Individualized trajectories in postradiotherapy neurocognitive functioning of patients with brain metastases

Publication date

2024-08-01

Authors

van Grinsven, Eva E.
Cialdella, Fia
Meijling, Yoniet Gmelich
Verhoeff, Joost J.C.
Philippens, Marielle E.P.
van Zandvoort, Martine J.E.ISNI 0000000393673388

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Article

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Abstract

Background. The increasing incidence of brain metastases (BMs) and improved survival rates underscore the necessity to investigate the effects of treatments on individuals. The aim of this study was to evaluate the individual trajectories of subjective and objective cognitive performance after radiotherapy in patients with BMs.  Methods. The study population consisted of adult patients with BMs referred for radiotherapy. A semi-structured interview and comprehensive neurocognitive assessment (NCA) were used to assess both subjective and objective cognitive performance before, 3 months and ≥ 11 months after radiotherapy. Reliable change indices were used to identify individual, clinically meaningful changes.  Results. Thirty-six patients completed the 3-month follow-up, and 14 patients completed the ≥ 11-months follow-up. Depending on the domain, subjective cognitive decline was reported by 11–22% of patients. In total, 50% of patients reported subjective decline in at least one cognitive domain. Intracranial progression 3 months postradiotherapy was a risk-factor for self-reported deterioration (P = .031). Objective changes were observed across all domains, with a particular vulnerability for decline in memory at 3 months postradiotherapy. The majority of patients (81%) experienced both a deterioration as well as improvement (eg, mixed response) in objective cognitive functioning. Results were similar for the long-term follow-up (3 to ≥11 months). No risk factors for objective cognitive change 3 months postradiotherapy were identified.  Conclusions. Our study revealed that the majority of patients with BMs will show a mixed cognitive response following radiotherapy, reflecting the complex impact. This underscores the importance of patient-tailored NCAs 3 months postradiotherapy to guide optimal rehabilitation strategies.

Keywords

brain metastases, radiotherapy, neurocognitive functioning, Medicine (miscellaneous), Oncology, Neurology

Citation

van Grinsven, E E, Cialdella, F, Meijling, Y G, Verhoeff, J J C, Philippens, M E P & van Zandvoort, M J E 2024, 'Individualized trajectories in postradiotherapy neurocognitive functioning of patients with brain metastases', Neuro-Oncology Practice, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 441-451. https://doi.org/10.1093/nop/npae024