Executive dysfunction and cognitive subgroups in a large sample of euthymic patients with bipolar disorder
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Date
2016
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Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BP), at the group level, is associated with significant but modest cognitive deficits, including executive dysfunction. Among executive functions, response inhibition deficits have been suggested to be particularly relevant to BP. However, BP is associated with significant heterogeneity in neurocognitive performance and level of functioning. Very few studies have investigated neurocognitive subgroups in BP with data-driven methods rather than arbitrarily defined criteria. Other than having relatively small sample sizes, previous studies have not taken into consideration the neurocognitive variability in healthy subjects. Five-hundred-fifty-six euthymic patients with BP and 416 healthy controls were assessed using a battery of cognitive tests and clinical measures. Neurocognitive subgroups were investigated using latent class analysis, based on executive functions. Four neurocognitive subgroups, including a good performance cluster, two moderately low-performance groups, which differ in response inhibition and reasoning abilities, and a severe impairment cluster were found. In comparison to healthy controls, BP patients were overrepresented in severe impairment cluster (27% vs 5.3%) and underrepresented in good performance cluster. BP patients with lower educational attainment and older age were significantly more likely to be members of cognitively impaired subgroups. Antipsychotic use was less common in good performance cluster. These results suggest that there is a considerable overlap of cognitive functions between BP and healthy controls. Neurocognitive differences between BP and healthy controls are driven by a subgroup of patients who have severe and global, rather than selective, cognitive deficits. © 2016 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP
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Adult , Antipsychotic Agents , Bipolar Disorder , Cognition Disorders , Cross-Sectional Studies , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Educational Status , Executive Function , Female , Hospitals, University , Humans , Inhibition (Psychology) , Male , Middle Aged , Outpatient Clinics, Hospital , Prevalence , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Severity of Illness Index , Statistics as Topic , Turkey , neuroleptic agent , adult , Article , bipolar disorder , clinical assessment , cognition , cognitive defect , controlled study , disease severity , educational status , executive function , female , groups by age , human , inhibition (psychology) , latent structure analysis , major clinical study , male , multicenter study , neuropsychological test , priority journal , task performance , bipolar disorder , classification , clinical trial , cognitive defect , cross-sectional study , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , middle aged , outpatient department , pathophysiology , prevalence , psychological rating scale , psychology , severity of illness index , statistics , university hospital