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Childhood Neurotoxicity and Brain Resilience to Adverse Events during Adulthood.

Authors :
Williams AM
Cheung YT
Hyun G
Liu W
Ness KK
Ehrhardt MJ
Mulrooney DA
Bhakta N
Banerjee P
Brinkman TM
Green DM
Chemaitilly W
Huang IC
Srivastava D
Hudson MM
Robison LL
Krull KR
Source :
Annals of neurology [Ann Neurol] 2021 Mar; Vol. 89 (3), pp. 534-545. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Dec 31.
Publication Year :
2021

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).<br />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.<br />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.<br />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.<br /> (© 2020 American Neurological Association.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1531-8249
Volume :
89
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Annals of neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33274777
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.25981