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Comparative Study
. 2005 Nov 15;104(10):2222-33.
doi: 10.1002/cncr.21469.

A metaanalysis of studies of the effects of cancer chemotherapy on various domains of cognitive function

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Free article
Comparative Study

A metaanalysis of studies of the effects of cancer chemotherapy on various domains of cognitive function

Catherine E Jansen et al. Cancer. .
Free article

Abstract

Background: Little is known about the effects of chemotherapy on cognitive function. The purposes of this metaanalysis were to estimate the effect sizes for the effect of chemotherapy on each domain of cognitive function and to differentiate effect sizes by each method of comparison of effects (i.e., normative data, control group, or baseline data).

Methods: Sixteen studies that evaluated cognitive function in chemotherapy patients were included in the study. DSTAT metaanalysis software was used to calculate an effect size and confidence intervals for each neuropsychologic test. Tests were assigned to a specific cognitive domain, and an average effect size was determined for each domain.

Results: Only one domain of cognitive function (i.e., visual memory) had significant chemotherapy-induced impairment across all comparison types. However, when the neuropsychologic test scores of chemotherapy patients were compared with normative data, significant effect sizes were found for four domains of cognitive function (i.e., executive function, information processing speed, verbal memory, visual memory). In addition, significant, albeit small, effect sizes were found for language and verbal memory when chemotherapy patients' test scores were compared with test scores of healthy matched controls. All significant averaged effect sizes were in the negative direction, indicating that mean scores on neuropsychologic tests for patients who had received chemotherapy were on average lower than comparison scores.

Conclusion: Data from this metaanalysis supported the hypothesis that chemotherapy can have a negative impact on cognitive function. However, most deficits in this study ranged from small to moderate and were nonsignificant.

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