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About
The purpose of this study is to improve our understanding of potential changes in size, shape and activity in some brain areas that can occur in women receiving different types of Breast Cancer therapy, and how these changes are related to the development of mild cognitive impairment as the result of these treatments.
Full description
This study aims to identify neuroimaging biomarkers for predicting mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant chemo and/or hormonal therapy by examining hippocampal-cortical neurocircuitry. Adjuvant therapies increase long-term survival, but produce changes in cognitive function in 30% (up to 70%) of women on average with breast cancer. Cognitive decline negatively impacts quality of life in patients and their supporters. Therefore, early identification of patients at risk for developing treatment-related cognitive impairment is needed to develop potential prevention or treatment options and prevent further decline. Our recent work demonstrates that patients receiving adjuvant hormonal treatment exhibit decline in cognition as soon as three months post treatment. Although neuroimaging studies have identified brain changes associated with chemotherapy ("chemo brain", no investigation has assessed the type and severity of such changes following hormonal therapy, nor has any study determined which individuals are at greatest risk for cognitive impairment.
Our central hypothesis is that measures of the hippocampal-cortical integrity can be used to predict cognitive decline, and changes of specific domains of cognitive performance in patients receiving adjuvant therapy over time will be related to changes in specific components of this circuitry over time.
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Exclusion criteria
Individuals who report significant medical, neurologic, or psychiatric illness, including but not limited to:
Major depression
Schizophrenia
ADHD
Autism
Alzheimer's disease
Dementia
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Individuals with an Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology - Self Report (IDS-SR) score of 30 or higher, since this level of depression could affect cognitive test performance.
Brain surgery or head injury
Ineligibility for MRI scanning, including but not limited to:
Individuals reporting consumption of drugs that would affect cognition (neuropsychiatric or illicit)
Individuals indicating a history of breast cancer will be excluded from the healthy control group
Women who are pregnant or are planning to become pregnant during study.
84 participants in 5 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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