Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02105779

Optimizing Cognitive Remediation Outcomes in Schizophrenia

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
172 (actual)
Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to drive an optimal response to neuroplasticity-based cognitive remediation in schizophrenia in order to maximize treatment response. The investigators will investigate factors that have generally been ignored in prior computer-based cognitive remediation programs-those related to social cognition-- and will delineate their relationship to motivation, functional outcome, and the neural substrates of reward anticipation and emotion processing. Current research indicates that, unless the investigators fully understand and harness these factors, the investigators will not achieve meaningful treatment gains for individuals with schizophrenia.

Detailed description

The purpose of this study is to explicitly and aggressively drive an optimal response to neuroplasticity- based cognitive remediation in schizophrenia in order to maximize treatment response. We will investigate factors that have generally been ignored in computer-based cognitive remediation programs-those related to social cognition-- and will delineate their relationship to motivation, functional outcome, and the neural substrates of reward anticipation and emotion processing. Current research indicates that, unless we fully understand and harness these factors, we will not achieve meaningful treatment gains for individuals with schizophrenia. Our specific aims are: 1. To perform an RCT in which 100 schizophrenia subjects are assigned to either 60 hours of neuroplasticity- based computerized targeted cognitive training (TCT) that focuses exclusively on "cold cognition" (a program which trains early sensory processing, attention, working memory and cognitive control in auditory and visual domains), or to 60 hours of training that combines the TCT program with 20 minutes per day of adaptive computerized social cognition training (SCT) exercises. 2. To compare the outcomes of these two groups of subjects on measures of neurocognition, social cognition, motivation, and functional outcome. 3. To assess subjects six months after the intervention to determine the durability of training effects. 4. To identify changes in brain activation patterns in key neural regions as a result of TCT alone vs. TCT+SCT: during reward anticipation, and during emotion recognition. The timeliness of this approach is supported by recent evidence demonstrating only weak associations between traditional cognitive remediation approaches and functional outcome in schizophrenia, but a strong, direct relationship between social cognition and functional outcome. Thus we must now examine the clinical, functional, and neural effects of a well-designed state-of-the-art cognitive training program that combines neurocognition with social cognition training.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERTargeted Cognitive TrainingAt present, the TCT exercises consist of three modules: an Auditory Processing Module (40-50 hours of training); a Visual Processing Module (30 hours); a Cognitive Control Module prototype (20 hours). \[Based on the results of our current RCT, Posit Science has revised aspects of the training modules in order to further optimize its effectiveness for treatment of schizophrenia. In this study, we will use updated versions of the training software: an Auditory Module (30 hours), and a Visual Module (30 hours). Features from the Cognitive Control module prototype have been expanded and incorporated into these new modules.
OTHERSocial Cognitive TrainingWe developed a systematic approach to basic training in facial emotion identification and discrimination and simple social perception and theory of mind tasks using components drawn from three commercially available software packages: the MicroExpressions Training Tool and The Subtle Expressions Training Tool (METT and SETT), plus the MindReading program. Training begins with simple emotion identification tasks, and slowly progressed to more difficult tasks that required subjects to discriminate between two subtle emotion expressions, and to correctly interpret the emotional significance of brief social scenes. A total of 10 hours of training occurred over 8 weeks.

Timeline

Start date
2009-12-01
Primary completion
2016-05-01
Completion
2016-07-26
First posted
2014-04-07
Last updated
2019-04-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02105779. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Optimizing Cognitive Remediation Outcomes in Schizophrenia (NCT02105779) · Clinical Trials Directory