OBJECTIVE:Schizophrenia is treated with medications that raise serum anticholinergic activity and are known to adversely affect cognition. The authors examined the relationship between serum anticholinergic activity and baseline cognitive performance and response to computerized cognitive training in outpatients with schizophrenia. METHOD:Fifty-five patients were randomly assigned to either computerized cognitive training or a computer games control condition. A neurocognitive battery based on the Measurement and Treatment Research to Improve Cognition in Schizophrenia (MATRICS) initiative was performed at baseline and after the intervention. Serum anticholinergic activity, measured at study entry by radioreceptor assay, was available for 49 patients. RESULTS:Serum anticholinergic activity showed a significant negative correlation with baseline performance in verbal working memory and verbal learning and memory, accounting for 7% of the variance in these measures, independent of age, IQ, or symptom severity. Patients in the cognitive training condition (N=25) showed a significant gain in global cognition compared to those in the control condition, but this improvement was negatively correlated with anticholinergic burden. Serum anticholinergic activity uniquely accounted for 20% of the variance in global cognition change, independent of age, IQ, or symptom severity. CONCLUSIONS:Serum anticholinergic activity in schizophrenia patients shows a significant association with impaired performance in MATRICS-based measures of verbal working memory and verbal learning and memory and is significantly associated with a lowered response to an intensive course of computerized cognitive training. These findings underscore the cognitive cost of medications that carry a high anticholinergic burden. The findings also have implications for the design and evaluation of cognitive treatments for schizophrenia.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE:Schizophrenia is treated with medications that raise serum anticholinergic activity and are known to adversely affect cognition. The authors examined the relationship between serum anticholinergic activity and baseline cognitive performance and response to computerized cognitive training in outpatients with schizophrenia. METHOD: Fifty-five patients were randomly assigned to either computerized cognitive training or a computer games control condition. A neurocognitive battery based on the Measurement and Treatment Research to Improve Cognition in Schizophrenia (MATRICS) initiative was performed at baseline and after the intervention. Serum anticholinergic activity, measured at study entry by radioreceptor assay, was available for 49 patients. RESULTS: Serum anticholinergic activity showed a significant negative correlation with baseline performance in verbal working memory and verbal learning and memory, accounting for 7% of the variance in these measures, independent of age, IQ, or symptom severity. Patients in the cognitive training condition (N=25) showed a significant gain in global cognition compared to those in the control condition, but this improvement was negatively correlated with anticholinergic burden. Serum anticholinergic activity uniquely accounted for 20% of the variance in global cognition change, independent of age, IQ, or symptom severity. CONCLUSIONS: Serum anticholinergic activity in schizophreniapatients shows a significant association with impaired performance in MATRICS-based measures of verbal working memory and verbal learning and memory and is significantly associated with a lowered response to an intensive course of computerized cognitive training. These findings underscore the cognitive cost of medications that carry a high anticholinergic burden. The findings also have implications for the design and evaluation of cognitive treatments for schizophrenia.
Authors: Susan R McGurk; Michael F Green; William C Wirshing; Donna Ames Wirshing; Steven R Marder; Jim Mintz; Robert Kern Journal: Schizophr Res Date: 2004-06-01 Impact factor: 4.939
Authors: Henry W Mahncke; Sarah-Jane Kim; Annika Rose; Catherine Stasio; Peter Buckley; Stanley Caroff; Erica Duncan; Sarah Yasmin; L Fredrik Jarskog; J Steven Lamberti; Keith Nuechterlein; Martin Strassnig; Dawn Velligan; Joseph Ventura; Trina Walker; T Scott Stroup; Richard S E Keefe Journal: Schizophr Res Date: 2019-03-28 Impact factor: 4.939
Authors: Juan A Gallego; Jimmi Nielsen; Marc De Hert; John M Kane; Christoph U Correll Journal: Expert Opin Drug Saf Date: 2012-05-08 Impact factor: 4.250
Authors: Tarek K Rajji; Benoit H Mulsant; Shinichiro Nakajima; Fernando Caravaggio; Takefumi Suzuki; Hiroyuki Uchida; Philip Gerretsen; Wanna Mar; Bruce G Pollock; David C Mamo; Ariel Graff-Guerrero Journal: Am J Geriatr Psychiatry Date: 2016-08-02 Impact factor: 4.105