Abstract

Cancer survivors frequently report significant forgetfulness, but standard neuropsychological tests often fail to detect primary memory deficits. Past research has suggested survivors may misattribute forgetfulness to memory decay rather than impairments in initial encoding, but no studies have tested whether this pattern is evident in older survivors, who are more vulnerable to age-related memory difficulties. We examined whether long-term breast cancer survivors treated in older adulthood demonstrate deficits in initial encoding, as opposed to increased rates of memory decay, relative to non-cancer controls. Three hundred twenty-eight breast cancer survivors age 60 and above, 5-15years post-treatment, and 162 age-matched non-cancer controls completed list learning and narrative memory assessments at four time-points over 2years. Performance on learning trials and delayed recall was analyzed at each time-point to assess group differences in memory encoding, and memory decay was assessed by analyzing changes in performance across delays. Univariate ANCOVAs correcting for age and education showed that survivors had worse initial encoding performance across multiple time-points, which were compensated for with multiple learning trials to produce recall performance comparable to controls. There were no significant group differences in memory decay. Older long-term breast cancer survivors exhibit a consistent pattern of initial encoding deficits, but memory retention was comparable to controls. Future research should consider the role of encoding deficits and age-related factors when evaluating cognitive function in older survivors. Commonly reported memory problems may stem from encoding deficits in older long-term cancer survivors.

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