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Clinical Trials/NCT01108952
NCT01108952
Unknown
Not Applicable

The Impact of Chemotherapy on Memory Function and the Development of Traumatic Symptoms in Children With Cancer

Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center1 site in 1 country45 target enrollmentJanuary 2011

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Oncology
Sponsor
Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center
Enrollment
45
Locations
1
Last Updated
16 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Background: While treatment for pediatric cancer has improved significantly over the past 40 years, the neurotoxic side-effects of the chemotherapy agents themselves are now being recognized. Two drugs suspected of having acute impact on memory performance in children are methotrexate (MTX) and steroids (GCs). In addition, new evidence suggests that this neurotoxicity might actually protect these children from traumatization.

Working hypothesis and aims: This project aims to examine the acute impact of MTX and GC chemotherapy on memory performance in children and young adults with cancer, and the subsequent impact on the development of traumatic symptoms. We hypothesize that MTX and GCs will each produce acute declines in memory performance and that children with greater reductions in memory performance will have fewer traumatic symptoms.

Methods: The investigators will recruit 45 children being treated with MTX or GCs at Dana Children's Hospital. To determine acute impact on memory, a battery of memory tests will be administered before and after a cycle of MTX and before and after a cycle of GCs. In addition, traumatic symptoms will be assessed at each post-chemotherapy evaluation point Expected results: The investigators expect poorer memory performance after MTX and after GCs and that these performance declines will correlate with lower rates of traumatic symptoms.

Importance: The immediate impact of MTX and GCs on memory is not well known, especially in children. In addition, recent findings have led us to hypothesize that chemotherapy-induced deficits in memory function would paradoxically protect these patients from the traumatization often associated with cancer and its treatment. The proposed study will test this novel hypothesis for the first time.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
January 2011
End Date
December 2013
Last Updated
16 years ago
Study Type
Observational
Sex
All

Investigators

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Histologically proven diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, or osteosarcoma
  • treatment protocol that includes at least one cycle of methotrexate or exogenous glucocorticoid
  • informed consent to participate in the study, according to institutional guidelines
  • fluency in Hebrew, English, or Arabic
  • age 6 to 25

Exclusion Criteria

  • Cranial irradiation within the past year
  • serious concomitant systemic disorders (including active infections) that would compromise the safety of the patient or compromise the patient's ability to complete the study
  • active meningitis or seizures occurring less than a month before study enrollment

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Not specified

Study Sites (1)

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