Cognitive function is mediated by deficit accumulation in older, long-term breast cancer survivors.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 ONCOLOGY
Journal of Cancer Survivorship Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-03-24 DOI:10.1007/s11764-023-01365-6
Tim A Ahles, Elizabeth Schofield, Yuelin Li, Elizabeth Ryan, Irene Orlow, Sunita K Patel, Tiffany Traina, James C Root
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Abstract

Purpose: This study aims to examine whether cognitive function in older, long-term breast cancer survivors is both a direct effect of cancer and cancer treatments and an indirect effect mediated by deficit accumulation.

Patients and methods: Female breast cancer survivors who had been diagnosed and treated at age 60 or older and were 5-15-year survivors (N = 220) and age- and education-matched non-cancer controls (N = 123) were assessed at enrollment and at 8-, 16-, and 24-month follow-ups with standard neuropsychological tests and the comprehensive geriatric assessment which was used to calculate the deficit accumulation frailty index (DAFI). Blood or saliva samples for APOE genotyping were collected at enrollment. Participants were purposely recruited so that approximately 50% had a history of treatment with chemotherapy or and 50% were not exposed to chemotherapy.

Results: Latent variable mediation analysis revealed that cognitive performance was mediated by deficit accumulation for all three domains. The direct effect of cancer diagnosis and treatment history was significant for the Language domain (p = 0.04), a trend for the learning and memory domain (p = 0.054), and non-significant for the attention, processing speed, executive function (APE) domain. Carrying the APOE ε4 allele had a significant negative direct effect on the APE domain (p = 0.05) but no indirect effect through deficit accumulation.

Conclusion: Cognitive function in older, long-term breast cancer survivors appears to be primarily mediated through deficit accumulation.

Implications for cancer survivors: These findings have important clinical implications suggesting that the most effective intervention to prevent or slow cognitive aging in older cancer survivors may be through prevention or management of comorbidities and interventions that maintain functional capacity (exercise, physical therapy) and social and mental health.

年长的长期乳腺癌幸存者的认知功能受赤字积累的影响。
目的:本研究旨在探讨老年长期乳腺癌幸存者的认知功能是否既受癌症和癌症治疗的直接影响,也受赤字积累的间接影响:通过标准神经心理学测试和老年综合评估,对60岁或60岁以上接受过诊断和治疗且存活5-15年的女性乳腺癌幸存者(N=220)和年龄与教育程度匹配的非癌症对照组(N=123)进行入组评估,并在8个月、16个月和24个月的随访中进行评估,该评估用于计算亏损累积虚弱指数(DAFI)。入组时收集血液或唾液样本进行 APOE 基因分型。特意招募的参与者中,约 50%有化疗史,50%没有化疗史:结果:潜变量中介分析表明,在所有三个领域中,认知表现都受到赤字积累的中介作用。癌症诊断和治疗史对语言领域的直接影响显著(p = 0.04),对学习和记忆领域的影响呈趋势(p = 0.054),而对注意力、处理速度和执行功能(APE)领域的影响不显著。APOE ε4等位基因对APE领域有显著的负直接影响(p = 0.05),但没有通过赤字累积产生间接影响:对癌症幸存者的影响:这些发现具有重要的临床意义,表明预防或延缓老年癌症幸存者认知老化的最有效干预措施可能是预防或控制合并症,以及保持功能能力(运动、物理治疗)和社会及心理健康的干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
10.80%
发文量
149
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Cancer survivorship is a worldwide concern. The aim of this multidisciplinary journal is to provide a global forum for new knowledge related to cancer survivorship. The journal publishes peer-reviewed papers relevant to improving the understanding, prevention, and management of the multiple areas related to cancer survivorship that can affect quality of care, access to care, longevity, and quality of life. It is a forum for research on humans (both laboratory and clinical), clinical studies, systematic and meta-analytic literature reviews, policy studies, and in rare situations case studies as long as they provide a new observation that should be followed up on to improve outcomes related to cancer survivors. Published articles represent a broad range of fields including oncology, primary care, physical medicine and rehabilitation, many other medical and nursing specialties, nursing, health services research, physical and occupational therapy, public health, behavioral medicine, psychology, social work, evidence-based policy, health economics, biobehavioral mechanisms, and qualitative analyses. The journal focuses exclusively on adult cancer survivors, young adult cancer survivors, and childhood cancer survivors who are young adults. Submissions must target those diagnosed with and treated for cancer.
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