Affiliation:
1. Department of Neuropsychiatry, Keio University School of Medicine,
Tokyo, Japan
2. Department of System Design Engineering, Faculty of Science and
Technology, Keio University Japan
3. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo,
NY, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction The complex nature of neurocognitive impairment in
schizophrenia has been discussed in light of the mixed effects of antipsychotic
drugs, psychotic symptoms, dopamine D2 receptor blockade, and
intelligence quotient (IQ). These factors have not been thoroughly examined
before.
Methods This study conducted a comprehensive re-analysis of the CATIE data
using machine learning techniques, in particular Conditional Inference Tree
(CTREE) analysis, to investigate associations between neurocognitive functions
and moderating factors such as estimated trough dopamine D2 receptor
blockade with risperidone, olanzapine, or ziprasidone, Positive and Negative
Syndrome Scale (PANSS), and baseline IQ in 573 patients with schizophrenia.
Results The study reveals that IQ, age, and education
consistently emerge as significant predictors across all neurocognitive domains.
Furthermore, higher severity of PANSS-negative symptoms was associated
with lower cognitive performance scores in several domains. CTREE analysis, in
combination with a genetic algorithm approach, has been identified as
particularly insightful for illustrating complex interactions between variables.
Lower neurocognitive function was associated with factors such as age>52
years, IQ<94/95,<12/13 education years, and more pronounced negative
symptoms (score<26).
Conclusions These findings emphasize the multifaceted nature of
neurocognitive functioning in patients with schizophrenia, with the
PANSS-negative score being an important predictor. This gives rise to a role in
addressing negative symptoms as a therapeutic objective for enhancing cognitive
impairments in these patients. Further research must examine nonlinear
relationships among various moderating factors identified in this work,
especially the role of D2 occupancy.