Breast Center, Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, CCC University Hospital of Munich, Germany.
CCCLMU University Hospital of Munich, Munich, Germany.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 2017 Oct 1;109(10). doi: 10.1093/jnci/djx057.
Cancer-related cognitive dysfunction has mostly been attributed to chemotherapy; this explanation, however, fails to account for cognitive dysfunction observed in chemotherapy-naïve patients. In a controlled, longitudinal, multisite study, we tested the hypothesis that cognitive function in breast cancer patients is affected by cancer-related post-traumatic stress.
Newly diagnosed breast cancer patients and healthy control subjects, age 65 or younger, underwent three assessments within one year, including paper-and-pencil and computerized neuropsychological tests, clinical diagnostics of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and self-reported cognitive function. Analysis of variance was used to compare three groups of participants-patients who did or did not receive chemotherapy and healthy control subjects-on age- and education-corrected cognitive performance and cognitive change. Differences that were statistically significant after correction for false discovery rate were investigated with linear mixed-effects models and mediation models. All statistical tests were two-sided.
Of 226 participants (166 patients and 60 control subjects), 206 completed all assessment sessions (attrition: 8.8%). Patients demonstrated overall cognitive decline (group*time effect on composite z -score: -0.13, P = .04) and scored consistently worse on Go/Nogo errors. The latter effect was mediated by PTSD symptoms (mediation effect: B = 0.15, 95% confidence interval = 0.02 to 0.38). Only chemotherapy patients showed declined reaction time on a computerized alertness test. Overall cognitive performance correlated with self-reported cognitive problems at one year ( T = -0.11, P = .02).
Largely irrespective of chemotherapy, breast cancer patients may encounter very subtle cognitive dysfunction, part of which is mediated by cancer-related post-traumatic stress. Further factors other than treatment side effects remain to be investigated.
癌症相关认知功能障碍主要归因于化疗;然而,这种解释无法解释在未经化疗的患者中观察到的认知功能障碍。在一项对照、纵向、多中心研究中,我们检验了一个假设,即乳腺癌患者的认知功能受与癌症相关的创伤后应激的影响。
新诊断的乳腺癌患者和年龄在 65 岁或以下的健康对照者在一年内接受了三次评估,包括纸笔和计算机神经心理测试、创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的临床诊断和自我报告的认知功能。方差分析用于比较三组参与者——接受或未接受化疗的患者和健康对照者——在年龄和教育校正后的认知表现和认知变化。经过假发现率校正后具有统计学意义的差异通过线性混合效应模型和中介模型进行了研究。所有统计检验均为双侧。
在 226 名参与者(166 名患者和 60 名对照者)中,206 名完成了所有评估阶段(流失率:8.8%)。患者表现出整体认知下降(组*时间对复合 z 评分的影响:-0.13,P=.04),并且在 Go/Nogo 错误上的得分始终较低。后一种效应由 PTSD 症状介导(中介效应:B=0.15,95%置信区间=0.02 至 0.38)。只有化疗患者在计算机警觉性测试中显示反应时间下降。一年时的整体认知表现与自我报告的认知问题相关(T=-0.11,P=.02)。
在很大程度上,不论是否接受化疗,乳腺癌患者可能会遇到非常轻微的认知功能障碍,其中一部分是由与癌症相关的创伤后应激引起的。需要进一步研究除治疗副作用以外的其他因素。