Cognitive profiles across the psychosis continuum.

Journal: Psychiatry research
PMID:

Abstract

Cognitive impairments are core features in individuals across the psychosis continuum and predict functional outcomes. Nevertheless, substantial variability in cognitive functioning within diagnostic groups, along with considerable overlap with healthy controls, hampers the translation of research findings into personalized treatment planning. Aligned with precision medicine, we employed a data driven machine learning method, self-organizing maps, to conduct transdiagnostic clustering based on cognitive functions in a sample comprising 228 healthy controls, 200 individuals at ultra-high risk for psychosis, and 98 antipsychotic-naïve patients with first-episode psychosis. The self-organizing maps revealed six clinically distinct cognitive profiles that significantly predicted baseline functional level and changes in functional level after one year. Cognitive flexibility in particular, as well as specific executive functions emerged as cardinal in differentiating the profiles. The application of self-organizing maps appears to be a promising approach to inform clinical decision-making based on individualized cognitive profiles, including patient allocation to different interventions. Moreover, this method has the potential to enable cross-diagnostic stratification in research trials, utilizing data-driven subgrouping informed by categories from underlying dimensions of cognition rather than from clinical diagnoses. Finally, the method enables cross-diagnostic profiling across other data modalities, such as brain networks or metabolic subtypes.

Authors

  • Tina D Kristensen
    Centre for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CNSR), Mental Health Centre Glostrup, Copenhagen University Hospital, Glostrup, Denmark.
  • Fabian M Mager
    Center for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research and Center for Clinical Intervention and Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research, Mental Health Centre Glostrup, Copenhagen University Hospital, Glostrup, Denmark; DTU Compute, Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark.
  • Karen S Ambrosen
    Center for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CNSR) & Center for Clinical Intervention and Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CINS), Mental Health Centre Glostrup, University of Copenhagen, Glostrup, Denmark.
  • Anita D Barber
    Department of Psychiatry, Zucker Hillside Hospital and Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, NY USA; Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience, Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, NY USA.
  • Cecilie K Lemvigh
    Center for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research and Center for Clinical Intervention and Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research, Mental Health Centre Glostrup, Copenhagen University Hospital, Glostrup, Denmark.
  • Kirsten B Bojesen
    Center for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CNSR) & Center for Clinical Intervention and Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CINS), Mental Health Centre Glostrup, University of Copenhagen, Glostrup, Denmark.
  • Mette Ø Nielsen
    Center for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CNSR) & Center for Clinical Intervention and Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CINS), Mental Health Centre Glostrup, University of Copenhagen, Glostrup, Denmark.
  • Birgitte Fagerlund
    Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Mental Health Centre Copenhagen, Copenhagen University Hospital, Hellerup, Denmark; Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
  • Birte Y Glenthøj
    Center for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CNSR) & Center for Clinical Intervention and Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research (CINS), Mental Health Centre Glostrup, University of Copenhagen, Glostrup, Denmark.
  • Warda T Syeda
    Center for Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research and Center for Clinical Intervention and Neuropsychiatric Schizophrenia Research, Mental Health Centre Glostrup, Copenhagen University Hospital, Glostrup, Denmark; Melbourne Brain Center Imaging Unit, Department of Radiology, University of Melbourne, Australia.
  • Louise B Glenthøj
    Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark; VIRTU research Group, Mental Health Center Copenhagen, 2900 Hellerup, Denmark.
  • Bjørn H Ebdrup
    Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne and Melbourne Health, Carlton South, Victoria, Australia.