| Literature DB >> 32349118 |
Katherine E Burdick1,2,3, Caitlin E Millett4,5, Manuela Russo6, Martin Alda7, Ney Alliey-Rodriguez8, Amit Anand9, Yokesh Balaraman9, Wade Berrettini10, Holli Bertram11, Joseph R Calabrese12, Cynthia Calkin7, Carla Conroy12, William Coryell13, Anna DeModena14, Scott Feeder15, Carrie Fisher9, Nicole Frazier11, Mark Frye15, Keming Gao12, Julie Garnham7, Elliot S Gershon8, Kara Glazer16, Fernando S Goes16, Toyomi Goto12, Gloria J Harrington11, Petter Jakobsen17, Masoud Kamali11, Marisa Kelly11, Susan Leckband14, Else Marie Løberg17,18,19, Falk W Lohoff20, Adam X Maihofer14, Michael J McCarthy14, Melvin McInnis11, Gunnar Morken21, Caroline M Nievergelt14, John Nurnberger9, Ketil J Oedegaard17, Abigail Ortiz22, Megan Ritchey16, Kelly Ryan11, Martha Schinagle12, Candice Schwebel10, Martha Shaw13, Paul Shilling14, Claire Slaney7, Emma Stapp16, Bruce Tarwater13, Peter Zandi16, John R Kelsoe14.
Abstract
Lithium remains the gold standard for the treatment of bipolar disorder (BD); however, its use has declined over the years mainly due to the side effects and the subjective experience of cognitive numbness reported by patients. In the present study, we aim to methodically test the effects of lithium on neurocognitive functioning in the largest single cohort (n = 262) of BD patients reported to date by harnessing the power of a multi-site, ongoing clinical trial of lithium monotherapy. At the cross-sectional level, multivariate analysis of covariance (MANCOVA) was conducted to examine potential group differences across neurocognitive tests [California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT trials 1-5,CVLT delayed recall), Wechsler Digit Symbol, Trail-making Test parts A and B (TMT-A; TMT-B), and a global cognition index]. At the longitudinal level, on a subset of patients (n = 88) who achieved mood stabilization with lithium monotherapy, we explored the effect of lithium treatment across time on neurocognitive functioning. There were no differences at baseline between BD patients that were taking lithium compared with those that were not. At follow-up a significant neurocognitive improvement in the global cognitive index score [F = 31.69; p < 0.001], CVLT trials 1-5 [F = 29.81; p < 0.001], CVLT delayed recall [F = 15.27; p < 0.001], and TMT-B [F = 6.64, p = 0.012] was detected. The cross-sectional and longitudinal (on a subset of 88 patients) investigations suggest that lithium may be beneficial to neurocognitive functioning in patients with BD and that at the very least it does not seem to significantly impair cognition when used therapeutically.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32349118 PMCID: PMC7419515 DOI: 10.1038/s41386-020-0683-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychopharmacology ISSN: 0893-133X Impact factor: 7.853