Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology (Mar 2022)

A prospective behavioral and imaging study exploring the impact on long-term memory of radiotherapy delivered for a brain tumor in childhood and adolescence

  • Eloïse Baudou,
  • Jérémie Pariente,
  • Patrice Péran,
  • Fatima Tensaouti,
  • Lisa Pollidoro,
  • Déborah Meligne,
  • Anne Ducassou,
  • Hélène Gros-Dagnac,
  • Germain Arribarat,
  • Jean-Pierre Desirat,
  • Anne-Isabelle Bertozzi,
  • Marion Gambart,
  • Delphine Larrieu-Ciron,
  • Dominique Barbolosi,
  • Xavier Muracciole,
  • Béatrice Lemesle,
  • Annick Sevely,
  • Margaux Roques,
  • Mathilde Cazaux,
  • Jessica Tallet,
  • Jeremy Danna,
  • Yves Chaix,
  • Anne Laprie

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33
pp. 7 – 14

Abstract

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Background: Posterior fossa tumors represent two thirds of brain tumors in children. Although progress in treatment has improved survival rates over the past few years, long-term memory impairments in survivors are frequent and have an impact on academic achievement. The hippocampi, cerebellum and cerebellar-cortical networks play a role in several memory systems. They are affected not only by the location of the tumor itself and its surgical removal, but also by the supratentorial effects of complementary treatments, particularly radiotherapy. The IMPALA study will investigate the impact of irradiation doses on brain structures involved in memory, especially the hippocampi and cerebellum. Methods/design: In this single-center prospective behavioral and neuro-imaging study, 90 participants will be enrolled in three groups. The first two groups will include patients who underwent surgery for a posterior fossa brain tumor in childhood, who are considered to be cured, and who completed treatment at least 5 years earlier, either with radiotherapy (aggressive brain tumor; Group 1) or without (low-grade brain tumor; Group 2). Group 3 will include control participants matched with Group 1 for age, sex, and handedness. All participants will perform an extensive battery of neuropsychological tests, including an assessment of the main memory systems, and undergo multimodal 3 T MRI. The irradiation dose to the different brain structures involved in memory will be collected from the initial radiotherapy dosimetry. Discussion: This study will provide long-term neuropsychological data about four different memory systems (working memory, episodic memory, semantic memory, and procedural memory) and the cognitive functions (attention, language, executive functions) that can interfere with them, in order to better characterize memory deficits among the survivors of brain tumors. We will investigate the correlations between neuropsychological and neuroimaging data on the structural (3DT1), microstructural (DTI), functional (rs-fMRI), vascular (ASL) and metabolic (spectroscopy) impact of the tumor and irradiation dose. This study will thus inform the setting of dose constraints to spare regions linked to the development of cognitive and memory functions. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04324450, registered March 27, 2020, updated January 25th, 2021. Retrospectively registered, https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04324450.

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