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Lifetime use of psychiatric medications and cognition at 43 years of age in schizophrenia in the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Jones, PB 
Hulkko, AP 
Murray, GK 
Moilanen, J 
Haapea, M 

Abstract

Background: Higher lifetime antipsychotic exposure has been associated with poorer cognition in schizophrenia. The cognitive effects of adjunctive psychiatric medications and lifetime trends of antipsychotic use remain largely unclear. We aimed to study how lifetime and current benzodiazepine and antidepressant medications, lifetime trends of antipsychotic use and antipsychotic polypharmacy are associated with cognitive performance in midlife schizophrenia.

Methods: Sixty participants with DSM-IV schizophrenia from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 were examined at 43 years of age with an extensive cognitive test battery. Cumulative lifetime and current use of psychiatric medications were collected from medical records and interviews. The associations between medication and principal component analysis-based cognitive composite score were analysed using linear regression.

Results: Lifetime cumulative DDD years of benzodiazepine and antidepressant medications were not significantly associated with global cognition. Being without antipsychotic medication (for minimum 11 months) before the cognitive examination was associated with better cognitive performance (P = 0.007) and higher lifetime cumulative DDD years of antipsychotics with poorer cognition (P = 0.020), when adjusted for gender, onset age and lifetime hospital treatment days. Other lifetime trends of antipsychotic use, such as a long antipsychotic-free period earlier in the treatment history, and antipsychotic polypharmacy, were not significantly associated with cognition.

Conclusions: Based on these naturalistic data, low exposure to adjunctive benzodiazepine and antidepressant medications does not seem to affect cognition nor explain the possible negative effects of high dose long-term antipsychotic medication on cognition in schizophrenia.

Description

Keywords

schizophrenia, cognition, benzodiazepine, antidepressant, antipsychotic, polypharmacy

Journal Title

European Psychiatry

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0924-9338
1778-3585

Volume Title

45

Publisher

Elsevier
Sponsorship
This work was supported by the Academy of Finland [grant numbers 278 286, 268 336], the Sigrid Juselius Foundation, the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation, the Jalmari and Rauha Ahokas Foundation, the Finnish Cultural Foundation Lapland Regional Fund, the Northern Finland Health Care Support Foundation, the scholarship Fund of the University of Oulu - Tyyni Tani Fund, the Foundation for Psychiatric Research and the Orion Research Foundation sr