Manuweera Thushini, Karunakaran Keerthana, Baechler Camille, Rosales Javier, Kleckner Amber S, Rosenblatt Paula, Ciner Aaron, Kleckner Ian R
University of Maryland School of Nursing, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Support Care Cancer. 2025 May 24;33(6):497. doi: 10.1007/s00520-025-09549-9.
A growing body of research suggests that the brain is implicated in cognitive impairment, fatigue, neuropathy, pain, nausea, sleep disturbances, distress, and other prevalent and burdensome symptoms of cancer and its treatments. Despite anecdotal evidence of difficulties using gold-standard magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to study the brain, no studies have systematically reported reasons that patients with cancer do or do not complete research MRI scans, making it difficult to understand the role of the brain related to these symptoms. The goal of this study was to investigate these reasons and to suggest possible solutions.
We analyzed data from 120 patients with cancer (mostly breast and gastrointestinal) from three studies: MRI was mandatory in Study 1; MRI was optional in Studies 2-3. Patients provided reasons for completing or not completing optional research MRI scans.
The percentage of scans completed when MRI was mandatory was 76%, and when optional, it was 35%. The most common reasons for not completing optional scans were claustrophobia (28%), scheduling conflicts (22%), safety contraindications (15%), the scanner being too far away (9%), and discomfort (8%). Older participants were slightly more likely to decline at least one optional scan (log(odds) = 0.06/year, p = 0.02).
Although brain MRI is feasible for many patients with cancer, it can be difficult or not feasible for patients with claustrophobia, safety issues, busy schedules, or transportation issues. Improving communication, comfort, and access to a scanner may help. Reducing inequities related to study participation can improve research supportive care research.
越来越多的研究表明,大脑与癌症及其治疗过程中出现的认知障碍、疲劳、神经病变、疼痛、恶心、睡眠障碍、痛苦以及其他常见且负担沉重的症状有关。尽管有传闻称使用金标准磁共振成像(MRI)研究大脑存在困难,但尚无研究系统地报告癌症患者完成或未完成研究性MRI扫描的原因,这使得难以理解大脑与这些症状之间的关系。本研究的目的是调查这些原因并提出可能的解决方案。
我们分析了来自三项研究的120例癌症患者(主要是乳腺癌和胃肠道癌患者)的数据:在研究1中,MRI是强制性的;在研究2至3中,MRI是可选的。患者提供了完成或未完成可选研究性MRI扫描的原因。
当MRI为强制性时,扫描完成率为76%;当MRI为可选时,扫描完成率为35%。未完成可选扫描的最常见原因是幽闭恐惧症(28%)、日程安排冲突(22%)、安全禁忌症(15%)、扫描仪距离太远(9%)和不适(8%)。年龄较大的参与者拒绝至少一项可选扫描的可能性略高(对数(优势比)=0.06/年,p=0.02)。
尽管脑MRI对许多癌症患者来说是可行的,但对于患有幽闭恐惧症、存在安全问题、日程繁忙或有交通问题的患者来说,可能会困难或不可行。改善沟通、舒适度以及扫描仪的可及性可能会有所帮助。减少与研究参与相关的不平等现象可以改善研究支持性护理研究。