| Literature DB >> 24455253 |
Stefano Barlati1, Giacomo Deste1, Luca De Peri2, Cassandra Ariu1, Antonio Vita3.
Abstract
Objectives. This study is aimed to review the current scientific literature on cognitive remediation in schizophrenia. In particular, the main structured protocols of cognitive remediation developed for schizophrenia are presented and the main results reported in recent meta-analyses are summarized. Possible benefits of cognitive remediation in the early course of schizophrenia and in subjects at risk for psychosis are also discussed. Methods. Electronic search of the relevant studies which appeared in the PubMed database until April 2013 has been performed and all the meta-analyses and review articles on cognitive remediation in schizophrenia have been also taken into account. Results. Numerous intervention programs have been designed, applied, and evaluated, with the objective of improving cognition and social functioning in schizophrenia. Several quantitative reviews have established that cognitive remediation is effective in reducing cognitive deficits and in improving functional outcome of the disorder. Furthermore, the studies available support the usefulness of cognitive remediation when applied in the early course of schizophrenia and even in subjects at risk of the disease. Conclusions. Cognitive remediation is a promising approach to improve real-world functioning in schizophrenia and should be considered a key strategy for early intervention in the psychoses.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24455253 PMCID: PMC3877646 DOI: 10.1155/2013/156084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Res Treatment ISSN: 2090-2093
Structured protocols of cognitive remediation interventions for schizophrenia (modified from Vita et al. [22]).
| Cognitive Training | Target | Duration | Setting (individual/ group) | Computer assisted/ | Restorative/ | Top-down | Bottom-up | Drill and practice | Strategy coaching | Individually tailored |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IPT [ | Cognitive functions, social skills, and problem solving | Sessions of 60 minutes, 2-3 times a week (about 12 months) | Group (6–8) | Noncomputer assisted | Restorative | + | + | + | + | − |
| INT [ | Cognitive functions and social cognition | 30 biweekly sessions, 90 minutes each | Group (6–8) | Computer assisted sessions and noncomputer-assisted sessions | Restorative | + | + | + | + | − |
| CRT [ | Cognitive functions | 40 sessions at least 3 times a week, 45–60 minutes each one | Individual | Not computer assisted session | Restorative | + | + | + | + | + |
| Cogpack* [ | Cognitive functions | Sessions variable in duration and frequency (starting from 2-3 weeks) | Individual | Computer assisted | Restorative | − | + | + | − | + |
| CET [ | Cognitive functions and social cognition | Biweekly sessions (about 90 minutes every week) for 24 months | Group (couples and then groups of 3-4 couples) | Computer-assisted sessions and noncomputer-assisted sessions | Restorative | + | + | + | + | − |
| NEAR [ | Cognitive functions and problem solving | Sessions of 60 minutes, twice a week | Individual/group (3–10) | Computer-assisted sessions and noncomputer-assisted sessions | Restorative | + | − | − | + | + |
| NET [ | Cognitive functions and social cognition | Sessions of 45 minutes at least 5 times a week | Individual/group | Computer-assisted sessions and noncomputer-assisted sessions | Restorative | − | + | + | − | + |
| CAT [ | Cognitive functions | Variable (short weekly visits at home, lasting about 30 minutes) | Individual | Noncomputer assisted | Compensatory | − | − | − | − | + |
| TAR [ | Social cognition | 12 sessions twice a week, 45 minutes for each one | Small groups of two patients and a therapist | Computer-assisted sessions and noncomputer-assisted sessions | Restorative/ | − | + | + | + | + |
| SCIT [ | Social cognition | 24 weekly sessions, 50 minutes each | Group (6–8) | Computer-assisted sessions and noncomputer-assisted group sessions | Restorative | − | + | + | + | − |
| SCST [ | Social cognition | 12 weekly sessions, 60 minutes each | Group (6 patients) | Computer-assisted sessions and noncomputer-assisted group sessions | Restorative | − | + | + | + | − |
| SCET [ | Social cognition, ToM | 36 sessions of 90 minutes, twice a week (about 6 months) | Group | Noncomputer assisted | Restorative | − | + | + | + | − |
| MCT [ | Metacognition | 8 biweekly sessions of 45–60 minutes | Group (3–10) | Noncomputer assisted | Restorative | + | − | − | + | − |
| SSANIT [ | Cognitive functions, social cognition, and social skills | NT: biweekly sessions of 1 hour | Individual (group) | NT sessions: computer assisted | Restorative | + | + | + | + | + |
CAT: cognitive adaptation training; CET: cognitive enhancement therapy; CRT: cognitive remediation therapy; INT: integrated neurocognitive therapy; IPT: integrated psychological therapy; MCT: metacognitive training; NEAR: neuropsychological educational approach to remediation; NET: neurocognitive enhancement therapy; NT: neurocognitive training; SCET: social cognition enhancement training; SCIT: social cognition and interaction training; SCST: social cognitive skills training; SSANIT: social skills and neurocognitive individualized training; SST: social skills training; TAR: training of affect recognition; ToM: theory of mind.
*Cogpack is a typical computer-assisted cognitive remediation (CACR) technique.
Meta-analyses of the efficacy of cognitive remediation in schizophrenia.
| Authors | Types of study | Number of included studies (number of patients) | Main investigated areas | Cognitive remediation program | Clinical outcomes (average effect size*) | Neurocognitive outcomes (average effect size*) | Functional outcomes (average effect size*) | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kurtz et al. [ | RCT and laboratory studies | 11 (181) | Executive functions (performance on WCTS) Attention Memory | Remediation strategies for improving performance on WCST | Not investigated | Improvement in executive functions: large mean ES ( | Not investigated | Perseverative errors, categories achieved, and conceptual level responses can be improved utilizing extra instructions, repeated practice, or reinforcement |
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| Twamley et al. [ | RCT | 17 (695) | Symptoms, cognitive performance and functioning | Computer assisted and noncomputer assisted, with and without strategy coaching and compensatory strategies | Reduction in symptom severity: small-to-medium ES ( | Improvement in neuropsychological performance: small-to-medium ES ( | Improvement in everyday functioning: | Both different types of approaches, computer assisted or not, have effective components that hold promise for improving cognitive performance, symptoms, and everyday functioning |
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| Roder et al. [ | RCT and open studies | 30 independent | Symptoms, cognitive performance, and functioning | IPT (a group program that integrates neurocognitive, social cognitive, and psychosocial rehabilitation) | Reduction in symptom severity: moderate ES ( | Improvement in neuropsychological performance: moderate ES ( | Improvement in psychosocial functioning: moderate ES | IPT obtained similarly favorable effects across the different outcome domains, assessment formats, settings, and phases of treatment |
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| McGurk et al. [ | RCT | 26 (1151) | Symptoms, cognitive performance, and functioning | Individual versus group setting, computer versus noncomputer assisted, with and without strategy coaching, compensatory strategies, and social cognitive training | Reduction in symptom severity: small ES ( | Improvement in cognitive performance: medium ES ( | Improvement in psychosocial functioning: | The impact of cognitive remediation on functional outcomes is significantly greater in studies that also provided psychiatric rehabilitation, suggesting that these two treatment approaches may work in a synergistic way |
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| Grynszpan et al. [ | RCT | 16 (805) | Cognitive performance and social cognition | Computer-assisted cognitive remediation (CACR) | Not investigated | Improvement in general cognition: small-to-moderate ES ( | Not investigated | The results support the efficacy of CACR particularly in social cognition. The difficulty in targeting specific domains suggests a “nonspecific” effect of CACR |
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| Wykes et al. [ | RCT | 40 (2104) | Symptoms, cognitive performance, and functioning | Individual versus group setting, computer versus noncomputer assisted, with and without strategy coaching, compensatory strategies, and social cognitive training | Reduction in symptom severity: small ES ( | Improvement in global cognitive performance: moderate ES ( | Improvement in psychosocial functioning: moderate ES | Significantly stronger effects on functioning are found when CR is provided together with another psychiatric rehabilitation. A much larger effect is present when a strategic approach is adopted |
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| Roder et al. [ | RCT and open studies | 36 independent IPT studies (1601) | Symptoms, cognitive performance, social cognition, and functioning | IPT | Reduction in symptom severity: moderate ES ( | Improvement in neuropsychological performance: moderate | Improvement in psychosocial functioning: moderate ES | The cognitive and social subprograms of IPT may work in a synergistic manner, thereby enhancing the transfer of therapy effects over time and improving functional recovery |
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| Kurtz and Richardson [ | RCT | 19 (692) | Social cognition, symptoms, and community and institutional functioning | Social cognitive training | Reduction in symptoms: moderate-to-large ES ( | Improvement in social cognition: | Improvement in psychosocial functioning: moderate-to-large ES ( | This is the first meta-analysis on social cognitive training in schizophrenia. Social cognitive training is effective in improving community and institutional functioning |
CR: cognitive remediation; ES: effect size (Cohen's d); FAR: facial affect recognition; RCT: randomized controlled trials; WCST: Wisconsin Card Sorting Test.
*Effects were categorized as small (d < 0.5), moderate-large (d = 0.5–0.8), or large (d > 0.8 or greater) [75].