학술논문

Effects of Anticholinergic Burden on Verbal Memory Performance in First-Episode Psychosis.
Document Type
article
Source
Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 68(12)
Subject
anticholinergic burden
first-episode psychosis
verbal memory
Humans
Cholinergic Antagonists
Psychotic Disorders
Cognition
Cognitive Dysfunction
Cognition Disorders
Neuropsychological Tests
Language
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Antipsychotics are widely used to treat first-episode psychosis but may have an anticholinergic burden, that is, a cumulative effect of medications that block the cholinergic system. Studies suggest that a high anticholinergic burden negatively affects memory in psychosis, where cognitive deficits, particularly those in verbal memory, are a core feature of the disease. The present study sought to replicate this in a large cohort of well-characterized first-episode psychosis patients. We expected that patients in the highest anticholinergic burden group would exhibit the poorest verbal memory compared to those with low anticholinergic burden and healthy controls at baseline (3 months following admission). We further hypothesized that over time, at month 12, patients verbal memory performance would improve but would remain inferior to controls. METHODS: Patients (n  =  311; low anticholinergic burden [n  =  241] and high anticholinergic burden [n  =  70], defined by a Drug Burden Index cut-off of 1) and healthy controls (n  =  128) completed a clinical and neurocognitive battery including parts of the Wechsler Memory Scale at months 3 and 12. RESULTS: Cross-sectionally, using an analysis of variance, patients in the highest anticholinergic burden group had the poorest performance in verbal memory when compared to the other groups at month 3, F(2,430)  =  52.33, P