epoetin-alfa and Cognition-Disorders

epoetin-alfa has been researched along with Cognition-Disorders* in 11 studies

Reviews

5 review(s) available for epoetin-alfa and Cognition-Disorders

ArticleYear
[Recent advances on the use of erythropoietin in oncology].
    Bulletin du cancer, 2006, Volume: 93, Issue:5

    The Standards, Options and Recommendations on the use of erythropoietin in cancer patients are recalled. The recent literature is analysed and allows some further comments to the SOR. Medico-economic aspects, new schedules of administration, extra-hematologic virtues of erythropoietin and its impact on cancer outcomes are debated.

    Topics: Adult; Anemia; Brain; Child; Cognition Disorders; Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Heart; Hematinics; Humans; Medical Oncology; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Recombinant Proteins

2006
Chemotherapy-induced cognitive dysfunction: a clearer picture.
    Clinical breast cancer, 2003, Volume: 4 Suppl 2

    Chemotherapy-associated cognitive dysfunction occurs in a subset of patients treated with adjuvant chemotherapy. Recent data suggest that development of chemotherapy-related anemia predisposes patients to cognitive dysfunction. Endogenous erythropoietin (EPO) is well recognized for its central role in erythropoiesis, and recombinant human EPO (epoetin alfa) is established as a safe and effective treatment for chemotherapy-related anemia. Treatment with epoetin alfa also improved health-related quality of life in anemic cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy, and several controlled studies have documented increases in quality-of-life scores correlated with increases in hemoglobin. Erythropoietin also plays a role in neuroprotection, presumably by activation of antiapoptotic genes. Erythropoietin and its receptor are expressed in neural cells of the human brain, and their expression is upregulated after hypoxic or ischemic injury. In animal models, systemic administration of epoetin alfa protects against such neural injury. Ongoing and future studies will determine whether epoetin alfa can provide neuroprotection with respect to the development of cognitive dysfunction in patients undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer.

    Topics: Anemia; Animals; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols; Breast Neoplasms; Cognition Disorders; Disease Models, Animal; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Humans; Quality of Life; Rats; Recombinant Proteins

2003
Anemia in the oncology patient: cognitive function and cancer.
    Cancer nursing, 2003, Volume: 26, Issue:6 Suppl

    Cancer-related anemia often develops from the infiltration of marrow by malignant cells, impaired hemoglobin (Hb) production related to chemotherapy or radiation therapy, iron deficiency, or low endogenous erythropoietin levels. Patients with cancer-related anemia may experience cognitive dysfunction including decreased mental alertness, poor concentration, and memory problems. Anemia-mediated cerebral hypoxia may cause symptoms such as headache, vertigo, tinnitus, and dizziness. These symptoms often are exacerbated in the elderly patient with cancer and related to underlying low Hb concentrations. Restoring Hb levels via the administration of iron supplements, blood transfusions, or, more recently, erythropoiesis-stimulating therapy (epoetin alfa) results in significant improvement of cognitive function. The use of epoetin alfa as a treatment option for patients with chemotherapy-associated anemia and an Hb concentration less than 10 g/dL has been recommended by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the American Society of Hematology. Erythropoiesis-stimulating therapies are a promising treatment option for cancer-related anemia that may improve cognitive function and quality of life for patients with cancer.

    Topics: Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anemia; Antineoplastic Agents; Cognition Disorders; Darbepoetin alfa; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Hematinics; Humans; Male; Neoplasms; Recombinant Proteins

2003
Effects of epoetin alfa on cognitive function, mood, asthenia, and quality of life in women with breast cancer undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy.
    Clinical breast cancer, 2002, Volume: 3 Suppl 3

    Several recently published studies describe moderate to severe cognitive dysfunction in breast cancer survivors who were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy 1-5 years before undergoing extensive neuropsychological testing. While these studies are hypothesis-generating and preliminary given their small size and retrospective nature, they consistently suggest that between approximately 15% and 25% of chemotherapy-treated breast cancer patients will have evidence of cognitive dysfunction some years after chemotherapy, compared to about 10% of breast cancer survivors who did not receive chemotherapy. Recent preclinical data strongly suggest that erythropoetin is a potent, endogenous neuroprotective agent that prevents neuronal apoptosis from a variety of insults including hypoxia, trauma, subarachnoidal hemorrhage, and encephalitis. Erythropoietin also appears to enhance learning in a mouse spatial learning maze model. We have conducted a pilot study of epoetin alfa versus placebo in early-stage breast cancer patients who received standard adjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy to determine the feasibility of administering standardized neurocognitive assessment tests in the oncology practice setting in order to understand whether the Executive Interview 25 test can detect the subtle cognitive impairment in verbal fluency, attention, and short-term memory observed with chemotherapy, and to assess whether epoetin alfa-treated patients have less evidence of cognitive dysfunction during and 6 months after chemotherapy compared with control-treated patients. We report here the preliminary results of this pilot clinical trial.

    Topics: Animals; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols; Asthenia; Breast Neoplasms; Chemotherapy, Adjuvant; Cognition Disorders; Controlled Clinical Trials as Topic; Disease Models, Animal; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Humans; Mastectomy; Mice; Mood Disorders; Patient Satisfaction; Pilot Projects; Prognosis; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins; Severity of Illness Index; Treatment Outcome

2002
Should the hematocrit (hemoglobin) be normalized in Pre-ESRD or dialysis patients? Yes!
    Blood purification, 2001, Volume: 19, Issue:2

    Topics: Adaptation, Physiological; Anemia; Cardiovascular System; Cognition Disorders; Drug Costs; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Exercise; Heart Failure; Hematocrit; Hemodynamics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular; Iron; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Multicenter Studies as Topic; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Quality of Life; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Recombinant Proteins; Reference Values; Renal Dialysis; Risk; Thrombophilia; Treatment Outcome

2001

Trials

4 trial(s) available for epoetin-alfa and Cognition-Disorders

ArticleYear
Erythropoietin as an add-on treatment for cognitive side effects of electroconvulsive therapy: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
    Trials, 2018, Apr-19, Volume: 19, Issue:1

    Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is the most effective treatment for severe depression, but its use is impeded by its cognitive side effects. Novel treatments that can counteract these side effects may therefore improve current treatment strategies for depression. The present randomized trial investigates (1) whether short-term add-on treatment with erythropoietin (EPO) can reduce the cognitive side -effects of ECT and (2) whether such effects are long-lasting. Further, structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) will be used to explore the neural underpinnings of such beneficial effects of EPO. Finally, the trial examines whether potential protective effects of EPO on cognition are accompanied by changes in markers of oxidative stress, inflammation, and neuroplasticity.. The trial has a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel group design. Patients with unipolar or bipolar disorder with current moderate to severe depression referred to ECT (N = 52) are randomized to receive four high-dose infusions of EPO (40,000 IU/ml) or placebo (saline). The first EPO/saline infusion is administered within 24 h before the first ECT. The following three infusions are administered at weekly intervals immediately after ECT sessions 1, 4, and 7. Cognition assessments are conducted at baseline, after the final EPO/saline infusion (3 days after eight ECT sessions), and at a 3 months follow-up after ECT treatment completion. The neuronal substrates for potential cognitive benefits of EPO are investigated with structural and functional MRI after the final EPO/saline infusion. The primary outcome is change from baseline to after EPO treatment (3 days after eight ECT sessions) in a cognitive composite score spanning attention, psychomotor speed, and executive functions. With a sample size of N = 52 (n = 26 per group), we have ≥ 80% power to detect a clinically relevant between-group difference in the primary outcome measure at an alpha level of 5% (two-sided test). Behavioral, mood, and blood-biomarker data will be analyzed using repeated measures analysis of covariance. Functional MRI data will be preprocessed and analyzed using the FMRIB Software Library.. If EPO is found to reduce the cognitive side effects of ECT, this could have important implications for future treatment strategies for depression and for the scientific understanding of the neurobiological etiology of cognitive dysfunction in patients treated with ECT.. ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03339596 . Registered on 10 November 2017.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Bipolar Disorder; Cognition; Cognition Disorders; Denmark; Depressive Disorder; Double-Blind Method; Drug Administration Schedule; Electroconvulsive Therapy; Epoetin Alfa; Female; Humans; Infusions, Intravenous; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Middle Aged; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome; Young Adult

2018
The effect of erythropoietin on cognition in affective disorders - Associations with baseline deficits and change in subjective cognitive complaints.
    European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology, 2016, Volume: 26, Issue:8

    This is a secondary data analysis from our erythropoietin (EPO) trials. We examine (I) whether EPO improves speed of complex cognitive processing across bipolar and unipolar disorder, (II) if objective and subjective baseline cognitive impairment increases patients׳ chances of treatment-efficacy and (III) if cognitive improvement correlates with better subjective cognitive function, quality of life and socio-occupational capacity. Patients with unipolar or bipolar disorder were randomized to eight weekly EPO (N=40) or saline (N=39) infusions. Cognition, mood, quality of life and socio-occupational capacity were assessed at baseline (week 1), after treatment completion (week 9) and at follow-up (week 14). We used repeated measures analysis of covariance to investigate the effect of EPO on speed of complex cognitive processing. With logistic regression, we examined whether baseline cognitive impairment predicted treatment-efficacy. Pearson correlations were used to assess associations between objective and subjective cognition, quality of life and socio-occupational capacity. EPO improved speed of complex cognitive processing across affective disorders at weeks 9 and 14 (p≤0.05). In EPO-treated patients, baseline cognitive impairment increased the odds of treatment-efficacy on cognition at weeks 9 and 14 by a factor 9.7 (95% CI:1.2-81.1) and 9.9 (95% CI:1.1-88.4), respectively (p≤0.04). Subjective cognitive complaints did not affect chances of treatment-efficacy (p≥0.45). EPO-associated cognitive improvement correlated with reduced cognitive complaints but not with quality of life or socio-occupational function. As the analyses were performed post-hoc, findings are only hypothesis-generating. In conclusion, pro-cognitive effects of EPO occurred across affective disorders. Neuropsychological screening for cognitive dysfunction may be warranted in future cognition trials.

    Topics: Adult; Affect; Bipolar Disorder; Cognition; Cognition Disorders; Cohort Studies; Denmark; Depressive Disorder; Epoetin Alfa; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; International Classification of Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Nervous System Physiological Phenomena; Neuropsychological Tests; Nootropic Agents; Psychiatric Status Rating Scales; Quality of Life; Self Report; Social Adjustment

2016
Feasibility of quantifying the effects of epoetin alfa therapy on cognitive function in women with breast cancer undergoing adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
    Clinical breast cancer, 2005, Volume: 5, Issue:6

    Impaired cognition, fatigue, and diminished quality of life (QOL) are commonly associated with breast cancer chemotherapy. This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot trial assessed the feasibility of quantifying the effects of epoetin alfa on cognitive function and mood, and evaluated its effects on fatigue and QOL in patients with breast cancer treated with anthracycline-based adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Patients were randomized to receive epoetin alfa 40,000 U subcutaneously once weekly or placebo at the beginning of 4 cycles of chemotherapy administered over 12 weeks. Cognitive function was assessed by Executive Interview (EXIT25) and Clock Drawing Tasks; mood by Profile of Mood States; anemia-related symptoms, including fatigue, by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Anemia (FACT-An) subscale; and QOL by Linear Analog Scale Assessment. Ninety-four patients were evaluable for efficacy and safety. Mean change in EXIT25 scores from baseline to cycle 4 in the epoetin alfa group was 1.3 +/- 3.3; the mean change was 0.3 +/- 2.4 in the placebo group (a negative change indicates improved executive function). There was no difference between groups in mean change in EXIT25 score from baseline to 6-month follow-up assessment. Mean hemoglobin levels were higher in the epoetin alfa group compared with the placebo group after 4 cycles of chemotherapy. Epoetin alfa recipients had less of a decrease in FACT-An subscale scores from baseline to cycle 4 and improvement in FACT-An subscale scores at 6-month follow-up assessment compared with placebo. Epoetin alfa therapy was well tolerated. These data suggest that epoetin alfa may have attenuated the cognitive impairment and fatigue that occurred during adjuvant breast cancer chemotherapy.

    Topics: Adult; Affect; Aged; Breast Neoplasms; Chemotherapy, Adjuvant; Cognition Disorders; Double-Blind Method; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Fatigue; Female; Hematinics; Humans; Injections, Subcutaneous; Middle Aged; Neoadjuvant Therapy; Placebos; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins; Treatment Outcome

2005
Effects of epoetin alfa on cognitive function, mood, asthenia, and quality of life in women with breast cancer undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy.
    Clinical breast cancer, 2002, Volume: 3 Suppl 3

    Several recently published studies describe moderate to severe cognitive dysfunction in breast cancer survivors who were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy 1-5 years before undergoing extensive neuropsychological testing. While these studies are hypothesis-generating and preliminary given their small size and retrospective nature, they consistently suggest that between approximately 15% and 25% of chemotherapy-treated breast cancer patients will have evidence of cognitive dysfunction some years after chemotherapy, compared to about 10% of breast cancer survivors who did not receive chemotherapy. Recent preclinical data strongly suggest that erythropoetin is a potent, endogenous neuroprotective agent that prevents neuronal apoptosis from a variety of insults including hypoxia, trauma, subarachnoidal hemorrhage, and encephalitis. Erythropoietin also appears to enhance learning in a mouse spatial learning maze model. We have conducted a pilot study of epoetin alfa versus placebo in early-stage breast cancer patients who received standard adjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy to determine the feasibility of administering standardized neurocognitive assessment tests in the oncology practice setting in order to understand whether the Executive Interview 25 test can detect the subtle cognitive impairment in verbal fluency, attention, and short-term memory observed with chemotherapy, and to assess whether epoetin alfa-treated patients have less evidence of cognitive dysfunction during and 6 months after chemotherapy compared with control-treated patients. We report here the preliminary results of this pilot clinical trial.

    Topics: Animals; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols; Asthenia; Breast Neoplasms; Chemotherapy, Adjuvant; Cognition Disorders; Controlled Clinical Trials as Topic; Disease Models, Animal; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Female; Humans; Mastectomy; Mice; Mood Disorders; Patient Satisfaction; Pilot Projects; Prognosis; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins; Severity of Illness Index; Treatment Outcome

2002

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for epoetin-alfa and Cognition-Disorders

ArticleYear
Erythropoietin protects newborn rat against sevoflurane-induced neurotoxicity.
    Paediatric anaesthesia, 2014, Volume: 24, Issue:7

    Recent data on newborn animals exposed to anesthetics have raised safety concerns regarding anesthesia practices in young children. Indeed, studies on rodents have demonstrated a widespread increase in brain apoptosis shortly after exposure to sevoflurane, followed by long-term neurologic impairment. In this context, we aimed to evaluate the protective effect of rh-EPO, a potent neuroprotective agent, in rat pups exposed to sevoflurane.. At postnatal day 7, 75 rat pups were allocated into three groups: SEVO + EPO (n = 27) exposed to sevoflurane 2 vol% (0.5 MAC) for 6 h in an air/O2 mixture (60/40) + 5000 UI.kg(-1) rh-EPO IP; SEVO (n = 27) exposed to sevoflurane + vehicle IP; and CONTROL (n = 21) exposed to the mixture without sevoflurane + vehicle IP. Three days after anesthesia (D10), apoptosis was quantified on brain extract with TUNEL method and caspase 3. NGF and BDNF expression was determined by Western blotting. Rats reaching adulthood were evaluated in terms of exploration capacities (object exploration duration) together with spatial and object learning (water maze and novel object test).. Sevoflurane exposure impaired normal behavior in adult rats by reducing the exploratory capacities during the novel object test and impaired both spatial and object learning capacities in adult rats (water maze, ratio time to find platform 3rd trial/1st trial: 1.1 ± 0.2 vs 0.4 ± 0.1; n = 9, SEVO vs CONTROL; P = 0.01). Rh-EPO reduced sevoflurane-induced behavior and learning abnormalities in adult rats (water maze, ratio time to find platform 3rd trial/1st trial: 0.3 ± 0.1 vs 1.1 ± 0.2; n = 9, SEVO + EPO vs SEVO; P = 0.01). Three days after anesthesia, rh-EPO prevented sevoflurane-induced brain apoptosis (5 ± 3 vs 35 ± 6 apoptotic cells·mm(-2) ; n = 6, SEVO + EPO vs SEVO; P = 0.01) and elevation of caspase three level and significantly increased the brain expression of BDNF and NGF (n = 6, SEVO + EPO vs SEVO; P = 0.01).. Six hours of sevoflurane anesthesia in newborn rats induces significant long-term cognitive impairment. A single administration of rh-EPO immediately after postnatal exposure to sevoflurane reduces both early activation of apoptotic phenomenon and late onset of neurologic disorders.

    Topics: Anesthetics, Inhalation; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Apoptosis; Blood Gas Analysis; Brain; Cognition Disorders; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Maze Learning; Memory; Methyl Ethers; Nervous System Diseases; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Recognition, Psychology; Recombinant Proteins; Sevoflurane

2014
The influence of erythropoietin on cognitive function in women following chemotherapy for breast cancer.
    Psycho-oncology, 2009, Volume: 18, Issue:2

    Cognitive dysfunction is a potential side effect of chemotherapy, and erythropoietin might be protective. A previously reported study compared quality-of-life in women undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer who were randomized to receive epoetin-alpha or standard care. Here, we report a non-randomized sub-study in which cognitive function of participants was evaluated at 12-30 months after chemotherapy.. The primary endpoint was the proportion of women with moderate-severe cognitive impairment, as measured by the High Sensitivity Cognitive Screen (HSCS). Subjects also completed the Revised Hopkins Verbal Learning Test (HVLT-R), the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy--Fatigue (FACT-F) and FACT-G self-report questionnaires for fatigue and quality-of-life, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.. Of 278 patients receiving adjuvant treatment in the primary study, 87 participated in the sub-study: 45 had received epoetin-alpha and 42 standard care. Groups were well matched for age and type of chemotherapy. Eight patients (9%) had moderate-severe cognitive dysfunction by the HSCS: six of them in the epoietin-alpha group (not significant). There were no significant differences in the HVLT-R, or in fatigue, but patients who had received epoetin-alpha reported better quality-of-life.. This study failed to demonstrate a protective effect of epoetin-alpha against the development of delayed cognitive dysfunction after chemotherapy.

    Topics: Antineoplastic Agents; Breast Neoplasms; Case-Control Studies; Cognition Disorders; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Fatigue; Female; Hematinics; Humans; Matched-Pair Analysis; Middle Aged; Quality of Life; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Recombinant Proteins

2009
Effect of epoetin alpha therapy on cognitive function in anaemic patients with solid tumours undergoing chemotherapy.
    European journal of cancer care, 2008, Volume: 17, Issue:6

    The primary aim of this study was to assess whether epoetin alpha (Ea) would improve cognitive performance in a group of anaemic cancer patients receiving chemotherapy. The secondary aim was to confirm the positive impact of Ea on haematological parameters, and quality of life (QOL). Fifty patients with solid tumours and haemoglobin (Hb) <11.0 g/dL received Ea 40,000 units once weekly for 12 weeks and were administered the Mini-Mental State Examination and the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (QLQ-C30) questionnaire prior to Ea therapy and at study completion. No clinically significant alterations were observed on cognitive function during Ea treatment. Changes in cognitive function were unrelated to Hb change and there were no significant differences in cognitive performance between Ea responders and non-responders. The analyses revealed clinically significant improvements in Hb levels, physical and role function, and clinically meaningful reductions in fatigue. Hb changes were significantly associated with the magnitude of improvement in QOL parameters. The lack of a clinical benefit in cognition observed in this study during Ea treatment may redirect the focus of research from enhancing to maintaining cognitive function, since stability in cognitive performance through time may be as well clinically important.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Anemia; Antineoplastic Agents; Chemotherapy, Adjuvant; Cognition Disorders; Drug Administration Schedule; Epoetin Alfa; Erythropoietin; Fatigue; Female; Hematinics; Hemoglobins; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Neoplasms; Quality of Life; Recombinant Proteins; Treatment Outcome; Young Adult

2008