Brief assessment of cognition in immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome
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Background
Immune-effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) is a common acute adverse event of chimeric antigen T-cell (CAR–T) therapy associated with a range of neurological and cognitive symptoms. Recent evidence has highlighted that cognitive changes in ICANS may predate changes in the current standard cognitive screening instrument. This study aimed to develop a novel screening instrument sensitive to ICANS-related cognitive dysfunction.
Methods
Patients were administered a 21-item bedside cognitive screening instrument (the Neuropsychiatry Unit Cognitive Assessment Tool) followed by an inpatient neuropsychological assessment. A cognitive screening index was computed by summing the beside items that maximally differentiated between ICANS and non-ICANS patients. A separate neuropsychological index was also derived.
Results
Among the 50 patients included, 26 (52%) had ICANS at assessment. Six screening tests and five neuropsychological tests demonstrated acceptable clinical utility for indices computation (AUC>0.70). ICANS patients had lower scores on both the cognitive screening index ( p <.001) and the neuropsychological index ( p < .001) than non-ICANS patients. The cognitive screening index (AUC=0.80) and the neuropsychological index (AUC=0.81) achieved acceptable clinical utility. Although there was no significant difference between the AUCs of the two indices ( p =.765), hierarchical logistic regression showed that the neuropsychological index improved the classification of ICANS patients ( p <.05).
Conclusion
The cognitive screening index can reliably discriminate between ICANS and non-ICANS patients, but neuropsychological examination provides more detailed cognitive characterisation in ICANS. Further validation of the cognitive screening index will inform practice in this emerging area of clinical need.