Burlile Jessica F, Cameron Joshua D, Gunn Heather J, Larson Nicole L, Bradt Jennifer L, Boughey Judy C, Mrdutt Mary M, Couch Fergus J, Olson Janet E, Cangie Valerie, Ehlers Shawna, Sharifzadeh Yasamin, Ruddy Kathryn J, Shumway Dean A, Loprinzi Charles L, Cathcart-Rake Elizabeth J
Mayo Clinic, Department of Radiation Oncology, Rochester, MN.
Mayo Clinic, Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Rochester, MN.
JCO Oncol Pract. 2025 Aug;21(8):1142-1152. doi: 10.1200/OP-24-00729. Epub 2025 Jan 22.
Over 50% of households in the United States have at least one musician-many musicians are also breast cancer survivors. This group has not been well studied, and given the level of fine sensory-motor skill required for musicianship, we hypothesized that musicians experience unique manifestations of breast cancer treatment toxicities.
A nine-item Musical Toxicity Questionnaire (MTQ) was distributed to patients who had consented to participate in the Mayo Clinic Breast Cancer Registry. The MTQ screened participants by asking if they played a musical instrument or sang in the last 10 years: questions populated for those who answered yes. Respondents were asked if they noticed difficulty with their musical endeavor during or after breast cancer treatment, defined as acute musical toxicity (AMT). The questionnaire asked which side effect and cancer-directed therapy most influenced musical ability, what musical attributes were affected, and the timeline of resolution. Multivariable and classification tree analyses assessed relationships between AMT and treatment characteristics.
Of 1,871 survey respondents, 29% (535/1,871) self-identified as musicians. Over a quarter (27%, 144/535) reported AMT, and for 57% (82/144), AMT had not resolved at the time of survey. Of the treatments each participant received, chemotherapy was most often reported as most negatively impactful (63/89 who received chemotherapy, 71%). Decreased endurance was the most common musical difficulty (64% of those with AMT, 92/144), followed by decreased accuracy, trouble playing/singing quickly, and difficulty using proper technique. Multivariable and classification tree analyses revealed that receipt of chemotherapy was most strongly correlated with AMT.
These results will help oncology care teams counsel musicians, answer questions about impacts on musicality, and provide a timeline for resolution of musical symptoms.
美国超过50%的家庭至少有一名音乐家——许多音乐家也是乳腺癌幸存者。这一群体尚未得到充分研究,鉴于音乐才能所需的精细感觉运动技能水平,我们推测音乐家会经历乳腺癌治疗毒性的独特表现。
向同意参与梅奥诊所乳腺癌登记处的患者发放了一份包含九个项目的音乐毒性问卷(MTQ)。MTQ通过询问患者在过去10年中是否演奏乐器或唱歌来筛选参与者:对回答“是”的人提出相关问题。询问受访者是否在乳腺癌治疗期间或之后注意到其音乐活动存在困难,这被定义为急性音乐毒性(AMT)。问卷询问了哪种副作用和针对癌症的治疗对音乐能力影响最大、哪些音乐属性受到了影响以及恢复的时间线。多变量分析和分类树分析评估了AMT与治疗特征之间的关系。
在1871名调查受访者中,29%(535/1871)自称是音乐家。超过四分之一(27%,144/535)报告有AMT,其中57%(82/144)在调查时AMT尚未缓解。在每位参与者接受的治疗中,化疗最常被报告为影响最负面(接受化疗的89人中的63人,71%)。耐力下降是最常见的音乐困难(有AMT的人中有64%,92/144),其次是准确性下降、快速演奏/唱歌困难以及使用正确技巧困难。多变量分析和分类树分析显示,接受化疗与AMT的相关性最强。
这些结果将有助于肿瘤护理团队为音乐家提供咨询,回答有关对音乐性影响的问题,并提供音乐症状缓解的时间线。