'Chemobrain' language symptoms are commonly reported by adults receiving intensive chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), but real-time detection eludes clinical imaging modalities. We performed a prospective, observational, longitudinal cohort study employing serial comprehensive neurocognitive assessment and brain functional MRI (fMRI) in 20 adults receiving intensive chemotherapy for newly diagnosed AML. At chemotherapy completion, fMRI demonstrated significantly reduced functional connectivity between the salience (anterior cingulate cortex ACC) and the left language (inferior frontal gyrus IFG and posterior superior temporal gyrus pSTG) networks (p = 0.008), supported by significant decreases in white matter fibre density in the corpus callosum (p = 0.009) and in the tract connecting the ACC and left IFG (p = 0.037). Increasing cytarabine dose significantly correlated with decreasing ACC-IFG connectivity (R2 = 0.51, p = 0.021). Correlative analyses identified significant associations between worse brain imaging findings (language region connectivity and volume); worse verbal fluency scores; and increasing treatment intensity (cytarabine dose, transfusions and serum ferritin) (R2 > 0.5, p < 0.05). Taken together, this study provides novel evidence that AML chemotherapy induces measurable alterations in brain microstructure and functional connectivity, particularly affecting salience and language networks, and suggests a dose-dependent effect with escalating cytarabine and transfusion exposure.
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Ashleigh Scott
Ada Lo
Ying Xia
British Journal of Haematology
The University of Queensland
Queensland University of Technology
Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital
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Scott et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b6069b83145bc643d1c950 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/bjh.70386
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