Why Are Cognition Studies in Schizophrenia Failing? - 09/06/15
Résumé |
Introduction |
Cognitive impairments are common in schizophrenia and impact disproportionately on real world functioning. Our current antipsychotic-medications do not offer any significant benefit for cognitive deficits. Psychological approaches have some positive-effects but require an integrated psychological and occupational focus to optimise cognitive performance, which has been difficult to implement in routine clinical-practice. Contemporary novel investigational drugs trialled in schizophrenia have failed to show any significant benefit for cognitive-symptoms;despite showing promise in earlier phase-2-studies(Goff-et-al.,2011;Choi-et-al.,2013). Recent data has suggested that there may be a subset of patients responding to interventions to improve cognitive performance(Vercammen-et-al,2011;Murthy-et-al,2012).
Objectives |
We review the literature and use our own cognitive-training-data to examine how one might define this group, and propose a methodology for future clinical-studies of cognition in schizophrenia, predicated on the use of adaptive-designs incorporating subtyping into the fabric of the studies.
Aims |
To categorise schizophrenia patients according to baseline performance and to investigate if this differentiation will predict their response to cognitive training(CT).
Methods |
47 schizophrenia-patients were recruited and classified in’learners’and’non-learners’based on learning-performance on day1-baseline-assessment measured by Mathew´s-correlation-coefficient and completed CT. We used multilevel-regressions to investigate differences between the defined groups in learning.
Results |
According to MCC-performance at day-1(session two),24 participants were classified as’learners’and 23 as’non-learners’. We found significant-differences in response to CT-between the defined groups(p<0.0001).
Conclusions |
We were able to distinguish between responders/non-responders on baseline-assessment. Our results showed that CT-enhanced-performance in the ’learners-group’relative to’non-learners-group’. Trial-design needs to be adaptive to optimise outcomes in trials modifying cognitive-dysfunction-in-schizophrenia. One option would be to stratify the-sample on their early-baseline ability to respond to cognitive training-and to treat these cognitive-responders with medication and non-responders with an enhanced-programme of psychological-and-occupational-therapy.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Vol 30 - N° S1
P. 1228 - mars 2015 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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