Brain-training exercises aid emotional recovery after breast cancer, study shows
Published 26 Apr 2018
Simple brain-training exercises carried out at home have been shown to reduce emotional vulnerability in female breast cancer survivors, according to new research.
Academics at Birkbeck, University of London, said their findings could have huge implications for other people suffering from chronic conditions and cancers that affect cognitive function and emotional well-being.
Advances in medical treatment mean breast cancer survival in the UK has doubled in the last 40 years, with 78% of women surviving for 10 years or more in England and Wales, according to Cancer Research UK.
But the psychological cost of the illness and the physical and mental impact of surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy can have a lasting effect.
Many women suffer symptoms of post-traumatic stress, anxiety and depression following treatment, and the fear of the cancer reoccurring can have a major impact.
The Birkbeck study, published in the journal Psycho-Oncology, looked at how cognitive training could help women suffering in this way.
It compared anxious and depressive symptoms in two groups of women who had undergone breast cancer treatment, after they undertook different types of cognitive-training tasks over 12 days.
Both groups undertook simple training tasks, known as adaptive dual n-back training, which required them to remember a sequence of spoken letters and a sequence of positions of a square at the same time, then identify when a letter or position matched one that occurred earlier.
For the first, experimental, group the task became more challenging and difficult as their competence increased, but for the second, control group, who trained on the same task, the difficulty level remained the same throughout the training period.
The anxious/depressive symptoms of the groups were then examined three times to assess their emotional vulnerability.
This took place immediately after the training, then after one month, and finally after 15-18 months, to assess the long-term effectiveness.
The study showed a significant 16% reduction in anxiety and distress-related symptoms in the experimental group when compared to the control group.
These reductions were sustained at one month and all the way through to the final assessment.
Similarly, training reduced “rumination” by 14% compared to the control group – a causal factor for depression which includes a tendency to get stuck in cycles of negative thinking.
The study was led by Nazanin Derakhshan, a professor of experimental psychopathology, who said: “Recent advances in cognitive and affective neuroscience indicate that by building new neural connections in the brain, we can pave the way towards resilience and cognitive flexibility, improving neural efficiency.
“We have previously identified impairment in attentional control and cognitive flexibility as a cause of anxiety and depressive-related vulnerability. By strengthening these neurological functions, we can reduce these negative symptoms.
“Training-related gains in the experimental group resulted in a reduction in emotional vulnerability following the cognitive tasks. On the other hand, the control group who stayed at a ‘practice’ level did not show this reduction in emotional vulnerability.”
Jessica Swainston, Prof Derakhshan’s PhD student who conducted the study, said: “This research has huge implications for not only improving cognitive flexibility in breast cancer but also other chronic conditions and cancers that affect cognitive function and emotional well-being.
“The training has further potential to increase the efficacy of other available therapies such as CBT and mindfulness by improving attentional engagement.
“We are currently running two more studies looking at the combined effects of n-back training with mindfulness and expressive writing to establish whether these treatments are enhanced when used in addition to cognitive training.”
BT