Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center (UMC) Utrecht, Heidelberglaan 100, 3584 CX, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2019 Jun;175(2):429-441. doi: 10.1007/s10549-019-05149-4. Epub 2019 Feb 12.
To evaluate the impact of chemotherapy on subjective cognitive functioning according to age in a large cohort of breast cancer patients.
Within the UMBRELLA cohort, 715 patients with early-stage primary invasive breast cancer (T1-3N0-1M0) were selected. Subjective cognitive function was assessed by means of the EORTC QLQ-C30 up to 24 months and compared between patients treated with and without chemotherapy, for three different age strata (355 patients < 55 years, 240 patients aged 55-65 years, and 120 patients > 65 years). Differences between chemotherapy and non-chemotherapy patients by age at different time points were assessed by linear mixed-effect models correcting for age, tumor stage, educational level, endocrine therapy, anxiety, and depression.
In total, 979 patients from the UMBRELLA cohort were included, of which 715 (73%) responded to baseline and at least one follow-up questionnaire. Questionnaire response rates ranged between 92 and 70%. The proportion of patients treated with chemotherapy decreased with age: 64% (n = 277) in patients < 55 years, 45% (n = 107) in patients 55-65 years, and 23% (n = 27) in patients > 65 years. Chemotherapy was associated with reduced subjective cognitive functioning. The impact of chemotherapy on subjective cognitive function was most pronounced in patients < 55 years, followed by those between 55 and 65 years. In the youngest age groups, patients treated with chemotherapy had significantly lower cognitive functioning up to 24 months. In women over 65 years, subjective cognitive functioning was comparable between patients treated with and without chemotherapy.
This study confirms that chemotherapy is associated with impaired subjective self-reported cognitive functioning in breast cancer patients, and the effect persists at least up to 2 years after diagnosis. The impact of chemotherapy on self-reported cognitive functioning in the first 24 months is most pronounced in younger patients, especially those under 55 years of age.
在一项大型乳腺癌患者队列中,根据年龄评估化疗对主观认知功能的影响。
在 UMBRELLA 队列中,选择了 715 例早期原发性浸润性乳腺癌(T1-3N0-1M0)患者。通过 EORTC QLQ-C30 在 24 个月内评估主观认知功能,并比较接受和未接受化疗的患者,分为三个不同年龄组(<55 岁 355 例,55-65 岁 240 例,>65 岁 120 例)。通过线性混合效应模型,在校正年龄、肿瘤分期、教育水平、内分泌治疗、焦虑和抑郁后,评估不同年龄的化疗和非化疗患者在不同时间点的差异。
共纳入 UMBRELLA 队列的 979 例患者,其中 715 例(73%)对基线和至少一次随访问卷做出了回应。问卷的回应率在 92%至 70%之间。接受化疗的患者比例随年龄增长而降低:<55 岁的患者中 64%(n=277)接受化疗,55-65 岁的患者中 45%(n=107)接受化疗,>65 岁的患者中 23%(n=27)接受化疗。化疗与主观认知功能下降相关。化疗对主观认知功能的影响在<55 岁的患者中最为显著,其次是 55-65 岁的患者。在年龄最小的患者中,接受化疗的患者在 24 个月内认知功能明显降低。在 65 岁以上的女性中,接受化疗和未接受化疗的患者的主观认知功能无差异。
本研究证实,化疗与乳腺癌患者主观自我报告认知功能受损相关,且该影响至少在诊断后 2 年内持续存在。化疗对前 24 个月自我报告认知功能的影响在年轻患者中最为显著,尤其是 55 岁以下的患者。