Trajectories of Cognitive Complaints in Patients With Breast Cancer and Their Association With Psychosocial and Neurobiological Factors
Rob Colaes, Gwen Schroyen, Rebeca Alejandra Gavrila Laic, Jeroen Blommaert, Sigrid Hatse, Ann Smeets, Stefan Sunaert, Sabine Deprez

TL;DR
This study identifies different patterns of cognitive complaints in breast cancer patients and links them to psychosocial factors like anxiety and stress.
Contribution
The study introduces distinct cognitive complaint trajectories and their associations with psychosocial factors in breast cancer patients.
Findings
Four cognitive complaint trajectories were identified, including stable, improving, short-term affected, and long-term affected groups.
Psychosocial factors like anxiety, fatigue, stress, and depression were strongly associated with these cognitive complaint patterns.
Neuropsychological tests, serum markers, and rs-fMRI showed only subtle associations with the identified trajectories.
Abstract
Cancer‐related cognitive impairment (CRCI) is common among patients with breast cancer, with significant variability in both severity and duration of cognitive complaints. This study aimed to elucidate this variability by identifying distinct trajectories of cognitive complaints over time in patients with breast cancer. Additionally, we explored the relationships between these trajectories and various clinical, demographic, psychosocial, neuropsychological, neuroimaging (resting‐state functional MRI, rs‐fMRI), and serum markers. In this prospective study, 67 patients with non‐metastatic breast cancer underwent psychosocial questionnaires, neuropsychological testing, rs‐fMRI, and serum markers at diagnosis (T0), 8 months after diagnosis (T1), and 16 months after diagnosis (T2). Using the partition around medoids (PAM) algorithm on the difference scores of cognitive complaints, patients…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer-related cognitive impairment studies · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Glioma Diagnosis and Treatment
