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View Full Version : alterations of brain ("chemobrain") still detectable 5-10 years later


Lani
06-14-2007, 01:19 PM
ltered frontocortical, cerebellar, and basal ganglia activity in adjuvant-treated breast cancer survivors 5-10 years after chemotherapy
[from Breast Cancer Research and Treatment]

Purpose: To explore the relationship of regional cerebral blood flow and metabolism with cognitive function and past exposure to chemotherapy for breast cancer.

Patients and methods: Subjects treated for breast cancer with adjuvant chemotherapy remotely (5-10 years previously) were studied with neuropsychologic testing and positron emission tomography (PET), and were compared with control subjects who had never received chemotherapy. [O-15] water PET scans was acquired during performance of control and memory-related tasks to evaluate cognition-related cerebral blood flow, and [F-18] fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET scans were acquired to evaluate resting cerebral metabolism. PET scans were analyzed by statistical parametric mapping and region of interest methods of analysis.
Results: During performance of a short-term recall task, modulation of cerebral blood flow in specific regions of frontal cortex and cerebellum was significantly altered in chemotherapy-treated subjects. Cerebral activation in chemotherapy-treated subjects differed most significantly from untreated subjects in inferior frontal gyrus, and resting metabolism in this area correlated with performance on a short-term memory task previously found to be particularly impaired in chemotherapy-treated subjects. In examining drug-class specific effects, metabolism of the basal ganglia was significantly decreased in tamoxifen + chemotherapy-treated patients compared with chemotherapy-only breast cancer subjects or with subjects who had not received chemotherapy, while chemotherapy alone was not associated with decreased basal ganglia activity relative to untreated subjects.

Conclusion: Specific alterations in activity of frontal cortex, cerebellum, and basal ganglia in breast cancer survivors were documented by functional neuroimaging 5-10 years after completion of chemotherapy.

suzan w
06-14-2007, 03:27 PM
Thank you for this! Good validation for me!!!

Hopeful
06-14-2007, 06:51 PM
These are the kinds of studies that should have been done 20 years ago, when chemo for early stage bc became standard of care. Patients have a right to be told ALL of the potential side effects, short and long term, before consenting to treatment. Thanks, Lani, for keeping us informed.

Hopeful

Bev
06-14-2007, 08:47 PM
Bummer. There were older studies that showed we regained our cognitive function loss after 2 years. BB

kacey
06-15-2007, 09:35 AM
Hmmmmmm, I guess I can still admit to chemo brain. Explains a lot!!

Kacey