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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Assessing Affect Reactivity and Regulation in Patients With Stage 0-III Breast Cancer

Completed
Conditions
Stage IB Breast Cancer
Stage IIB Breast Cancer
Stage IIIB Breast Cancer
Stage IA Breast Cancer
Healthy Subject
Stage 0 Breast Cancer
Stage IIA Breast Cancer
Stage IIIA Breast Cancer
Stage IIIC Breast Cancer
Interventions
Procedure: Biospecimen Collection
Procedure: Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Other: Questionnaire Administration
Registration Number
NCT03050463
Lead Sponsor
Stanford University
Brief Summary

The investigators hope to gain a better understanding of the influence of affect reactivity and regulation on the decision of newly diagnosed breast cancer patients to choose bilateral mastectomy. The information gained can help develop an intervention to enable management of cancer-related anxiety by non-surgical means.

Detailed Description

PRIMARY OBJECTIVES:

I. Examine affect reactivity and regulation among women with a recent diagnosis of breast cancer in comparison to healthy controls.

II. Relate affect reactivity and regulation to choice of bilateral mastectomy (BLM).

SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:

I. Assess long term functioning correlates of BLM decision and affect reactivity and regulation.

OUTLINE: Study plans to recruit total of 170 women. Participants will be assigned to 3 arms. For women diagnosed with breast cancer (total of 130) 65 with BLM as part of their cancer treatment and 65 non-BLM. The 3rd arm being 40 women with no cancer diagnosis as controls.

Study protocol will be the same for all 170 Study participants. Active participation by each participant will be approximately 8 hours at baseline and 2 hours at 6, 12, and 18-month follow-ups. Baseline assessment involve completing a set of questionnaires, participating in various tasks while undergoing an MRI scan of the head, providing saliva samples and I tube of blood. Follow-up assessments involve completing a set of questionnaires and saliva collection, all can be done at home.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
178
Inclusion Criteria

Women Diagnosed with breast cancer

  • Female
  • Age 18 or older
  • Agree to suspend treatments containing Benzodiazepines and steroids up to 2 weeks pre and during cortisol sampling (based on PI's clinical judgement)
  • Agree to taking saliva samples and having fMRI scan
  • No contraindications to MRI imaging (like ferromagnetic metal in their body)
  • Proficiency in English sufficient to complete questionnaires and follow instructions during the fMRI assessments
  • US Citizen or resident able to receive payment legally
  • Documented stage 0-III breast cancer
  • Unilateral breast tumors

Controls

  • Female
  • Age 18 or older
  • Agree to suspend treatments containing Benzodiazepines and steroids up to 2 weeks pre and during cortisol sampling (based on PI's clinical judgement)
  • Agree to having saliva samples and fMRI scan
  • No contraindications to MRI imaging (like ferromagnetic metal in their body)
  • Proficiency in English sufficient to complete questionnaires and follow instructions during the fMRI assessments
  • US Citizen or resident able to receive payment legally
Exclusion Criteria

Women Diagnosed with breast cancer

  • Other active cancers within the past 10 years other than squamous cell carcinoma of the skin
  • Pregnant
  • Any significant neurologic disease, such as dementia, multi-infarct dementia, Parkinson's or Huntington's disease, brain tumor, progressive supranuclear palsy, seizure disorder, subdural hematoma, multiple sclerosis, stroke, or traumatic brain injury
  • Hearing impaired
  • Current untreated psychosis, or bipolar disorder, or substance/alcohol abuse/dependence
  • Current use of psychotropic (based on PI's clinical judgement) medication 5 or more days a week

Controls

  • Cancer diagnosis, current or past
  • Pregnant
  • Any significant neurologic disease, such as dementia, multi-infarct dementia, Parkinson's or Huntington's disease, brain tumor, progressive supranuclear palsy, seizure disorder, subdural hematoma, multiple sclerosis, stroke, or traumatic brain injury
  • Hearing impaired
  • Current untreated psychosis, or bipolar disorder, or substance/alcohol abuse/dependence
  • Current use of psychotropic (based on PI's clinical judgement) medication 5 or more days a week
  • Breast cancer diagnosis in 1 first degree relative or 2 or more second degree relatives
  • Ovarian cancer diagnosis in 1 first or second degree relative

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
breast cancer with bilateral mastectomyQuestionnaire AdministrationThis group has patients with breast cancer who have chosen to have a bilateral mastectomy. Patients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
healthy subjectsBiospecimen CollectionPatients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
breast cancer with bilateral mastectomyBiospecimen CollectionThis group has patients with breast cancer who have chosen to have a bilateral mastectomy. Patients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
healthy subjectsQuestionnaire AdministrationPatients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
breast cancer with bilateral mastectomyFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingThis group has patients with breast cancer who have chosen to have a bilateral mastectomy. Patients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
breast cancer without bilateral mastectomyFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingThis group has patients diagnosed with breast cancer who have chosen not to have bilateral mastectomy (e.g. they may have unilateral mastectomy, lumpectomy, radiation, etc. but not bilateral mastectomy). Patients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
healthy subjectsFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingPatients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
breast cancer without bilateral mastectomyQuestionnaire AdministrationThis group has patients diagnosed with breast cancer who have chosen not to have bilateral mastectomy (e.g. they may have unilateral mastectomy, lumpectomy, radiation, etc. but not bilateral mastectomy). Patients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
breast cancer without bilateral mastectomyBiospecimen CollectionThis group has patients diagnosed with breast cancer who have chosen not to have bilateral mastectomy (e.g. they may have unilateral mastectomy, lumpectomy, radiation, etc. but not bilateral mastectomy). Patients complete questionnaires over 1 hour, undergo fMRI related tasks over 2-2.5 hours, and blood/saliva sample collection upon awakening, 30 minutes after awakening, and at 9 pm in the evening for 3 consecutive days.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Implicit Affect Reactivity and Regulation Measured Using fMRI Reactivity ProbesUp to 18 months

Multivariate regression analysis will be used to examine affect reactivity among women with a recent diagnosis of breast cancer in comparison to healthy controls at baseline. Functional data will be collected on the implicit affect regulation task (13 minutes) and implicit cancer-related affect regulation task (13 minutes). Affect reactivity and cancer-related affect reactivity will be defined by incongruent minus congruent trials and incongruent cancer minus congruent cancer-related trials. The greater this value, the more affect reactivity there is. Implicit affect regulation for general affective content will be calculated by post-congruent incongruent trials minus post-incongruent incongruent trials. Similarly, implicit affect regulation for cancer related content will be calculated from the post-congruent incongruent trials minus post-incongruent incongruent trials in the cancer-related adaptation of the task. The greater this value, the less successful implicit regulation is.

Explicit Affect Reactivity and Regulation Measured Using functional MRI (fMRI) Reactivity ProbesUp to 18 months

Multivariate regression analysis will be used to examine affect reactivity among women with a recent diagnosis of breast cancer in comparison to healthy controls at baseline. Functional data will be collected on the explicit affect regulation task (20 minutes) and explicit cancer related affect regulation task (8 minutes). Affect reactivity and cancer-related affect reactivity will be defined by WATCH negative minus WATCH neutral and by WATCH cancer-related negative and WATCH neutral contrast. The larger this value, the greater the affect reactivity. Explicit affect regulation will defined by WATCH negative minus REAPPRAISE negative, and by WATCH negative minus REAPPRAISE cancer-related negative contrasts. The greater this value, the less successful explicit regulation is.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Diurnal Slope of CortisolUp to 18 months

Affect management is associated with the diurnal slope of cortisol. The stress of a breast cancer diagnosis and subsequent treatment choices is bound to affect hormonal stress response systems, such as the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA). Cortisol levels, measured reliably in saliva, are a meaningful and accessible way of assessing physiological stress response. Salient to this study of affect regulation, the investigators have found that flatter diurnal cortisol slope is associated with higher repressive-defensiveness and less sustained expression of primary negative affect in a group setting.

BLM decision and affective distressUp to 18 months

Longitudinal trajectories of affective distress are examined. For this, The Contralateral Prophylactic Mastectomy (CPM) survey consists of 23 items related to decision making, knowledge, risk perceptions, and worry about breast cancer. It was developed based on expert knowledge measuring decision making, risk perceptions, and knowledge outcomes in patients with breast cancer. It showed in a recent study that choice of CPM is related to significant anxiety about cancer coupled with overestimation of the risk of recurrence and therefore of the benefit of the procedure. This will be used to study the link between affect reactivity and regulation and cognitive distortion about risks and benefits.

Functional status as a predictor of longitudinal progressionUp to 18 months

Functional status is assessed through self-report measures. The "Ways of Coping Checklist" was developed to assess eight fundamental dimensions of the coping process: confrontation, distancing, self-control, seeking social support, accepting responsibility, escape/avoidance, planful problem solving, and positive reappraisal. These dimensions measure two general functions of coping, problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping. Problem-focused coping is aimed at doing something to change the stressful situation for the better, whereas emotion- focused coping is aimed at regulating emotional distress

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Stanford University, School of Medicine

🇺🇸

Palo Alto, California, United States

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