Background and objective: Survivors of testicular germ cell tumor (TGCT) may experience long-term cognitive changes. The aim of our prospective study was to longitudinally assess cognitive function among TGCT survivors to identify potential lasting cognitive changes over a period of 5 yr.
Methods: TGCT survivors (n = 151) completed Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Cognitive Function (FACT-Cog) questionnaires annually, with median time to first follow-up visit (FUV) of 8 (range 4-24) yr since completion of treatment. Treatment after orchiectomy included: active surveillance (AS) alone (n = 21); chemotherapy (CTx; n = 109); radiotherapy (RT) to the retroperitoneum (n = 11); and combined CTx + RT (n = 10). Scores for four FACT-Cog domains and overall cognitive scores were evaluated annually for 5 yr. In a subgroup analysis we compared results for survivors who received cisplatin at a dose of <400 mg/m2 (n = 48) versus ≥400 mg/m2 (n = 70).
Results: The CTx + RT group had persistently lower scores for the perceived cognitive abilities (CogPCA) domain annually between the first and fifth FUVs in comparison to the AS group (all p < 0.05), with lower overall cognitive scores from the second to the fifth FUV (all p < 0.03). The group that received ≥400 mg/m2 cisplatin had lower CogPCA scores at the first and second FUVs, and lower overall cognitive scores at the second FUV in comparison to the AS group. However, no significant change in cognitive scores across all domains was observed over 5 yr for all survivors.
Conclusions: Cognitive impairment in TGCT survivors persisted over long-term follow-up. Survivors who received both CTx and RT consistently had the worst cognitive performance at all FUVs over a 5-yr period. In addition, survivors who received a higher cisplatin dose showed worse cognitive function at all FUVs.
Patient summary: Our study results show that survivors of testicular cancer experienced long-term cognitive dysfunction that persisted over time. Survivors who underwent both chemotherapy and radiotherapy and those who received a higher dose of chemotherapy had the worst cognitive problems.
Keywords: Cognitive impairment; Germ cell tumors; Late toxicities; Survivorship; Testicular cancer.
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