Chemo-brain in the News
5/13/2008 Philadelphia, PA Carolyn Vachani, RN, MSN, AOCN OncoLink.com Many survivors who have previously received or are currently undergoing chemotherapy report experiencing cognitive changes, often referred to as "chemo-brain." These changes include difficulty with short-term memory, multi-tasking, new learning, reading comprehension, and working with numbers, as well as a decrease in concentration ability. For many years, this was attributed by physicians and researchers to depression or anxiety over the diagnosis and treatment of cancer. More recently, researchers have begun to study and document what survivors have been saying all along; cognitive changes after chemotherapy are real. Although we are not yet able to pinpoint whether only certain chemotherapy drugs are responsible for these cognitive changes, it seems certain that the effects are cumulative. That is, those who receive more chemotherapy tend to experience greater deficits. Studies have found that cognitive ability can improve over time in some survivors, but deficits are still present in many survivors, even years after treatment. Two studies recently presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology prompted health news reports to claim that “chemo-brain” may be a myth. These reports fly in the face of millions of survivors’ accounts and numerous research studies (one that was presented at the same meeting). As is often the case, these news snippets don’t report the whole story, so let’s take a look at these studies and some of the research on this topic. The two abstract presentations addressed in the recent news were both small [...]