Title of article
Long-Term Neurocognitive Effects of Olanzapine or Low-Dose Haloperidol in First-Episode Psychosis
Author/Authors
Richard S.E. Keefe، نويسنده , , Larry J. Seidman، نويسنده , , Bruce K. Christensen، نويسنده , , Robert M. Hamer، نويسنده , , Tonmoy Sharma، نويسنده , , Margriet M. Sitskoorn، نويسنده , , Stephanie L. Rock، نويسنده , , Sandra Woolson، نويسنده , , Mauricio Tohen، نويسنده , , Gary D. Tollefson، نويسنده , , Todd M. Sanger، نويسنده , , Jeffrey A. Lieberman and HGDH Research Group، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
9
From page
97
To page
105
Abstract
Background
Neurocognitive deficits are severe in first-episode psychosis.
Methods
Patients (N = 263) with first-episode psychosis (schizophrenia, schizoaffective, or schizophreniform disorders) were randomly assigned to double-blind treatment with olanzapine (mean 11.30 mg/day) or haloperidol (mean 4.87 mg/day) for 104 weeks. A neurocognitive battery was administered at baseline (n = 246) and 12 (n = 167), 24 (n = 126), 52 (n = 89), and 104 (n = 46) weeks during treatment. Weighted principal component and unweighted composite scores were derived from individual tests.
Results
Both treatment groups demonstrated significant improvement on both composite scores. On the basis of the weighted composite score, olanzapine had greater improvement than haloperidol only at 12 (p = .014) and 24 (p = .029) weeks. For the unweighted composite, olanzapine had significantly better improvement compared with haloperidol only at week 12 (p = .044). At week 12 only, olanzapine improved performance on the Digit Symbol and Continuous Performance Test significantly more than haloperidol.
Conclusions
Both antipsychotic agents appeared to improve neurocognitive functioning among first-episode psychosis patients with schizophrenia. A significantly greater benefit in terms of neurocognitive improvement was found with olanzapine than with haloperidol at weeks 12 and 24.
Keywords
OLANZAPINE , Haloperidol , First-episode , Schizophrenia , neurocognition , double-blind
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Record number
502873
Link To Document