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Estimated cognitive decline in patients with schizophrenia: A multicenter study

Authors :
Haruo, Fujino
Chika, Sumiyoshi
Yuka, Yasuda
Hidenaga, Yamamori
Michiko, Fujimoto
Masaki, Fukunaga
Kenichiro, Miura
Yuto, Takebayashi
Naohiro, Okada
Shuichi, Isomura
Naoko, Kawano
Atsuhito, Toyomaki
Hironori, Kuga
Masanori, Isobe
Kazuto, Oya
Yuko, Okahisa
Manabu, Takaki
Naoki, Hashimoto
Masaki, Kato
Toshiaki, Onitsuka
Takefumi, Ueno
Tohru, Ohnuma
Kiyoto, Kasai
Norio, Ozaki
Tomiki, Sumiyoshi
Osamu, Imura
Ryota, Hashimoto
Source :
Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences. 71(5)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Studies have reported that cognitive decline occurs after the onset of schizophrenia despite heterogeneity in cognitive function among patients. The aim of this study was to investigate the degree of estimated cognitive decline in patients with schizophrenia by comparing estimated premorbid intellectual functioning and current intellectual functioning.A total of 446 patients with schizophrenia (228 male, 218 female), consisting of three sample sets obtained from 11 psychiatric facilities, and 686 healthy controls participated in this study. The Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III (WAIS-III) was used to measure the participants' current full-scale IQ (FSIQ). The premorbid IQ was estimated using the Japanese Adult Reading Test-25. Estimated cognitive decline (difference score) was defined as the difference between the estimated premorbid IQ and the current FSIQ.Patients with schizophrenia showed greater estimated cognitive decline, a lower FSIQ, and a lower premorbid IQ compared with the healthy controls. The mean difference score, FSIQ, and estimated premorbid IQ were -16.3, 84.2, and 100.5, respectively, in patients with schizophrenia. Furthermore, 39.7% of the patients had a difference score of 20 points or greater decline. A discriminant analysis showed that the difference score accurately predicted 81.6% of the patients and healthy controls.These results show the distribution of difference score in patients with schizophrenia. These findings may contribute to assessing the severity of estimated cognitive decline and identifying patients with schizophrenia who suffer from cognitive decline.

Details

ISSN :
14401819
Volume :
71
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........07d8a762deceefd8896f9edec37e9df5