patients with breast cancer, but little information was available from large population-based cohort studies.
We studied 62,565 women who were diagnosed with stages I-IV breast cancer at age ≥65 years from 1991 through 2002 from 16 regions in the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results program who were free of cognitive impairments at diagnosis with up to 16 years of follow-up, and also studied 9752 matched cohort based on the propensity of receiving chemotherapy. The cumulative incidence of cognitive impairments was calculated and the time to event (cognitive impairments) analysis was conducted using Cox hazard regression model.
Overall, patients who received chemotherapy were 8% more likely to have drug-induced dementia compared with those without chemotherapy, but that was not statistically significant after adjusting for patient and tumor characteristics (hazard ratio = 1.08, 95% confidence interval = 0.85-1.37). The risk of developing Alzheimer disease, vascular dementia, or other dementias was significantly lower in patients receiving chemotherapy except for cognitive disorder which was not significantly different between the 2 chemotherapy groups. The results were somewhat similar in the entire cohort and the matched cohort based on the probability of receiving chemotherapy.
There was no significant association between chemotherapy and the risk of developing drug-induced dementia and unspecified cognitive disorders. The risk of developing Alzheimer disease, vascular dementia, or other dementias was significantly lower in patients receiving chemotherapy. This study with long-term follow-up did not support the findings that chemotherapy was associated with an increased risk of late stage cognitive impairments.
几项小规模临床试验表明,化疗与乳腺癌患者认知障碍风险增加之间可能存在关联,但来自大型基于人群的队列研究的信息有限。
我们研究了 1991 年至 2002 年期间来自监测、流行病学和最终结果计划 16 个地区的年龄≥65 岁、被诊断患有 I-IV 期乳腺癌且在长达 16 年的随访期间无认知障碍的 62565 名女性,并且还根据接受化疗的倾向研究了 9752 名匹配队列。计算认知障碍的累积发生率,并使用 Cox 风险回归模型进行事件(认知障碍)时间分析。
总体而言,与未接受化疗的患者相比,接受化疗的患者发生药物性痴呆的可能性高 8%,但在调整患者和肿瘤特征后,这并不具有统计学意义(风险比=1.08,95%置信区间=0.85-1.37)。除认知障碍外,接受化疗的患者发生阿尔茨海默病、血管性痴呆或其他痴呆的风险显著降低,而这两种化疗组之间的认知障碍无显著差异。在整个队列和基于接受化疗概率的匹配队列中,结果有些相似。
化疗与发生药物性痴呆和未特指的认知障碍风险之间没有显著关联。接受化疗的患者发生阿尔茨海默病、血管性痴呆或其他痴呆的风险显著降低。这项具有长期随访的研究不支持化疗与晚期认知障碍风险增加相关的发现。