Effects of Breast Cancer Treatment on Neural Noise: a Longitudinal Design

Author:

Melara Robert D1ORCID,Root James C2ORCID,Edelman Jay A3,Estelle Maria Camilla2,Mohr Isabella2,Ahles Tim A2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, The City College, City University of New York , 160 Convent Avenue, NAC 7-120, New York, NY 10031, USA

2. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center , Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science Services, 641 Lexington Avenue, 7th Floor, New York, New York 10022, USA

3. Department of Biology, The City College, City University of New York , 160 Convent Avenue, MR 526, New York, NY 10031, USA

Abstract

Abstract Objective Cognitive dysfunction has been observed consistently in a subset of breast cancer survivors. Yet the precise neurophysiological origins of cancer-related cognitive decline remain unknown. The current study assessed neural noise (1/f activity in electroencephalogram [EEG]) in breast cancer survivors as a potential contributor to observed cognitive dysfunction from pre- to post-treatment. Methods We measured EEG in a longitudinal design during performance of the paired-click task and the revised Attention Network Test (ANT-R) to investigate pre- versus post-treatment effects of neural noise in breast cancer patients (n = 20 in paired click; n = 19 in ANT-R) compared with healthy controls (n = 32 in paired click; n = 29 in ANT-R). Results In both paradigms, one sensory (paired click) and one cognitive (ANT-R), we found that neural noise was significantly elevated after treatment in patients, remaining constant from pretest to posttest in controls. In the ANT-R, patients responded more slowly than controls on invalid cuing trials. Increased neural noise was associated with poorer alerting and poorer inhibitory control of attention (as measured by behavioral network scores), particularly for patients after treatment. Conclusions The current study is the first to show a deleterious effect of breast cancer and/or cancer treatment on neural noise, pointing to alterations in the relative balance of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs, while also suggesting promising approaches for cognitive rehabilitation.

Funder

National Cancer Institute/National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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