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Childhood Neurotoxicity and Brain Resilience to Adverse Events during Adulthood

AnnaLynn M. Williams, Yin Ting Cheung, Geehong Hyun, Wei Liu, Kirsten K. Ness, Matthew J. Ehrhardt, Daniel A. Mulrooney, Nickhill Bhakta, Pia Banerjee, Tara M. Brinkman, Daniel M. Green, Wassim Chemaitilly, I‐Chan Huang, Deo Kumar Srivastava, Melissa M. Hudson, Leslie L. Robison, Kevin R. Krull

2020Annals of Neurology41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study used childhood cancer survivors as a novel model to study whether children who experience central nervous system (CNS) injury are at higher risk for neurocognitive impairment associated with subsequent late onset chronic health conditions (CHCs). METHODS: Adult survivors of childhood cancer (n = 2,859, ≥10 years from diagnosis, ≥18 years old) completed a comprehensive neurocognitive battery and clinical examination. Neurocognitive impairment was defined as age-adjusted z score < 10th percentile. Participants impaired on ≥3 tests had global impairment. CHCs were graded using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v4.3 (grade 1, mild; 2, moderate; 3, severe/disabling; 4, life-threatening) and were combined into a severity/burden score by frequency and grade (none/low, medium, high, and very high). A total of 1,598 survivors received CNS-directed therapy including cranial radiation, intrathecal methotrexate, or neurosurgery. Logistic regression estimated the odds of neurocognitive impairment associated with severity/burden score and grade 2 to 4 conditions, stratified by CNS treatment. RESULTS: CNS-treated survivors performed worse than non-CNS-treated survivors on all neurocognitive tests and were more likely to have global neurocognitive impairment (46.9% vs 35.3%, p < 0.001). After adjusting for demographic and treatment factors, there was a dose-response association between severity/burden score and global neurocognitive impairment, but only among CNS-treated survivors (high odds ratio [OR] = 2.24, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.42-3.53; very high OR = 4.07, 95% CI = 2.30-7.17). Cardiovascular and pulmonary conditions were associated with processing speed, executive function, and memory impairments in CNS-treated but not non-CNS-treated survivors who were impacted by neurologic conditions. INTERPRETATION: Reduced cognitive/brain reserve associated with CNS-directed therapy during childhood may make survivors vulnerable to adverse cognitive effects of cardiopulmonary conditions during adulthood. ANN NEUROL 2021;89:534-545.

Topics & Concepts

NeurocognitiveMedicineCommon Terminology Criteria for Adverse EventsOdds ratioAdverse effectConfidence intervalInternal medicinePediatricsPsychiatryCognitionChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of LifeCancer-related cognitive impairment studiesChemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity and mitigation
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