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12 Differential Processing Efficiency Skills in Survivors of Pediatric Primary CNS Cancer and Cancers of non-CNS Origin
- Julie A Trapani, Victoria C Seghatol-Eslami, Tiffany D Tucker, Amanda M Cook, Sarah-Ann McGilvray, Shreya Grandhi, Donna L Murdaugh
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 14
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Objective:
Pediatric cancer and cancer-related treatments may disrupt brain development and place survivors at risk for long term problems with cognitive functions. Processing efficiency has been operationalized as a nuanced cognitive skill that reflects both processing speed (PS) and working memory (WM) abilities and is sensitive to neurobiological disruption. Pediatric cancer survivors are at risk for processing efficiency deficits; however, a thorough characterization of processing efficiency skills across pediatric primary central nervous system (CNS) tumor and non-CNS cancer survivors has not yet been reported.
Participants and Methods:Participants were selected from a mixed retrospective clinical database of pediatric cancer survivors (Total n=160; primary CNS tumor n=33; Non-CNS n=127). Univariate analyses were conducted to examine differences in processing efficiency mean scores (t-tests) and percent impairment (scores >1 SD below mean; chi-squared tests) between the total sample and normative sample, and across groups (CNS vs. Non-CNS). Multiple linear regressions were utilized to evaluate the relationships between additional risk factors, including biological sex, age at diagnosis, time since treatment, and socioeconomic status, and processing efficiency outcomes.
Results:The total sample obtained lower scores on WM (M=90.83, SD=13.35) and PS (M=88.86, SD=14.38) measures than normative samples (M=100, SD=15), p < 0.001. Greater percentage of pediatric cancer survivors demonstrated impairment across all processing efficiency measures (24.8-38.1%) than normative samples (15.9%), p < 0.001. Regarding group differences, the CNS group obtained lower mean WM (M=84.85, SD =11.77) and PS (M=80, SD=14.18) scores than the Non-CNS group (WM M=92.39, SD=13.32; PS M=91.16, SD=13.56), p < 0.001. Rates of impairment between groups only differed for PS scores, with 63.6% of the CNS group and 31.5% of the non-CNS group demonstrating impairment, p < 0.001. Primary CNS tumor cancer type and male biological sex emerged as the only significant risk factors that predicted processing efficiency skills, with male sex predicting lower scores on PS (ß=8.91 p<.001) and semantic fluency (ß=7.59, p=.007).
Conclusions:These findings indicate that both pediatric primary CNS tumor and non-CNS cancer survivors exhibit substantial weaknesses in processing efficiency skills after treatment. While both groups demonstrated deficits compared to normative samples, the CNS group was more susceptible to PS impairments than non-CNS group. A basic initial study of the relationships between risk factors and processing efficiency skills revealed that primary CNS cancer was a predictor of lower performance on working memory and processing speed measures, while male biological sex was a significant risk factor for worse performance on processing speed and semantic fluency measures. Continued focus on the construct of processing efficiency in pediatric cancer survivors is warranted. Applying a standardized approach to assessing and communicating this nuanced cognitive skill could contribute to advancing both clinical practice and outcomes research of pediatric cancer survivors.
6 Subjective Sleep Measures and Neurocognitive Outcomes in Pediatric Sickle Cell Disease
- Tiffany D Tucker, Dakshin Padmanabhan, Shreya Grandhi, Victoria Seghatol-Eslami, Julie Trapani, Amanda Cook, Sarah-An McGilvary, Jeffrey Lebensburger, Justin S Thomas, Donna Murdaugh
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 514
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Objective:
Youth with sickle cell disease (SCD) are at increased risk of neurocognitive difficulties with and without neurological complications. Research has identified disease-related, socioeconomic, and sociodemographic risk factors as independently having significant associations with brain physiology for youth with SCD. Notably, sleep has a profound effect on youth’s neurocognitive abilities including learning, executive function, memory, attention, and processing speed. Furthermore, youth with SCD are at an increased risk for poor sleep measured by self-report questionnaires and by polysomnography (PSG). Within the SCD literature, only a few studies have examined the relationship between sleep and cognition. Of these, the majority examined individuals with SCD and comorbid sleep disorder diagnoses. The aim of this study is to identify associations between subjective sleep measures and neurocognitive outcomes in youth with SCD.
Participants and Methods:This study investigated a cohort of 24 youth with SCD (ages 9-16, 11 males, 13 females; HbSS [63%], HbSB+ [8%], HbSC [21%], HbSB0 [8%]) who received sleep questionnaires and a neuropsychological evaluation. Exclusion criteria included a history of neurological disorder (e.g., overt stroke, seizures, or moyamoya disease) or prescribed psychotropic medication. Sleep questionnaires measuring sleep disturbance (e.g., sleep onset, sleep continuity, and sleep quality) and sleep-related impairments (e.g., daytime sleepiness, sleepiness interference with concentration, and difficulty with activities of daily living skills) were collected. Executive function, working memory, processing speed, and verbal comprehension measures were assessed. Demographics and disease-related risk factors were analyzed individually from medical records.
Results:All analyses were controlled for age, the time between neuropsychological testing and sleep questionnaires, SCD genotype, and sex. Partial correlations were conducted to explore associations with neurocognitive outcomes. Verbal comprehension was significantly correlated with sleep disturbance (r= -.673, p=.001). Multiple linear regressions revealed that sleep disturbance significantly predicts verbal comprehension (ß= -.572, p=.003). Specifically, verbal comprehension decreased by 4.4 standard points for every one-point increase in sleep disturbance. Additionally, total sleep problems significantly predicted working memory (ß=-.414, p=.044) and processing speed (ß= -.411, p= .046). Specifically, working memory decreased by 3.5 standard points while processing speed decreased by 3.3 standard points for every one-point increase in total sleep problems reported. Sleep parameters did not significantly predict executive function.
Conclusions:Results support the association between poor sleep and neurocognitive difficulty in youth with SCD. Three of the participants in this study received a PSG, which further demonstrates the importance of the current findings. This study serves to identify potential risk factors for neurocognitive deficits and provides potential methods for identifying youth with SCD who may need to be referred for a PSG assessment. Research should replicate these findings with increased sample sizes including utilizing PSG and investigating neurobiological effects. Findings may inform future screening tools, treatment approaches, and advanced cognitive initiatives and resources for this population.
The Effects of Radiation and Sex Differences on Adaptive Functioning in Adult Survivors of Pediatric Posterior Fossa Brain Tumors
- Tanya F. Panwala, Michelle E. Fox, Tiffany D. Tucker, Tricia Z. King
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 25 / Issue 7 / August 2019
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 14 May 2019, pp. 729-739
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Objective: Radiation therapy (RT) improves rates of survival of patients with childhood brain tumors but increases deficits in cognition and independent living skills. Previous literature has studied difficulties in basic cognitive processes, but few explore impairment in higher-order skills such as adaptive functioning. Some studies identify females as at risk for cognitive deficits due to RT, but few investigate sex differences in adaptive functioning. It was hypothesized that females would exhibit poorer long-term independent living skills and core cognitive skills relative to males following RT. Methods: Forty-five adult survivors of posterior fossa childhood brain tumors (24 females) completed the Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence (WASI-II), Wechsler Memory Scale, Third Edition (WMS-III) Digit Span Forward (DSF) and Backward (DSB), and Oral Symbol Digit Modalities Test (OSDMT). Informants completed the Scales of Independent Behavior-Revised (SIB-R). Results: DSF and OSDMT were positively correlated with all five SIB-R domains, full-scale IQ (FSIQ) was positively correlated with four SIB-R domains, and DSB was positively correlated with three SIB-R domains. There was an interaction between sex and RT for OSDMT and community living skills with trend level interactions for personal living skills and broad independent living skills, where females without RT had higher scores than females with RT. Conclusions: Female survivors were more affected by RT than males across the community living skills domain of adaptive functioning as well as processing speed. Processing speed deficits may have a cascading impact on daily living skills. Future studies should investigate how clinical and biological factors may contribute to personalized treatment plans between sexes. (JINS, 2019, 25, 729–739)
Contributions of ascariasis to poor nutritional status in children from Chiriqui Province, Republic of Panama
- D. L. Taren, M. C. Nesheim, D. W. T. Crompton, Celia V. Holland, Irma Barbeau, Gloria Rivera, Diva Sanjur, Jean Tiffany, Katherine Tucker
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- Journal:
- Parasitology / Volume 95 / Issue 3 / December 1987
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 06 April 2009, pp. 603-613
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Relationships between ascariasis and lactose digestion and between ascariasis and food transit time from mouth to caecum were investigated in young children from Chiriqui Province, Republic of Panama. The breath hydrogen method was used in both studies. Ascaris-infected children showed a significantly poorer degree of lactose digestion following a test oral load than uninfected children. Recovery of the capacity of the children to digest lactose was still not fully complete for at least 3 weeks following anthelmintic treatment. On average, the mouth-to-caecum transit time was similar in infected and uninfected children, but among the Ascaris-infected children the transit time tended to be shorter in relation to the intensity of infection. Evidence from a cross-sectional survey indicated that ascariasis was significantly associated with reduced plasma vitamin A and carotenoid concentrations. This relationship remained after controlling for a range of socio-economic variables. Ascaris-infected children were frequently found to have lower haematocrits and blood haemoglobin concentrations than uninfected children, but these relationships could not be attributed to ascariasis alone.