作者
James C.H. Chow,J. Jack Lee,Maria Lai,Sara Li,A.M.C. Lau,B.S.Y. Ng,Gigi G.G. Leung,S.T.Y. Li,Jeffrey C.F. Lui,Ka Man Cheung,Kwok Hung Au,Kam-Hung Wong,Alexander Yuk Lun Lau,Benny Zee
摘要
Introduction Neurocognitive impairment from inadvertent brain irradiation is common following intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). This study aimed to determine the prevalence, pattern, and radiation dose-toxicity relationship of this late complication. Materials and methods We undertook a cross-sectional study of 190 post-IMRT NPC survivors. Neurocognitive function was screened using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment-Hong Kong (HK-MoCA). Detailed assessments of eight distinct neurocognitive domains were conducted: intellectual capacity (WAIS-IV), attention span (Digit Span and Visual Spatial Span), visual memory (Visual Reproduction Span), verbal memory (Auditory Verbal Learning Test), processing speed (Color Trail Test), executive function (Stroop Test), motor dexterity (Grooved Pegboard Test) and language ability (Verbal Fluency Test). The mean percentiles and Z-scores were compared with normative population data. Associations between radiation dose and brain substructures were explored using multivariable logistic regression. Results The median post-IMRT interval was 7.0 years. The prevalence of impaired HK-MoCA was 25.3% (48/190). Among the participants, 151 (79.4%) exhibited impairments in at least one neurocognitive domain. The predominantly impaired domains included verbal memory (short-term: mean Z-score, -0.56, p<0.001; long-term: mean Z-score, -0.70, p<0.001), processing speed (basic: mean Z-score, -1.04, p<0.001; advanced: mean Z-score, -0.38, p<0.001), executive function (mean Z-score, -1.90, p<0.001), and motor dexterity (dominant hand: mean Z-score, -0.97, p<0.001). Radiation dose to the whole brain, hippocampus, and temporal lobe was associated with impairments in executive function, verbal memory, processing speed, and motor dexterity. Conclusions Neurocognitive impairment is prevalent and profound in post-IMRT NPC survivors. Cognitive assessment and rehabilitation should be considered part of survivorship care.