Abstract

Cancer- and treatment-related cognitive dysfunction (CRCD) is a common challenge faced by patients diagnosed with non-central nervous system (CNS) cancer. It has become increasingly recognized that multiple factors likely play a role in these symptoms, including the cancer disease process, systemic treatments (e.g., chemotherapy and endocrine therapies), and risk factors that may predispose an individual to both cancer and cognitive dysfunction. As the field has evolved, advanced neuroimaging techniques have been applied to better understand the neural correlates of CRCD. This review focuses on structural neuroimaging findings related to CRCD in adult non-CNS cancer populations, including examination of gray matter volume/density and white matter integrity differences between cancer patients and comparison groups, as well as emerging findings regarding structural network abnormalities. Overall, this literature has demonstrated consistent findings of reduced gray matter volume/density and white matter integrity in cancer patients relative to comparison groups. These are most prominent in individuals treated with chemotherapy, though alterations have also been noted in those treated with anti-estrogen and androgen-deprivation therapies. Alterations in gray and white matter structural network connectivity have also been identified. These structural abnormalities have been observed most prominently in frontal and temporal brain regions, and have been shown to correlate with subjective and objective cognitive function, as well as with physiological and clinical variables, helping to inform understanding of CRCD mechanisms. To date, however, structural neuroimaging techniques have not been utilized in systematic studies of potential CRCD treatments, suggesting a potentially fruitful avenue for future research.

Highlights

  • Since the 1980s, the scientific literature has focused increasing attention on the phenomenon of cognitive symptoms after non-central nervous system (CNS) cancer diagnosis and treatment

  • This marks an important distinction between Cancer- and treatment-related cognitive dysfunction (CRCD) and cognitive disorders of aging such as mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or Alzheimer’s disease (AD), where level of cognitive impairment is more severe

  • This review focuses on neuroimaging studies in adult non-CNS cancer populations that utilize quantitative approaches to characterize differences in brain structure, including gray and white matter volumetric alterations as well as effects of cancer and treatment on brain structural network integrity

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Summary

Introduction

Since the 1980s, the scientific literature has focused increasing attention on the phenomenon of cognitive symptoms after non-central nervous system (CNS) cancer diagnosis and treatment. C. McDonald et al, 2010 [43].) C Regions where older breast cancer patients (mean age 67.0 years) showed greater gray matter density reduction than healthy controls from pre-treatment to within 1 month post-chemotherapy.

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