학술논문

Cognitive markers for efficacy of neurofeedback for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder – personalized medicine using computational psychiatry in a randomized clinical trial.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Clinical & Experimental Neuropsychology. Mar2023, Vol. 45 Issue 2, p118-131. 14p. 4 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder
*CLINICAL trials
*BIOFEEDBACK training
*INDIVIDUALIZED medicine
*CONTINUOUS performance test
Language
ISSN
1380-3395
Abstract
Exploring whether cognitive components (identified by baseline cognitive testing and computational modeling) moderate clinical outcome of neurofeedback (NF) for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). 142 children (aged 7–10) with ADHD were randomly assigned to either NF (n = 84) or control treatment (n = 58) in a double-blind clinical trial (NCT02251743). The NF group received live, self-controlled downtraining of electroencephalographic theta/beta ratio power. The control group received identical-appearing reinforcement from prerecorded electroencephalograms from other children. 133 (78 NF, 55 control) children had cognitive processing measured at baseline with the Integrated Visual and Auditory Continuous Performance Test (IVA2-CPT) and were included in this analysis. A diffusion decision model applied to the IVA2-CPT data quantified two latent cognitive components deficient in ADHD: drift rate and drift bias, indexing efficiency and context sensitivity of cognitive processes involving information integration. We explored whether these cognitive components moderated the improvement in parent- and teacher-rated inattention symptoms from baseline to treatment end (primary clinical outcome). Baseline cognitive components reflecting information integration (drift rate, drift bias) moderated the improvement in inattention due to NF vs. control treatment (p = 0.006). Specifically, those with either the most or least severe deficits in these components showed more improvement in parent- and teacher-rated inattention when assigned to NF (Cohen's d = 0.59) than when assigned to control (Cohen's d = −0.21). Pre-treatment cognitive testing with computational modeling identified children who benefitted more from neurofeedback than control treatment for ADHD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]