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Tumour brain: Pretreatment cognitive and affective disorders caused by peripheral cancers

Myrthe Mampay, Melanie S. Flint, Graham K. Sheridan

2021British Journal of Pharmacology24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

People that develop extracranial cancers often display co-morbid neurological disorders, such as anxiety, depression and cognitive impairment, even before commencement of chemotherapy. This suggests bidirectional crosstalk between non-CNS tumours and the brain, which can regulate peripheral tumour growth. However, the reciprocal neurological effects of tumour progression on brain homeostasis are not well understood. Here, we review brain regions involved in regulating peripheral tumour development and how they, in turn, are adversely affected by advancing tumour burden. Tumour-induced activation of the immune system, blood-brain barrier breakdown and chronic neuroinflammation can lead to circadian rhythm dysfunction, sleep disturbances, aberrant glucocorticoid production, decreased hippocampal neurogenesis and dysregulation of neural network activity, resulting in depression and memory impairments. Given that cancer-related cognitive impairment diminishes patient quality of life, reduces adherence to chemotherapy and worsens cancer prognosis, it is essential that more research is focused at understanding how peripheral tumours affect brain homeostasis.

Topics & Concepts

PeripheralCognitionMedicineNeurosciencePsychologyPsychiatryInternal medicineCancer-related cognitive impairment studiesGlioma Diagnosis and TreatmentCancer, Stress, Anesthesia, and Immune Response
Tumour brain: Pretreatment cognitive and affective disorders caused by peripheral cancers | Litcius