A Neuropsychologic Perspective: Cognitive Impairments in Cancer Patients - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 34
About This Presentation
Title:

A Neuropsychologic Perspective: Cognitive Impairments in Cancer Patients

Description:

A Neuropsychologic Perspective: Cognitive Impairments in Cancer Patients J. Aubrey Burhart State University of New York at Buffalo What is a neuropsychologist? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:91
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 35
Provided by: bsccdhsOr
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: A Neuropsychologic Perspective: Cognitive Impairments in Cancer Patients


1
A Neuropsychologic Perspective Cognitive
Impairments in Cancer Patients
  • J. Aubrey Burhart
  • State University of New York at Buffalo

2
What is a neuropsychologist?
  • A neuropsychologist is an expert in the applied
    science of clinical neuropsychology concerned
    with the behavioral expression of brain
    dysfunction

3
Dimensions of Behavior
4
What does a Neuropsychologist do?
  • Diagnose Differentiate btw. Psychiatric and
    neurological symptoms distinguishing btw. 2
    neurological disorders predict outcome of a
    condition
  • Patient care and planning Identify how the
    disease might affect patients behavior for
    family members Assess patients capability for
    managing daily activities and following treatment
    regimen Repeated assessments at intervals allows
    for tracking disease progression
  • Rehabilitation and Treatment evaluation provide
    information to various healthcare providers
    regarding patients capacities, defective
    behaviors, etc.
  • Research study brain activity and its effect on
    behavior

5
Lateralization in the Brain
  • Left Side
  • Speech
  • Writing
  • Main Language Center
  • Calculation
  • Right Side
  • Spatial Construction
  • Simple Language
  • Copying/Drawing Geometric Designs
  • Some Musical Ability
  • Odors

6
Major Neuropsychology Domains
  • Memory
  • Visual/Spatial
  • Attention/Concentration
  • Intellectual
  • Executive
  • Motor
  • Speech/Language

7
The Domains Defined (Lezak, 1995)
  • Attention and Concentration
  • Refers to several processes that are related
    aspects of how the organism becomes receptive to
    stimuli and how it may begin processing incoming
    or attended to-information
  • Memory
  • The complex of systems by which an organism
    registers, stores, retains, and retrieves some
    previous exposure to an event or experience
  • Visual/Spatial
  • The memory for familiar routes or for the
    location of objects and places in space

8
Definition of Domains..contd.
  • Executive
  • Those capacities that enable a person to engage
    successfully in independent, purposive,
    self-serving behavior
  • Motor
  • Primarily concerned with use of the hands,
    although gait is qualitatively assessed. Gross
    and fine motor skills are assessed to varying
    degrees of precision.
  • Intelligence
  • Tendency for cerebral regions subserving
    different intellectual functions to be
    proportionately developed in any one individual
  • Speech Language
  • Refers to the understanding and expression of
    language in all realms (spoken, written,
    auditory). Incl.s quality/quantity of
    spontaneous speech, aud. Comp., reading
    recognition and comp., writing, repetition, and
    confrontation and generative naming.

9
Cancer is Devastating
  • The incidence of cancers of the breast and lung
    in women, as well as non-Hodgkin lymphoma,
    melanoma of the skin, and liver in men and women,
    is rising
  • Lung cancer deaths in women continue to rise,
    though not as effectively as before
  • More people are overweight and obese, and
    physical activity is increasing only slightly
  • Cancer treatment spending continues to rise along
    with total health care spending

10
Cognitive Functioning is Essential For
  • Comprehending disease treatment and progression
  • Making informed healthcare decisions
  • Adhering to a treatment regimen
  • Medication compliance
  • Occupational success
  • Maintaining social networks

11
Risk Factors for Cognitive Deficits
  • Disease Induced
  • Infections
  • Pain
  • Metastases to CNS
  • Disturbances of endocrinologic system
  • Treatment Induced
  • Chemotherapy
  • Radiation
  • Bone marrow transplantation
  • Medications
  • Biologic Response Modifiers

12
All of these things can cause..
  • Combination treatments are often implemented
    which may be more effective in combating the
    cancer, but poses even greater risks of
    neurotoxicity for the patient

Encephalopathy
13
Effects of Chemotherapy on Cognitive Functioning
  • Cognitive dysfunction can appear soon after
    treatment initiation or as late as 10 years later
  • Altered cognitive functioning can be transient or
    permanent
  • Even when cognitive function appears to be in the
    normal range, low-normal functioning is
    associated with previous chemotherapy treatment
  • There is new evidence that supports the theory
    that carriers of the e4 allele of apoliprotein
    are at greater risk for reduced
    neuropsychological performance when coupled with
    chemo treatment, their risk substantially
    increases for cognitive dysfunction

14
Neurological complications of chemotherapy
  • Acute encephalopathy (begins with insomnia,
    rapidly followed by a state of confusion
    associated with agitation
  • Stroke-like episodes (characterized by acute
    onset of encephalopathy with fluctuating motor
    deficit)
  • Chronic encephalopathy develops progressively
    for months to years after treatment

15
Neurological Complications of radiation
  • Acute encephalopathy (headache, nausea,
    drowsiness, fever)
  • Early-delayed Complications (2 weeks-3 or 4
    months) hypersomnia, irritability, headache,
    attention deficits, memory problems
  • Late-delayed complications (4 months-years)
    radiation necrosis, dementia syndrome, vision
    and/or hearing loss, lower cranial nerve
    paralysis, radiation-induced tumors

16
Potential Mediators ?
  • There have been some agents identified that might
    reduce cognitive impairment
  • Erythropoietin
  • Aspirin
  • Methylphenidate (has demonstrated improvement in
    children undergoing chemo)

17
What is Bone Marrow Transplantation (BMT)?
  • Used to treat cancers that have not responded
    well to more standard medical interventions
  • Bone marrow transplants involve the destruction
    of a patients own bone marrow via chemotherapy
    and/or radiation therapy, followed by infusion of
    new cells to generate healthy bone marrow
    function
  • BMT can be classified as allogeneic or
    autologous
  • Allo bone marrow is transferred from a donor
  • Auto replacement marrow is harvested from the
    patient, cleaned from disease, and reinfused into
    patient

18
BMT patients are at high risk for cognitive
deficits
  • Most patients undergoing BMT receive chemotherapy
    or combination chemotherapy/radiation as a
    preparatory regimen prior to BMT
  • Toxicity from high-dose chemotherapy combine with
    whole-body radiation puts patient at risk for
    extended hospitalization, posthospitalization
    recovery, and risk of death from the procedure
  • Neurological acute complications are frequent,
    including transient drowsiness, occasional
    seizures, or severe encephalopathy delayed
    complications typically include mild/moderate
    cognitive dysfunction with cerebral atrophy.

19
BMT
  • Studies investigating cognitive impairment in BMT
    patients have used various methods of assessment
    including a review of medical records,
    interviews, self-reported questionnaires, and
    standardized neuropsychological testing
  • Cognitive impairment has been found to persist
    for months to years following BMT

20
BMT
  • Several domains of cognitive functioning have
    been found to be affected, ranging in severity
    from mild to severe impairment, including memory,
    attention/concentration, language, motor, and
    executive functioning
  • Most studies investigating cognitive impairment
    as a result of BMT do not include a baseline
    assessment, lack long-term follow-up assessment,
    do not include standardized neuropsychological
    protocols, and lack a measure of Quality of Life.

21
  • Research Shows
  • More than 20 of people who receive cranial
    irradiation suffer significant CNS damage and
    neurocognitive impairment (Levin, 1999).
  • Andrykowski et al., (1992) 56 of their sample
    of adult BMT candidates scored 1.5 S.Ds below
    the norm on neuropsych battery
  • van Dam et al., (1998) High-dose chemotherapy
    impairs cognitive functioning more than
    standard-dose chemotherapy on breast cancer
    patients
  • Significant dose escalations of opioids (gt or
    30) cause impaired psychomotor and cognitive
    functions in cancer patients (Sjogren, 1997).

22
Research shows..(contd.)
  • Chemotherapy and radiation therapy have a
    negative impact on cognitive functioning (Ahles,
    1998).
  • In a study by Pereira et al. (1997), 44 of
    terminal cancer patients had prevalent cognitive
    impairment upon admission to a palliative care
    unit. Just prior to death, 62.1 of patients had
    prevalent cognitive impairment.
  • Both non-small-cell lung cancer and glioma
    patients suffer from a number of
    condition-specific neurologic and
    neuropsychologic problems that have a significant
    impact on their daily lives.

23
(No Transcript)
24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
(No Transcript)
31
(No Transcript)
32
In Conclusion
  • As cancer treatments become more efficacious, the
    greater consideration needs to be given to choose
    a treatment modality that might minimize risk for
    cognitive dysfunction
  • Family members are a critical component of
    follow-up treatment for cancer patients/survivors
    cognitive deficits are often more apparent to
    others rather than the patient themselves.
    Family members should track the nature and
    frequency of notable deficits

33
Critical Issues
  • Where is the literature concerning cognitive
    impairments in other cancer populations?
  • Since normal cognitive functioning is critical
    for intellectual and academic development,
    occupational achievement, development and
    maintenance of social relationships, and
    appropriate self-care, why werent QoL measures
    included in all of the studies conducted?
  • If certain meds and treatments are correlated
    with cognitive impairments even prior to surgical
    procedures, how well informed are patients
    regarding their consent?
  • If tamoxifen is used in the treatment of breast
    cancer and has been shown to adversely effect
    cognition, are there other cancer populations for
    which this is prescribed?

34
Thanks for your attention!
Any Questions?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com