| Literature DB >> 30642417 |
Roger S McIntyre1, Nicole Anderson2, Bernhard T Baune3, Elisa Brietzke1, Katherine Burdick4, Phillipe Fossati5, Philip Gorwood6, Catherine Harmer7, John Harrison8, Philip Harvey9, Rodrigo B Mansur10, Alice Medalia11, Kamilla Miskowiak12, Tanya Ramey13, Carola Rong10, Joshua D Rosenblat10, Allan Young14, Stephen M Stahl15.
Abstract
During the past two decades, it has been amply documented that neuropsychiatric disorders (NPDs) disproportionately account for burden of illness attributable to chronic non-communicable medical disorders globally. It is also likely that human capital costs attributable to NPDs will disproportionately increase as a consequence of population aging and beneficial risk factor modification of other common and chronic medical disorders (e.g., cardiovascular disease). Notwithstanding the availability of multiple modalities of antidepressant treatment, relatively few studies in psychiatry have primarily sought to determine whether improving cognitive function in MDD improves patient reported outcomes (PROs) and/or is cost effective. The mediational relevance of cognition in MDD potentially extrapolates to all NPDs, indicating that screening for, measuring, preventing, and treating cognitive deficits in psychiatry is not only a primary therapeutic target, but also should be conceptualized as a transdiagnostic domain to be considered regardless of patient age and/or differential diagnosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30642417 DOI: 10.1017/S1092852918001189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Spectr ISSN: 1092-8529 Impact factor: 3.790