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Quetiapine treatment and improved cognitive functioning in borderline personality disorder
Author(s) -
Van den Eynde Frederique,
De Saedeleer Sofie,
Naudts Kris,
Day Jemma,
Vogels Caroline,
van Heeringen Cornelis,
Audenaert Kurt
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
human psychopharmacology: clinical and experimental
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.461
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1099-1077
pISSN - 0885-6222
DOI - 10.1002/hup.1075
Subject(s) - neurocognitive , quetiapine , borderline personality disorder , psychology , verbal fluency test , fluency , executive functions , clinical psychology , cognition , psychiatry , audiology , medicine , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , neuropsychology , mathematics education
Abstract Objective We aimed to assess whether executive functioning improved over time in a sample of borderline personality disorder (BPD) subjects that took part in a quetiapine treatment trial. Methods Performance on the following neurocognitive tasks was assessed at enrolment and at the end of the 12 weeks quetiapine treatment: Trail Making Task, Word Fluency Task and Tower of London Task. Forty‐one BPD patients were recruited, of whom 32 completed the trial. An intention‐to‐treat analysis with a mixed linear model was applied. Results The data show that participants significantly improved on most executive functioning measures. Patients' scores decreased significantly (mean [SD] difference; p ‐value) on the Trail Making Task Part A (11.7 [2.3]; p  < 0.0001), Part B (51.8 [9.2]; p  < 0.0001) and ‘B minus A’ (40.1 [8.2]; p  < 0.0001), on a Phonological (15.9 [1.6]; p  < 0.0001) and Semantic (9.8 [1.1]; p  < 0.0001) Verbal Fluency tasks, and on the Tower of London total correct score (2.5 [0.4]; p  < 0.0001), total move score (29.5 [4.5]; p  < 0.0001) and total time (172.9 [35.8]; p  < 0.0001). Conclusions In this study we have demonstrated that executive functioning in BPD is improved after treatment with quetiapine. Neurocognitive measures of executive functioning should be considered as valuable outcomes in the study of treatment efficacy in BPD. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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