Cognitive assessment by an occupational therapist (OT) is sometimes used in individual disability income insurance (IDII) claims and managing return to work where the primary diagnosis is cancer and there are subjective reports of ongoing fatigue and mental impairment. Such assessment can help guide functional upgrade and measurable work capacity.
Cognitive impairment
People who have undergone chemotherapy frequently complain of mild cognitive impairments such as memory loss and an inability to focus which impact participation in valued occupations and roles.1 This is most prevalent in the breast cancer population, with a 91% survival rate.2 Similarly, we are seeing early trends in the COVID‑19 pandemic where an acute disease can persist in the long term and affect brain and cognitive function.3
Cognition is defined as a process comprising eight domains: attention, concentration, information-processing speed, memory, language, executive function, visuospatial ability, and psychomotor ability. Cognitive function is the ability of the brain to acquire, process, store and retrieve information.4,5
Cancer related cognitive impairment, also called “chemo brain”, is recognised as a side-effect of cancer treatment that impacts 30% to 70% of breast cancer survivors. These cognitive changes impact activities of daily living (ADL), family and occupational roles.6 Greater than 69% are of working age.7 fMRI studies of 60‑year-old identical twins measuring structural brain changes demonstrate that heightened activity occurs in more regions, indicating that the brain is working harder to complete tasks.8
Furthermore, the excess active areas are seen after chemotherapy, meaning that the brain is compensating to maintain adequate performance levels. The evidence suggest that the over-recruitment of brain regions is due to reduced neural integrity and connections after chemotherapy.9
Claims for cognitive impairment such as this are often referred to an OT to assess cognition and plan treatment rehabilitation needs of cancer survivors, so it is essential that OTs can assess cognition to evaluate the outcomes of any interventions.10 With a plethora of screening tools and outcome measures how do we ensure that the outcome measures chosen by an OT are applicable and have strong validity and reliability to help us manage return to work outcomes?
Cognitive interventions used by OTs may involve implementing coping and compensation strategies to assist people to participate in work activities.11 To plan cognitive interventions, OTs often perform standardised assessments to determine which areas of executive functioning that are affected. As executive functioning refers to a variety of processes, it is difficult or impossible to assess with a single measure, but it is crucial given the impact impairment can have on a person’s ability to work.12
Cancer survivors often perform within the normal range of neuropsychological tests, so self-reporting questionnaires are recommended to be used in conjunction with standardised tests to determine the impact of perceived cognitive decline.13 This is further amplified when the cohort of IDII claims are often high value, high-income earning professionals who would have had pre-morbid high average (75th to 90th percentile) to very superior (98th percentile and above) intellectual functions.
Making an assessment
The assessment of cognitive dysfunction is complex and although there are several standardised tools, each has its own limitations. It is impractical to examine every component of cognition, therefore good history at clinical examination is crucial to guide assessment. Claimants often state on claims forms or through functional telephone interviews that they are “forgetful” or have “brain fog” or “can’t concentrate”.
Many of the cognitive changes are explained in the context of fatigue. Claimants typically describe this malaise as having several components, including difficulty thinking clearly, emotional lability (exaggerated changes in mood), social withdrawal, decreased functional ability and decreased sleep quality.14
A neuropsychological assessment is routinely suggested as a claims strategy. Using an extensive battery of neuropsychological assessments can be impractical due to lack of available clinical psychologists to perform these, costs involved, and timeliness. Most importantly, neuropsychological assessments may not be ecologically valid due to not taking place in a functional environment, assessing only actual cognitive components. In some cases, these are contraindicated in populations who have a secondary mental health condition.
Many of the tests currently available include screening, subjective and objective assessment, and imaging approaches, but there are questions about whether these tools are sufficiently sensitive to detect subtle changes. The most widely used screening tools – Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE), Mini‑COG and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MOCA) – are not diagnostic, but positive results indicate that further follow‑up is required.15
For simplicity, the key domains for which claims specialists should advise our cedants to obtain testing are the following: