Towards a biomarker model for cognitive improvement: No change in memory-related prefrontal engagement following a negative cognitive remediation trial in bipolar disorder

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Standard

Towards a biomarker model for cognitive improvement: No change in memory-related prefrontal engagement following a negative cognitive remediation trial in bipolar disorder. / Macoveanu, Julian; Demant, Kirsa M.; Vinberg, Maj; Siebner, Hartwig R.; Kessing, Lars Vedel; Miskowiak, Kamilla Woznica .

In: Journal of Psychopharmacology, Vol. 32, No. 10, 10.2018, p. 1075-1085.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Macoveanu, J, Demant, KM, Vinberg, M, Siebner, HR, Kessing, LV & Miskowiak, KW 2018, 'Towards a biomarker model for cognitive improvement: No change in memory-related prefrontal engagement following a negative cognitive remediation trial in bipolar disorder', Journal of Psychopharmacology, vol. 32, no. 10, pp. 1075-1085. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269881118783334

APA

Macoveanu, J., Demant, K. M., Vinberg, M., Siebner, H. R., Kessing, L. V., & Miskowiak, K. W. (2018). Towards a biomarker model for cognitive improvement: No change in memory-related prefrontal engagement following a negative cognitive remediation trial in bipolar disorder. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 32(10), 1075-1085. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269881118783334

Vancouver

Macoveanu J, Demant KM, Vinberg M, Siebner HR, Kessing LV, Miskowiak KW. Towards a biomarker model for cognitive improvement: No change in memory-related prefrontal engagement following a negative cognitive remediation trial in bipolar disorder. Journal of Psychopharmacology. 2018 Oct;32(10):1075-1085. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269881118783334

Author

Macoveanu, Julian ; Demant, Kirsa M. ; Vinberg, Maj ; Siebner, Hartwig R. ; Kessing, Lars Vedel ; Miskowiak, Kamilla Woznica . / Towards a biomarker model for cognitive improvement: No change in memory-related prefrontal engagement following a negative cognitive remediation trial in bipolar disorder. In: Journal of Psychopharmacology. 2018 ; Vol. 32, No. 10. pp. 1075-1085.

Bibtex

@article{e91eeb5f42534e46b36ef5010a74b2e0,
title = "Towards a biomarker model for cognitive improvement: No change in memory-related prefrontal engagement following a negative cognitive remediation trial in bipolar disorder",
abstract = "Background:Cognitive deficits are prevalent in bipolar disorder during remission but effective cognition treatments are lacking due to insufficient insight into the neurobiological targets of cognitive improvement. Emerging data suggest that dorsal prefrontal cortex target engagement is a key neurocircuitry biomarker of pro-cognitive treatment effects.Aims:In this randomized controlled functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we test this hypothesis by investigating the effects of an ineffective cognitive remediation intervention on dorsal prefrontal response during strategic memory encoding and working memory engagement.Methods:Bipolar disorder patients in partial remission with subjective cognitive difficulties were randomized to receive 12-week group-based cognitive remediation (n = 13) or to continue their standard treatment (n = 14). The patients performed a strategic episodic picture encoding task and a spatial n-back working memory task under functional magnetic resonance imaging at baseline and following cognitive remediation or standard treatment.Results:The right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was commonly activated by both strategic memory tasks across all patients. The task-related prefrontal engagement was not altered by cognitive remediation relative to standard treatment. The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex response was not significantly associated with recall accuracy or working memory performance.Conclusions:As hypothesized, no task-related change in prefrontal activity was observed in a negative cognitive remediation trial in remitted bipolar disorder patients. By complementing previous findings linking cognitive improvement with increased dorsolateral prefrontal cortex engagement, our negative findings provide additional validity evidence to the dorsal prefrontal target engagement biomarker model of cognitive improvement by strengthening the proposed causality between modulation of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex engagement and pro-cognitive effects.",
keywords = "Cognitive remediation, bipolar disorder, prefrontal cortex, functional magnetic resonance imaging",
author = "Julian Macoveanu and Demant, {Kirsa M.} and Maj Vinberg and Siebner, {Hartwig R.} and Kessing, {Lars Vedel} and Miskowiak, {Kamilla Woznica}",
year = "2018",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1177/0269881118783334",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "1075--1085",
journal = "Journal of Psychopharmacology",
issn = "0269-8811",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Towards a biomarker model for cognitive improvement: No change in memory-related prefrontal engagement following a negative cognitive remediation trial in bipolar disorder

AU - Macoveanu, Julian

AU - Demant, Kirsa M.

AU - Vinberg, Maj

AU - Siebner, Hartwig R.

AU - Kessing, Lars Vedel

AU - Miskowiak, Kamilla Woznica

PY - 2018/10

Y1 - 2018/10

N2 - Background:Cognitive deficits are prevalent in bipolar disorder during remission but effective cognition treatments are lacking due to insufficient insight into the neurobiological targets of cognitive improvement. Emerging data suggest that dorsal prefrontal cortex target engagement is a key neurocircuitry biomarker of pro-cognitive treatment effects.Aims:In this randomized controlled functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we test this hypothesis by investigating the effects of an ineffective cognitive remediation intervention on dorsal prefrontal response during strategic memory encoding and working memory engagement.Methods:Bipolar disorder patients in partial remission with subjective cognitive difficulties were randomized to receive 12-week group-based cognitive remediation (n = 13) or to continue their standard treatment (n = 14). The patients performed a strategic episodic picture encoding task and a spatial n-back working memory task under functional magnetic resonance imaging at baseline and following cognitive remediation or standard treatment.Results:The right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was commonly activated by both strategic memory tasks across all patients. The task-related prefrontal engagement was not altered by cognitive remediation relative to standard treatment. The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex response was not significantly associated with recall accuracy or working memory performance.Conclusions:As hypothesized, no task-related change in prefrontal activity was observed in a negative cognitive remediation trial in remitted bipolar disorder patients. By complementing previous findings linking cognitive improvement with increased dorsolateral prefrontal cortex engagement, our negative findings provide additional validity evidence to the dorsal prefrontal target engagement biomarker model of cognitive improvement by strengthening the proposed causality between modulation of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex engagement and pro-cognitive effects.

AB - Background:Cognitive deficits are prevalent in bipolar disorder during remission but effective cognition treatments are lacking due to insufficient insight into the neurobiological targets of cognitive improvement. Emerging data suggest that dorsal prefrontal cortex target engagement is a key neurocircuitry biomarker of pro-cognitive treatment effects.Aims:In this randomized controlled functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we test this hypothesis by investigating the effects of an ineffective cognitive remediation intervention on dorsal prefrontal response during strategic memory encoding and working memory engagement.Methods:Bipolar disorder patients in partial remission with subjective cognitive difficulties were randomized to receive 12-week group-based cognitive remediation (n = 13) or to continue their standard treatment (n = 14). The patients performed a strategic episodic picture encoding task and a spatial n-back working memory task under functional magnetic resonance imaging at baseline and following cognitive remediation or standard treatment.Results:The right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was commonly activated by both strategic memory tasks across all patients. The task-related prefrontal engagement was not altered by cognitive remediation relative to standard treatment. The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex response was not significantly associated with recall accuracy or working memory performance.Conclusions:As hypothesized, no task-related change in prefrontal activity was observed in a negative cognitive remediation trial in remitted bipolar disorder patients. By complementing previous findings linking cognitive improvement with increased dorsolateral prefrontal cortex engagement, our negative findings provide additional validity evidence to the dorsal prefrontal target engagement biomarker model of cognitive improvement by strengthening the proposed causality between modulation of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex engagement and pro-cognitive effects.

KW - Cognitive remediation

KW - bipolar disorder

KW - prefrontal cortex

KW - functional magnetic resonance imaging

U2 - 10.1177/0269881118783334

DO - 10.1177/0269881118783334

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29969938

VL - 32

SP - 1075

EP - 1085

JO - Journal of Psychopharmacology

JF - Journal of Psychopharmacology

SN - 0269-8811

IS - 10

ER -

ID: 210441779