An evaluation of memory and attention in BRCA mutation carriers using an online cognitive assessment tool

Joanne Kotsopoulos & Steven Narod · 2021-06-02

3Citations

Background

The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of various surgical, hormonal, and lifestyle factors on memory and attention in women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation.

Methods

BRCA mutation carriers enrolled in a longitudinal study were invited to complete an online brain health assessment tool designed to screen for cognitive deficits. Four measures of memory and executive attention were assessed individually, and an overall score was compiled adjusting for age. Exposures, including preventive surgery, hormone use, and lifestyle factors, were captured by questionnaire. Performance on each of the 5 subtasks was analyzed according to various exposures. Analysis of covariance was used to compare overall scores.

Results

In total, 880 women completed the online cognitive assessment. The average age of the participants was 54 years (range, 23‐86 years). The mean overall test score was 54.4 (range, 0‐93). The individual subtask scores declined with age at test completion (P < .0001) and increased with level of education (P ≤ .01). Women who underwent a preventive oophorectomy had a significantly higher overall score compared with women who did not undergo this surgery (55.5 vs 50.5; P = .01). Reconstructive breast surgery was also associated with a higher overall score (56.5 vs 52.3; P = .005). Chemotherapy and hormone‐replacement therapy were not predictive of the overall score.

Conclusions

These findings are reassuring to high‐risk women who undergo early surgical menopause for their cancer predisposition. Further studies are needed to evaluate cognitive function over time when memory deficits become more prevalent.

Journal
Cancer
TL;DR

The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of various surgical, hormonal, and lifestyle factors on memory and attention in women with a BRCA1 or BRCa2 mutation.

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Funding

Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute

703058

CIHR

154275

Tier II Canada Research Chair

Peter Gilgan Centre for Women's Cancers at Women's College Hospital, in partnership with the Canadian Cancer Society

Gina Nitsopoulos Fundraiser

Tier I Canada Research Chair

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

154275