Stanford Research Brain Health After Breast Cancer Chemotherapy

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Palo Alto CA

28 November, 2021

4:08 PM

Description

STANFORD RESEARCH Brain Health After Breast Cancer Chemotherapy Breast cancer chemotherapy may impact memory, attention, processing speed, multitasking, and problem-solving. The goal of this National Cancer Institute study is to improve our understanding of these difficulties and try to identify women who are at the highest risk for having them. We are looking for women who are ages 35-68 and are free of any MRI contraindications (e.g. implants, tissue expanders) and: who are newly diagnosed with Breast Cancer (stages I-IIIA) who: have not started but are scheduled for adjuvant/neoadjuvant chemotherapy have completed chemotherapy treatment (and any other cancer-specific treatments such as cancer surgery, radiation, immune therapy) at least one month ago OR who are Breast Cancer (stages I-IIIA) survivors who: Participation involves two study visits approximately 12-18 months apart. Each visit will take about 2.5 hours and includes: Brain MRI scan at the Stanford Lucas Center for imagingCognitive testing and questionnaires completed online You will receive an honorarium of $75 for your completion of each study visit. For further information, please contact the Cancer Survivorship Research Team at [email protected] or (650) 723-6250 Participant’s rights questions, contact 1-866-680-2906

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