4.2 Article

Neurocognitive profile of adolescents with early-onset schizophrenia and their unaffected siblings

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 677-688

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/15622975.2021.2023758

Keywords

Adolescent; attention; cognition; early onset; executive function; memory; schizophrenia

Categories

Funding

  1. Winston Churchill Memorial Trust Fellowship

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This study investigated the neurocognitive profiles of patients with Early-Onset Schizophrenia (EOS) and their unaffected siblings. The findings revealed that EOS patients showed deficits in working memory, attention, and executive function compared to their siblings. The duration of illness was found to be more important in older patients. The similarity in cognitive task performance between siblings and the greater variability in patient scores across tasks provide support for the neurobiological heterogeneity in schizophrenia.
Background We investigated the neurocognitive profiles of Early-Onset Schizophrenia (EOS; onset before age 18) and paired unaffected siblings and the little-studied effect of age-of-onset and duration of illness on cognitive performance. Methods 31 EOS probands, and 31 of their siblings, had four cognitive domains assessed: (a) Memory: California Verbal Learning Test, and the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised; (b) Working memory: Digit Span; (c) Attention: Degraded-Stimulus Continuous Performance Test, Span of Apprehension (SPAN), and Trail Making Test (TMT) part A; (d) Executive function: Wisconsin card sorting task, and TMT part B. Diagnosis was confirmed using the structured clinical interview for DSM-IV. Results While EOS showed a generalised neurocognitive deficit (0.25-0.50 effect size) compared with siblings, across all cognitive domains, significantly greater patient deficits were observed with, working memory, attention, and executive function and minimal differences for digit span forward, block design and false alarms on the SPAN-12 confirmed by repeated measures MANOVA. Patients with earlier onset (12-15) showed greater deficits on false alarm and digits backward scores. Siblings showed individual cognitive task profiles similar to patients, confirming familial effects. EOS showed much more variable scores than siblings with more individual tasks showing 2 SD deficits than siblings. Long duration patients had greater z-score variability across tasks. Conclusions Duration of illness was a more important characteristic in patients with onset 16 and over than in younger onset patients with comparable durations. Both the similarity of sibling pair profiles and greater patient variability across task provide further support for neurobiological heterogeneity in schizophrenia.

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