The longitudinal effect of antipsychotic burden on psychosocial functioning in first-episode psychosis patients: the role of verbal memory

Date

2020-04-24

Authors

Ballesteros, Alejandro
López-Ilundain, José M.
Mezquida, Gisela
Lobo, Antonio
González Pinto, Ana
Pina-Camacho, Laura
Corripio, Iluminada
Vieta, Eduard
Serna, Elena de la

Director

Publisher

Cambridge University Press
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión aceptada / Onetsi den bertsioa

Project identifier

  • MICINN//08%2F0208/ES/ recolecta
  • MICINN//08%2F1026/ES/ recolecta
  • MICINN//PI11%2F02831/ES/ recolecta
  • MICINN//08%2F1161/ES/ recolecta
  • MINECO//PI14%2F1621/
  • Gobierno de Navarra///
Impacto
No disponible en Scopus

Abstract

Background. Previous literature supports antipsychotics¿ (AP) efficacy in acute first-episode psychosis (FEP) in terms of symptomatology and functioning but also a cognitive detrimental effect. However, regarding functional recovery in stabilised patients, these effects are not clear. Therefore, the main aim of this study is to investigate dopaminergic/anticholinergic burden of (AP) on psychosocial functioning in FEP. We also examined whether cognitive impairment may mediate these effects on functioning.

Methods. A total of 157 FEP participants were assessed at study entry, and at 2 months and 2 years after remission of the acute episode. The primary outcomes were social functioning as measured by the functioning assessment short test (FAST). Cognitive domains were assessed as potential mediators. Dopaminergic and anticholinergic AP burden on 2-year psychosocial functioning [measured with chlorpromazine (CPZ) and drug burden index] were independent variables. Secondary outcomes were clinical and socio-demographic variables.

Results. Mediation analysis found a statistical but not meaningful contribution of dopaminergic receptor blockade burden to worse functioning mediated by cognition (for every 600 CPZ equivalent points, 2-year FAST score increased 1.38 points). Regarding verbal memory and attention, there was an indirect effect of CPZ burden on FAST (b = 0.0045, 95% CI 0.0011¿0.0091) and (b = 0.0026, 95% CI 0.0001¿0.0006) respectively. However, only verbal memory post hoc analyses showed a significant indirect effect (b = 0.009, 95% CI 0.033¿0.0151) adding premorbid IQ as covariate. We did not find significant results for anticholinergic burden.

Conclusion. CPZ dose effect over functioning is mediated by verbal memory but this association appears barely relevant.

Description

Keywords

Antipsychotics, Cognition, Dopaminergic receptor blockade burden, First episode psychosis, Functioning

Department

Ciencias de la Salud / Osasun Zientziak

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

item.page.cita

Ballesteros, A., Sánchez-Torres, A. M. López-Ilundáin, J., Mezquida, G., Lobo, A., González-Pinto, A., Pina-Camacho, L., Corripio, I., Vieta, E., de la Serna, E., Mané, A., Bioque, M., Moreno-Izco, L., Espliego, A., Lorente-Omeñaca, R., Amoretti, S., Bernardo, M., Cuesta, M. J., PEPs Group (2021) The longitudinal effect of antipsychotic burden on psychosocial functioning in first-episode psychosis patients: the role of verbal memory. Psychological Medicine, 51(12), 2044-2053. https://doi.org/10.1017/S003329172000080X.

item.page.rights

© The Author(s), 2020.

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