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Neurocognitive Predictors of Functioning in Schizophrenia: Five Years Follow Up Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

M.L. Vargas
Affiliation:
Psychiatric Service, Complejo Asistencial de Zamora, Zamora, Spain
J.C. Sanz
Affiliation:
University of Extremadura, Mérida, Spain
N. Jimeno-Bulnes
Affiliation:
University of Valladolid, Valladolid, Spain
S. Lopez
Affiliation:
Addictive Behavior Unit, Complejo Asistencial de Zamora, Zamora, Spain

Abstract

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Aims:

Verbal memory and processing speed are two of the proposed neurocognitive predictors in schizophrenia. the objective is to determinate neurocognitive predictors of functioning in one five years follow-up period on ambulatory schizophrenia patients.

Method:

We conduct one cohort study on 30 schizophrenia out-patients (19 male; age mean: 32.8 years; SD:7.2). at the moment of inclusion it was applied one neuropsychological battery sensitive to neuropsychological deficit in schizophrenia: WAIS-III, BADS, WCST, Colour Trails, Trail Making A and B, BVRT, California Verbal Learning Test (Spanish version: TAVEC). Variables was summarized determining Z values and principal components. the cohort was prospectively studied for up to five years. as result variables it were considered: time to the first antipsychotic-drug change, time to the first psychiatric admission, and average five-years annual score in the Strauss-Carpenter Outcome Scale. It was constructed Cox and Linear Regression Models to determinate the better predicting neurocognitive components.

Results:

The better global outcome was directly related with WAIS-III processing speed index (corrected R square: 0.19; p = 0.02; beta constant= 0.469; beta WAIS-III processing speed= 0.125). None predictor was selected for the outcome variable change of antipsychotic. Psychiatric admission was predicted (p=0.006) by implicit learning (beta= -2.19), executive functioning (beta= 1.02), WAIS-III Total IQ (beta= 0.45) and WAIS-III Perceptual Organization Index (beta= -0.20).

Conclusion:

Higher processing speed index predicts one better functioning outcome during five-years follow-up. the risk for psychiatric admission was heterogeneously related with neurocognitive predictors. Verbal memory did not predict functional outcome.

Type
P03-213
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2009
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