Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Cognitive Changes with Adjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer: A Longitudinal Study Michael Jameson, Barbara Hedge, Robyn Segedin, Stephanie Campbell-Wilson, Jenny Boyd Oncology Dept, Waikato Hospital, Hamilton, NZ University of Waikato PONZ 2011 Perhaps better entitled…. Where Possibilities Meet Practicalities – The Challenges of Undertaking Longitudinal Psycho-oncology Research in NZ Outline The great idea The research plan The hurdles More hurdles… Yet more of those @#**!! hurdles…. Limping across the finish line… Not the results Background 2575 cases of breast cancer in NZ in 2007 – Approx 75% will not die from breast cancer Mortality is falling due to: – Earlier diagnosis from screening programmes – Adjuvant therapy Women with breast cancer are one of the largest groups of cancer survivors – Quality of life experienced by cancer survivors is of great importance – What is the impact of adjuvant therapies on QOL? Adjuvant Therapy Treatment given after surgery – Reduce risk of relapse and death Radiotherapy – Conserved breast or chest wall +/- nodes Chemotherapy – Systemic treatment, usually IV drugs Hormone therapy – 5 years – May precipitate or mimic menopause Adjuvant Therapy Little is known about long-term effects of adjuvant therapy on QOL, especially chemo Long term effects possibly due to: – Direct effects of chemo or hormones on brain “chemo brain” – Induction of menopause – Psychological effects of cancer diagnosis – Psychological effects of treatment » Altered body image from surgery +/- chemo +/- RT – Fatigue – Alcohol, smoking, drugs Effects of Adjuvant Therapy on Cognitive Function Only preliminary studies by 2003 Chemotherapy: – Impaired memory and concentration – Stressful, associated with poor quality of life – Effects common at 6 months – Persistent in 1/3 10 years after high-dose chemo Hormone therapy (tamoxifen) – Blocks oestrogen – Associated with depression Chemo and Cognitive Function Generally cohort studies – One group before, another after treatment – No comparison of individual changes Longitudinal studies – Toronto – breast cancer only » simple instrument » not discriminating among domains » poor correlation with patient perceptions – Dunedin – breast and bowel cancer » Changes noted in some domains » complex assessment » Requires clinical psychologist to administer Brezden, JCO 2000;18:2695 Peace, PONZ 2003 Waikato Initiative 2003 Clear need for: – Prospective longitudinal study » Pre-treatment baseline » Repeated assessment in each patient – Look at other psychological and medical factors – Battery of tests that: » Focuses on identified problem areas » Easy to train non-psychologist to use ? Suitable for Master of Nursing project – Too long Objectives investigate the incidence, time course and recovery of deficits in cognitive function associated with adjuvant therapies for breast cancer over a 2 year period i.e. how bad does it get, and how quickly and completely does it recover? Objectives Specifically look at : – Verbal memory – Concentration – Speed of mental processing – Motor functioning Explore changes in quality of life, fatigue and mood during adjuvant therapies for breast cancer Examine the roles played by menopausal status, fatigue and mood in cognitive functioning during adjuvant therapies Study Design Eligible women: – Have had surgery for breast cancer – Adjuvant therapy is planned – No current meds that affect cognitive function – No current severe mental illness Comparisons Each woman serves as her own control – See changes over time – Completeness of recovery Comparator groups: – RT alone – Tamoxifen alone – Chemo alone – Any combination of the above – Induced menopause or not Assessments 1 2 3 Baseline 3 months 6 months Prepostpostadjuvant baseline baseline treatment 4 5 1 year postbaseline 2 years postbaseline Assessments Demographics and medical history • Includes age, gender, ethnic group, educational level achieved, occupation, marital status, number of children, number of co-habitants, stage of breast cancer • Menopausal status • Current regular medication • Drug and alcohol intake • If employed and, if so, hours per week • Adjuvant therapy (start and stop dates, type) Assessments Mood – Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale Fatigue – Multidimensional Fatigue Symptom Inventory – Visual analogue scales » mental tiredness » physical tiredness Quality of life – QLQ-C30 Assessments Cognitive functioning – Psychomotor function » Digit symbol » Trail making – Concentration » Digit span – Motor function » Grooved pegboard – Verbal memory » Word recall test » Logical memory Trail Making B Grooved Pegboard Assessments Cognitive failures questionnaire Everyday memory questionnaire Each assessment takes about: – 60 mins first time – 45 mins subsequently Research Plan 3 Centres – Waikato, Tauranga, Whakatane – Train a nurse in each centre – Clinical psychology student at Waikato Funding: – Equipment and forms needed – Travel expenses for patients & staff » Waikato Medical Research Foundation » Genesis Oncology Trust – Research nurses already employed – Nursing staff at other centres would do it in working hours Progress Started late 2003 Student finished end 2004 –Difficult for man to recruit women! –Poor recruitment in Oncology Dept and Breast Care Centre » Disinterest? » Lack of research culture Other centres insisted on nursing salaries – BOP Cancer Research Trust Progress Dec 2005 Research nurse employed by WDHB – 0.5 FTE – Clerical support – Funded from trust funds Recruitment dramatically improved – recruiting 2–3 per week – Aiming for 200 patients total Staff changes at all sites – 3 in Tauranga – Stopped in Whakatane – Added Rotorua briefly – Succession at Waikato – Managed to keep trained staff doing most planned assessments Progress Falling enthusiasm and recruitment Finally recruited 200th patient Sept 2010 – 12 month assessment last month Database now cleaned and ready for analysis – By Prof Barbara Hedge in Liverpool – Was originally planned with statisticians at University of Waikato The Learnings It may be a great idea but….. The idea has to have the backing of key recruiters It has to be practical – Realistic recruitment plan and timeline – Study staff and funding where necessary – Be completed in a timely fashion Health research in NZ suffers due to lack of infrastructure – Compared to Australia and the UK – Research nurses, data managers, biostatisticians The Learnings Collaborative research between institutions is challenging Much better tools are now available – E.g. Cogstate Important to have the investigators engaged throughout – Difficult across time and distance Overly ambitious – Start with a smaller pilot study rather than the definitive study Acknowledgments Genesis Oncology Trust Waikato Medical Research Foundation Bay Cancer Research Trust Waikato DHB (Oncology Trust Fund) Professor Barbara Hedge – Clinical Psychologist Robyn Segedin – Haematology Clinical Nurse Specialist, Waikato Hospital Research staff - Cancer Trials Unit, Waikato Hospital Nursing staff at BOPDHB Patients