MedPath

Social Cognition and Language in Patients With Gliomas

Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Glioma, Malignant
Cognitive Dysfunction
Registration Number
NCT05764460
Lead Sponsor
University Medical Center Groningen
Brief Summary

Patients with gliomas often suffer from lower quality of life, and detrimental social interactions after diagnosis. Two cognitive processes are crucial for maintaining healthy social relationships and interacting with others: social cognition and language. Social cognition is the ability to recognize and process mental and emotional states and to react appropriately in social situations. Social cognition and language are separate cognitive functions that can be affected in different ways in patients with brain injury. Also, distinct cognitive measurement instruments are used to assess both processes. However, there appears to be a certain overlap between social cognition and language. Reacting adequately in social situations requires both verbal and non-verbal communication and to communicate feelings, thoughts and intentions, people often use language. That is, verbal communication is part of a symbolic system that makes social interaction possible. Therefore, language abilities seem to be important to social cognition. Research shows that language is frequently impaired in adult patients with gliomas. Importantly, recent evidence suggests that social cognition can also be impaired in this patient group. However, no studies have been conducted into the relationship between social cognition and language in patients with gliomas. Increasing knowledge on the overlap between both functions, more specifically the influence of language difficulties on social cognition, will improve diagnostic accuracy. Eventually, this will lead to better, tailor-made treatments for these problems that negatively affect daily functioning.

Objective: The main research objective is to examine the influence of language impairments on different social cognition processes, i.e., emotion recognition, Theory of Mind (ToM) and affective empathy, in patients with (suspected) gliomas. Secondary objectives are 1) to determine if patients with gliomas show impairments in different aspects of social cognition, i.e. emotion recognition, ToM, empathy and self-awareness; 2) to assess specific language impairments by looking at item-level characteristics of language tasks (e.g., analyses of word properties of fluency tasks, errors during object naming or spontaneous speech), and 3) to determine which tumor characteristics (low- or high-grade, genetic mutation, tumor location) are associated with different aspects of language and social cognition.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
105
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients with suspected gliomas, i.e. low- or high-grade gliomas.
  • Age older than 18 years
  • Sufficient command of the Dutch language
  • Being able to understand the instructions of the NPA and to mentally and physically sustain/endure the assessment; this will be assessed in a consultation between treating physician (neurosurgeon) and investigator (neuropsychologist).
Exclusion Criteria
  • Serious neurodegenerative or psychiatric conditions (including addiction)
  • Serious (other) medical conditions or physical inability hindering patients to come to the hospital
  • Patients who need to undergo emergency craniotomy due to progression of disease

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Impairments in phonology, semantics, syntaxis10 minutes (total NPA approximately 3 hours)

Screeling

Impairments in emotion recognition10 minutes

FEEST

Impairments in Theory of Mind10 minutes

Cartoons

Impairments in social insight10 minutes

Faux Pas

Impairments in naming5 minutes (total NPA approximately 3 hours)

Boston Naming Test

Impairments in fluency5 minutes (total NPA approximately 3 hours)

Fluency

Impairments in language comprehension5 minutes (total NPA approximately 3 hours)

SAN

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Impairments in executive functions2 minutes (total NPA approximately 3 hours)

Key Search

Impairments in unstructured spontaneous language5 minutes (total NPO approximately 3 hours)

Story telling

EmpathyApproximately 3 minutes

Questionnaire filled in by patient and proxy: IRI

Relationship qualityApproximately 4 minutes

Questionnaire filled in by patient and proxy: CSI

Impairments in speed and attention5 minutes (total NPA approximately 3 hours)

Trail Making Test

Impairments in general language5 minutes (total NPO approximately 3 hours)

QUEST-NL

Social abilitiesApproximately 3 minutes

Questionnaire filled in by patient and proxy: DEX

Impairments in memory10 minutes (total NPA approximately 3 hours)

Rivermead Behavioral Memory Test

Impairments in structured spontaneous language5 minutes (total NPO approximately 3 hours)

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