Hot and cold cognitive disturbances in antidepressant-free patients with major depressive disorder: a NeuroPharm study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Hot and cold cognitive disturbances in antidepressant-free patients with major depressive disorder : a NeuroPharm study. / Dam, V H; Stenbæk, D S; Köhler-Forsberg, K; Ip, C; Ozenne, B; Sahakian, B J; Knudsen, G M; Jørgensen, M. B.; Frøkjær, V G.

In: Psychological Medicine, Vol. 51, No. 14, 2021, p. 2347-2356.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Dam, VH, Stenbæk, DS, Köhler-Forsberg, K, Ip, C, Ozenne, B, Sahakian, BJ, Knudsen, GM, Jørgensen, MB & Frøkjær, VG 2021, 'Hot and cold cognitive disturbances in antidepressant-free patients with major depressive disorder: a NeuroPharm study', Psychological Medicine, vol. 51, no. 14, pp. 2347-2356. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291720000938

APA

Dam, V. H., Stenbæk, D. S., Köhler-Forsberg, K., Ip, C., Ozenne, B., Sahakian, B. J., Knudsen, G. M., Jørgensen, M. B., & Frøkjær, V. G. (2021). Hot and cold cognitive disturbances in antidepressant-free patients with major depressive disorder: a NeuroPharm study. Psychological Medicine, 51(14), 2347-2356. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291720000938

Vancouver

Dam VH, Stenbæk DS, Köhler-Forsberg K, Ip C, Ozenne B, Sahakian BJ et al. Hot and cold cognitive disturbances in antidepressant-free patients with major depressive disorder: a NeuroPharm study. Psychological Medicine. 2021;51(14):2347-2356. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291720000938

Author

Dam, V H ; Stenbæk, D S ; Köhler-Forsberg, K ; Ip, C ; Ozenne, B ; Sahakian, B J ; Knudsen, G M ; Jørgensen, M. B. ; Frøkjær, V G. / Hot and cold cognitive disturbances in antidepressant-free patients with major depressive disorder : a NeuroPharm study. In: Psychological Medicine. 2021 ; Vol. 51, No. 14. pp. 2347-2356.

Bibtex

@article{c984bb63a20f46d0a89318a3411b6952,
title = "Hot and cold cognitive disturbances in antidepressant-free patients with major depressive disorder: a NeuroPharm study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Cognitive disturbances are common and disabling features of major depressive disorder (MDD). Previous studies provide limited insight into the co-occurrence of hot (emotion-dependent) and cold (emotion-independent) cognitive disturbances in MDD. Therefore, we here map both hot and cold cognition in depressed patients compared to healthy individuals.METHODS: We collected neuropsychological data from 92 antidepressant-free MDD patients and 103 healthy controls. All participants completed a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery assessing hot cognition including emotion processing, affective verbal memory and social cognition as well as cold cognition including verbal and working memory and reaction time.RESULTS: The depressed patients showed small to moderate negative affective biases on emotion processing outcomes, moderate increases in ratings of guilt and shame and moderate deficits in verbal and working memory as well as moderately slowed reaction time compared to healthy controls. We observed no correlations between individual cognitive tasks and depression severity in the depressed patients. Lastly, an exploratory cluster analysis suggested the presence of three cognitive profiles in MDD: one characterised predominantly by disturbed hot cognitive functions, one characterised predominantly by disturbed cold cognitive functions and one characterised by global impairment across all cognitive domains. Notably, the three cognitive profiles differed in depression severity.CONCLUSION: We identified a pattern of small to moderate disturbances in both hot and cold cognition in MDD. While none of the individual cognitive outcomes mapped onto depression severity, cognitive profile clusters did. Overall cognition-based stratification tools may be useful in precision medicine approaches to MDD.",
author = "Dam, {V H} and Stenb{\ae}k, {D S} and K K{\"o}hler-Forsberg and C Ip and B Ozenne and Sahakian, {B J} and Knudsen, {G M} and J{\o}rgensen, {M. B.} and Fr{\o}kj{\ae}r, {V G}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1017/S0033291720000938",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
pages = "2347--2356",
journal = "Psychological Medicine",
issn = "0033-2917",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "14",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Hot and cold cognitive disturbances in antidepressant-free patients with major depressive disorder

T2 - a NeuroPharm study

AU - Dam, V H

AU - Stenbæk, D S

AU - Köhler-Forsberg, K

AU - Ip, C

AU - Ozenne, B

AU - Sahakian, B J

AU - Knudsen, G M

AU - Jørgensen, M. B.

AU - Frøkjær, V G

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - BACKGROUND: Cognitive disturbances are common and disabling features of major depressive disorder (MDD). Previous studies provide limited insight into the co-occurrence of hot (emotion-dependent) and cold (emotion-independent) cognitive disturbances in MDD. Therefore, we here map both hot and cold cognition in depressed patients compared to healthy individuals.METHODS: We collected neuropsychological data from 92 antidepressant-free MDD patients and 103 healthy controls. All participants completed a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery assessing hot cognition including emotion processing, affective verbal memory and social cognition as well as cold cognition including verbal and working memory and reaction time.RESULTS: The depressed patients showed small to moderate negative affective biases on emotion processing outcomes, moderate increases in ratings of guilt and shame and moderate deficits in verbal and working memory as well as moderately slowed reaction time compared to healthy controls. We observed no correlations between individual cognitive tasks and depression severity in the depressed patients. Lastly, an exploratory cluster analysis suggested the presence of three cognitive profiles in MDD: one characterised predominantly by disturbed hot cognitive functions, one characterised predominantly by disturbed cold cognitive functions and one characterised by global impairment across all cognitive domains. Notably, the three cognitive profiles differed in depression severity.CONCLUSION: We identified a pattern of small to moderate disturbances in both hot and cold cognition in MDD. While none of the individual cognitive outcomes mapped onto depression severity, cognitive profile clusters did. Overall cognition-based stratification tools may be useful in precision medicine approaches to MDD.

AB - BACKGROUND: Cognitive disturbances are common and disabling features of major depressive disorder (MDD). Previous studies provide limited insight into the co-occurrence of hot (emotion-dependent) and cold (emotion-independent) cognitive disturbances in MDD. Therefore, we here map both hot and cold cognition in depressed patients compared to healthy individuals.METHODS: We collected neuropsychological data from 92 antidepressant-free MDD patients and 103 healthy controls. All participants completed a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery assessing hot cognition including emotion processing, affective verbal memory and social cognition as well as cold cognition including verbal and working memory and reaction time.RESULTS: The depressed patients showed small to moderate negative affective biases on emotion processing outcomes, moderate increases in ratings of guilt and shame and moderate deficits in verbal and working memory as well as moderately slowed reaction time compared to healthy controls. We observed no correlations between individual cognitive tasks and depression severity in the depressed patients. Lastly, an exploratory cluster analysis suggested the presence of three cognitive profiles in MDD: one characterised predominantly by disturbed hot cognitive functions, one characterised predominantly by disturbed cold cognitive functions and one characterised by global impairment across all cognitive domains. Notably, the three cognitive profiles differed in depression severity.CONCLUSION: We identified a pattern of small to moderate disturbances in both hot and cold cognition in MDD. While none of the individual cognitive outcomes mapped onto depression severity, cognitive profile clusters did. Overall cognition-based stratification tools may be useful in precision medicine approaches to MDD.

U2 - 10.1017/S0033291720000938

DO - 10.1017/S0033291720000938

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32317043

VL - 51

SP - 2347

EP - 2356

JO - Psychological Medicine

JF - Psychological Medicine

SN - 0033-2917

IS - 14

ER -

ID: 255686403