1. Computerized cognitive remediation training for schizophrenia: An open label, multi-site, multinational methodology study.
- Author
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Murthy, N.V., Mahncke, H., Wexler, B.E., Maruff, P., Inamdar, A., Zucchetto, M., Lund, J., Shabbir, S., Shergill, S., Keshavan, M., Kapur, S., Laruelle, M., and Alexander, R.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA , *COGNITIVE training , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *COGNITION disorders , *REHABILITATION , *CLINICAL trials , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
A recent single-site study (Fisher et al., 2009. Am J Psychiatry. 166 (7) 805–11) showed that repeated training with the Brain Fitness Program (BFP) improved performance on a battery of neuropsychological tasks. If replicated these data suggest an important non-pharmacological method for ameliorating cognitive impairment in schizophrenia. Our study evaluated the BFP training effects in an open-label, multi-site, multinational clinical trial. Fifty-five stable adult patients with schizophrenia on regular antipsychotic medication completed ≥ 32 BFP training sessions over 8–10 weeks. Training effects on cognitive performance and functional capacity outcome measures were measured using CogState® schizophrenia battery, UCSD Performance based Skills Assessment (UPSA-2) and Cognitive Assessment Interview (CAI). BFP training showed a large and significant treatment effect on a training exercise task (auditory processing speed), however this effect did not generalize to improved performance on independent CogState® assessment. There were no significant effects on UPSA-2 or CAI scores. Our study demonstrated the feasibility of implementing BFP training in a multi-site study. However, BFP training did not show significant treatment effects on cognitive performance or functional capacity outcome measures despite showing large and significant effects on a training exercise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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