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Neurophysiological Targets for Cognitive Training in Schizophrenia

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VA Office of Research and Development

Status

Completed

Conditions

Schizophrenia

Treatments

Behavioral: Auditory Cognitive Training
Behavioral: Visual Cognitive Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT00923078
D7008-W

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine whether computer-based training of auditory and visual processing results in corresponding improvement in brain function in individuals with schizophrenia.

Full description

Schizophrenia is recognized as one of the leading causes of medical disability worldwide, ranked 9th overall by the World Health Organization, and affects more than 2 million Americans per year. There is considerable evidence to suggest that disability status in schizophrenia relates more directly to cognitive Impairment, involving attention, reasoning, and memory, than to characteristic symptoms of psychosis. Accordingly, the evaluation and advancement of interventions designed to restore cognitive function, generally termed cognitive remediation, is of critical importance to our rehabilitation mission. Recent randomized controlled trials of cognitive remediation in schizophrenia have found moderate gains in cognitive function and improved outcomes in important areas of community living. However, despite these encouraging findings, there remains sparse evidence in support of assumptions that (1) cognitive outcomes represent benefits of training-induced adaptive learning, (2) that training effects are specific to method of intervention, or (3) that change in cognitive test performance occurs through restoration of impaired neural circuitry in schizophrenia. This project will begin to address these issues by examining modality-specific effects of computer-based cognitive training on psychophysiological measures of sensory information processing. Training will be administered using two commercially available computer-based software packages, separately targeting auditory and visually-mediated processes using principles of bottom-up perceptual learning. Two psychophysiological paradigms, mismatch negativity (MMN) and P300 generation, will be administered as tests of early visual and auditory processing. MMN and P300 have been studied extensively in human neuroscience as probes of sensory echoic memory and attention engagement to contextually relevant information. Furthermore, reductions in MMN and P300 generation are reliably observed in schizophrenia, follow the course of a progressive neuropathological process, and correlate with severity of cognitive impairment. The specific aims of this study are to determine: (1) whether training selectively influences bottom-up (MMN) or top-down (P300) information processing, (2) whether training effects are modality (auditory vs. visual) specific, (3) whether baseline MMN and P300 predict, or rate-limit, training progress, and (4) whether pre-post change in cognitive test performance is mediated by neural-level change in MMN and P300 generation. Answers to these questions will provide information needed to structure cognitive training for maximum benefit in schizophrenia.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • DSM-IV diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder
  • Age between 18 & 70
  • minimum of 30 days since discharge from last hospitalization
  • minimum of 30 days since last change in psychiatric medications
  • receiving mental health services
  • no housing changes in the past 30 days

Exclusion criteria

  • current diagnosis of alcohol or substance abuse

  • history of brain trauma or neurological disease

  • chart diagnosis of mental retardation or premorbid intelligence < 70 based on Wechsler Test of Adult Reading (WTAR) full-scale estimated IQ

  • auditory or visual impairment that would interfere with study procedures

    • a sample of 20 healthy community volunteers was also recruited according to these criteria and tested, without intervention, as a normative reference sample for MMN and P300 measures

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Auditory-Visual Train Order
Experimental group
Description:
4 weeks (20 sessions) of auditory cognitive training (Brain Fitness) followed by 4 weeks (20 sessions) of visual cognitive training (Insight)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Visual Cognitive Training
Behavioral: Auditory Cognitive Training
Visual-Auditory Train Order
Experimental group
Description:
4 weeks (20 sessions) of visual cognitive training (Insight) followed by 4 weeks (20 sessions) of auditory cognitive training (Brain Fitness)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Visual Cognitive Training
Behavioral: Auditory Cognitive Training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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