Cognitive Rehabilitation in Schizophrenia-Associated Cognitive Impairment: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Cognitive Training Programs
3.2. Cognitive Improvements after Cognitive Rehabilitation
3.3. Improvement in Non-Cognitive Outcomes after Cognitive Rehabilitation
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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First Author | Country of Origin | Publication Year | Study Design | Set of Diagnostic Criteria | Number of Participants | Mean Age ± SD, Sex Distribution |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bor et al. | France | 2011 | Randomized—single-blind parallel—arms design (part of a larger RCT study) | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV-TR criteria | n = 32 Cognitive Remediation therapy Group/patients: n = 8 Non-Cognitive Remediation Therapy Group/patients: n = 9 Healthy controls: n = 15 | Cognitive Remediation therapy Group/patients: 30.5 (8.3), n = 6 males Non-Cognitive Remediation Therapy Group/patients: 28.5 (7.2), n = 6 males Healthy controls: 30.1 (7.5), n = 10 males |
Nemoto et al. | Japan | 2018 | Feasibility study | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV criteria | n = 22 | 32.1 (10.36) n = 10 males |
Murthy et al. | USA and UK | 2012 | Open label multisite single sequence study | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV-R criteria | n = 55 | 31.1 (7) n = 42 males |
Buonocore et al. | Italy | 2018 | Monocentric retrospective study | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV-TR criteria | n = 60 CRT/SRT: n = 27 CRT/SRT+: n = 33 | CRT/SRT: n = 34.59 (10.27) CRT/SRT+: n = 35.20 (9.42) n = 35 males |
Krzystanek et al. | Poland | 2020 | Multicenter, open-label randomized trial | Paranoid schizophrenia according to ICD-10 criteria | n = 290 Study group: 199 Reference group: 91 | Study group: 32.0 (5.92), n = 114 males Reference group: 32.2 (6.94), n = 60 males |
Lee | Korea | 2013 | RCT | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV criteria | n = 60 Cog-trainer group: 30 Usual Rehabilitation group: 30 | Cog-trainer group: 43.53 (4.87), n = 16 males Usual Rehabilitation group: 43.46 (3.53), n = 17 males |
Mohammadi et al. | Iran | 2014 | Pre-experimental study (pre-test and post-test in a single group) | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV-TR criteria | n = 15 | Not specifically mentioned (Age: 18 or older) |
Cellard et al. | Canada | 2016 | Feasibility study (case study design) | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV criteria | n = 3 | Case A:26 years old, male Case B: 26 years old, male Case C: 24 years old, male |
Fisher et al. | USA | 2010 | RCT | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV criteria | n = 32 Computer games group: n = 10 Control group: n = 12 Targeted Cognitive Training group: n = 10 | Computer games group: 46.90 (9.17), n = 8 males Control group: 48.50 (6.94), n = 10 males Targeted Cognitive Training group: 42.90 (8.06), n = 7 males |
Matsuda et al. | Japan | 2016 | RCT | Schizophrenia according to DSM-IV-TR criteria | n = 62 Cognitive Rehabilitation group: n = 31 Control group: n = 31 | Cognitive Rehabilitation group: 36.39 (8.53), n = 17 males Control group: 37.77 (9.12), n = 18 males |
Mak et al. | Poland | 2013 | RCT | Paranoid schizophrenia according to ICD-10 criteria | n = 81 Research group: n = 41 Control group: n = 40 | Research group: 34 (11.07), n = 19 males Control group: 39 (12.99), n = 18 males |
Dubreucq et al. | French | 2019 | FACE-SC-Longitudinal study | No specifically mentioned at this article | n = 183 | 33.91 (10.26) n = 144 males |
Jaiswal et al. | India | 2020 | Quasi—experimental design (preliminary intervention study) | Paranoid schizophrenia according to ICD-10 criteria | n = 12 Intervention group: n = 6 Control group: n = 6 | Intervention group: 31.33 (2.34), n = 6 males Control group: 28.50 (5.58), n = 6 males |
Author (Year) | Study Settings | Cognitive Rehabilitation Training | Training Intensity | Trained Modules | Significant Cognitive Improvements after Rehabilitation | Significant Non- Cognitive Improvements after Rehabilitation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bor et al. (2011) | Outpatients (stable doses of antipsychotic medications for at least 3 months before the inclusion in the study) | RehaCom software | Total duration 7 weeks, 14 individual sessions (2 h length) | Attention/concentration, working memory, logical thinking, executive functions | Strong improvements in reasoning and attention (variations in cerebral functioning at fMRI) | Not mentioned |
Nemoto et al. (2018) | Inpatients | Cognitive rehabilitation programs workbook style | Total duration 8 weeks, 20 min. per day | Exercises to improve cognitive function, interpersonal relationships, social context | Feasibility and accessibility of cognitive rehabilitation during the acute phase of schizophrenia | Improvements in global functioning |
Murthy et al. (2011) | Outpatients (clinically stable in the previous 6 months and on regular antipsychotic medication) | BFP—computerized intervention | ≥32 BFP training (≈40 sessions, at least 1 h, 5 times/week) sessions over 8–10 weeks | Speed and accuracy of auditory information processing | Significant effect on auditory processing speed | No significant effects on cognitive performance in general and functional capacity |
Buonocore et al. (2018) | Outpatients (clinically stable in the last 3 months) | Computerized cognitive remediation therapy, performed with the Cogpack software and SRT | 3 months of 3 1 h sessions a week and 6 months SRT and acute and 5-year follow-up assessment | Domain-specific neurocognitive exercises depending on patients’ impairments and graded difficulty | Cognitive abilities remained stable after 5 years in both groups (except of psychomotor speed and coordination) | Not mentioned |
Krzystanek et al. (2020) | Outpatients (in symptomatic remission and stable schizophrenia symptoms at a mild level for at least 6 months prior study enrolment) | Self-administered cognitive training using a smartphone-based application (MONEO) | Cognitive training twice a week (study group) with increasing levels of difficulty and limited 3 cognitive trainings (reference group) | Not specifically mentioned, measurements of response time, rate of correct answers, rate of incorrect answers and rate of lack of reaction | Significant cognitive improvement in both the rate of correct answers and cognitive fatigability and slight improvement in the rate of incorrect answers | Significant improvement in the clinical condition, decreased schizophrenia symptoms |
Lee (2013) | Inpatients (stable dose of antipsychotic therapy for at least 6 months) | Computerized cognitive training employed Cog-trainer software | Cog-trainer group: 20 sessions, 1 h, one or two times a week over 3 months UR group: 15 months duration | Cog-trainer group: attention and working memory UR group: social skills, vocational, recreational functioning, psychoeducation | Significant improvement in attention, concentration and working memory | Improvement in the work quality subscale and work habits of the work behavior inventory |
Mohammadi et al. (2014) | Outpatients (clinically stable) | RehaCom software | 20 individual sessions each 60 min, 2 sessions/week for 18 weeks | Attention/concentration, working memory and executive functions | Improvements in attention/vigilance, working memory and prospective and retrospective memory | No improvements in positive or negative symptoms of schizophrenia |
Cellard et al. (2016) | Recruited from clinical settings without acute psychotic symptoms | Computerized cognitive remediation—CIRCuiTS | 1 h sessions at least 3 days/week, for 40 sessions total | Attention, memory, executive functioning, and metacognitive skills | Improvements in verbal and visual episodic memory | Not specifically mentioned |
Pena et al. (2018) | Not specifically mentioned (inpatients and outpatients probably from a previous RCT from which the sample was recruited) | REHACOP group: Cognitive rehabilitation based on paper and pencil tasks, role playing, active group discussions Control group: occupational group activities | 4 months total duration, 90 min sessions, 3 days/week both groups | REHACOP group: attention, memory, language, executive functions, and social cognition control group: occupational activities | Improvements on processing speed and verbal memory, working memory, executive functions, emotion perception, theory of mind, social perception | Negative symptoms of schizophrenia |
Fisher et al. (2010) | Not specifically mentioned (clinically stable patients recruited from mental health settings in the community) | TCT (software developed by Posit-Science, Inc.) and commercially available computerized games | TCT group: 12 participants completed 50 h training—10 participants completed 100 h training CG group: 5 days/week, 1 h/day (4–5 games/day) | TCT group: auditory exercises, visual system, categorization, prediction, association of information from auditory and visual stimuli CG group: 16 different games, e.g., visuospatial puzzle games, clue-gathering mystery games | Both TCT groups showed significant improvements in verbal learning/memory, cognitive control TCT-100 h training group showed improvements in processing speed and global condition | Not mentioned |
Matsuda et al. (2016) | Outpatients | Original computer programme JCORES | Cognitive remediation group: 60 min., 2 sessions/week, 12 weeks total duration (plus 1/week metacognition enhancement and strategies teaching) control group: 12 weeks total; duration | attention, psychomotor speed, learning, memory, executive functions, verbal memory, verbal fluency, reasoning, problem solving, metacognition, strategies | Improvements on verbal memory and composite cognitive score | Improvements on general psychopathology on the positive and negative symptoms syndrome scale |
Mak et al. (2013) | Not specifically mentioned (stable at remission period and pharmacological monotherapy) | RehaCom programme | 16 sessions, twice/week (40 min.) 60 days total duration | Attention/concentration, topological memory | Moderate improvement in cognitive functioning (combined with pharmacological treatment and psychiatric rehabilitation) | Not mentioned |
Dubreucq et al. (2019) | Not specifically mentioned—recruited from FACE-SZ cohort | CRT | At least 1 PI during the 1-year follow-up | Not specifically mentioned | Moderate improvement in sustained attention, working memory, high improvement in reactive mental flexibility (combined with PI intervention) | Moderate improvement in negative symptoms, mild effect on clinical global severity and on the level of insight into illness (combined with PI intervention) |
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Zoupa, E.; Bogiatzidou, O.; Siokas, V.; Liampas, I.; Tzeferakos, G.; Mavreas, V.; Stylianidis, S.; Dardiotis, E. Cognitive Rehabilitation in Schizophrenia-Associated Cognitive Impairment: A Review. Neurol. Int. 2023, 15, 12-23. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint15010002
Zoupa E, Bogiatzidou O, Siokas V, Liampas I, Tzeferakos G, Mavreas V, Stylianidis S, Dardiotis E. Cognitive Rehabilitation in Schizophrenia-Associated Cognitive Impairment: A Review. Neurology International. 2023; 15(1):12-23. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint15010002
Chicago/Turabian StyleZoupa, Elli, Olympia Bogiatzidou, Vasileios Siokas, Ioannis Liampas, Georgios Tzeferakos, Venetsanos Mavreas, Stelios Stylianidis, and Efthimios Dardiotis. 2023. "Cognitive Rehabilitation in Schizophrenia-Associated Cognitive Impairment: A Review" Neurology International 15, no. 1: 12-23. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint15010002