Cognitive impairment in depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis
University of Oxford · Cambridge Cognition (United Kingdom) · +4 more institutions
Abstract
This review aimed to address the question of whether cognitive impairment should be considered a core feature of depression that may be a valuable target for treatment. METHOD: We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of cognitive function, assessed with a single neuropsychological test battery, the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB), in patients with depression during symptomatic and remitted states. Inclusion of studies comparing patients remitted from depression and controls enabled us to investigate whether cognitive impairment persists beyond episodes of low mood in depression.
Our meta-analysis revealed significant moderate cognitive deficits in executive function, memory and attention in patients with depression relative to controls (Cohen's d effect sizes ranging from -0.34 to -0.65). Significant moderate deficits in executive function and attention (Cohen's d ranging from -0.52 to -0.61) and non-significant small/moderate deficits in memory (Cohen's d ranging from -0.22 to -0.54) were found to persist in patients whose depressive symptoms had remitted, indicating that cognitive impairment occurs separately from episodes of low mood in depression.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 43.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 76
Authors
4- PLP L RockCorresponding
University of Oxford, Cambridge Cognition (United Kingdom)
- JPJonathan P. Roiser
Institut des Sciences Cognitives Marc Jeannerod, University College London
- WJWim J. Riedel
University of Cambridge, Maastricht University, Cambridge Cognition (United Kingdom)
- ADAaron D. Blackwell
University of Cambridge, Cambridge Cognition (United Kingdom)
Topics & keywords
- Mood
- Psychology
- Depression (economics)
- Meta-analysis
- Cognition
- Neuropsychology
- Clinical psychology
- Cognitive remediation therapy
- No poverty