MULTIDIMENSIONAL PROfiLES OF COGNITIVE DETERIORATION AND RECOVERY ASSOCIATED WITH GLIOBLASTOMA SURGERY

Yizhou Wan, Ajay Halai, Haiyan Zheng, Rohitashwa Sinha, Thomas Santarius, Richard Mair, Robert Morris, Matt Lambon-Ralph, Stephen J. Price

Research output: Contribution to journalMeeting abstractpeer-review

Abstract

AIMS
Patients with glioblastoma suffer a high incidence of cognitive deficits. Cognition is the result of multiple neural mechanisms and glioblastoma is diffusely infiltrative with the capacity to invade multiple functional areas in the brain.

We hypothesise that cognitive deterioration and recovery in these patients will be multidimensional in nature and therefore different components of cognition will show distinct recovery profiles following surgery.

METHOD
28 patients with high-grade glioma, recruited at a single centre underwent preoperative (T0), early postoperative (within one week) (T1) and delayed (six to eight weeks) (T2) testing of their cognition with a neurocognitive screening tests; Oxford Cognitive Screen and Cambridge Attention, Memory and Perception Screen (OCS-Bridge) tool.

Varimax principal component analysis was performed to determine if there are low-dimensional domains of cognition examined by the tests. Changes in cognitive scores between time points was calculated and correlated with principal component scores (PCs).

RESULTS
We found six principal components which explained 71% of the variance in OCS scores. and six different com- ponents explained 63% of the variance in Bridge scores.

Cognitive deterioration was largely multidimensional with few significant correlations between PC change scores at T1 except tests loading on to visual field and spatial neglect. Cognitive recovery measured with T2 change scores were not significantly correlated between attention, praxis and language domains and between verbal working memory and visual memory and attention.

CONCLUSIONS
Longitudinal cognitive signatures of deterioration and recovery are heterogenous between patients. This high- lights the importance of targeting potentially distinct neural mechanisms for the rehabilitation of these patients.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)iii10
JournalNeuro-Oncology
Volume25
Issue numberSupplement_3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Sept 2023

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