Cognitive training plus a comprehensive psychosocial programme (OPUS) versus the comprehensive psychosocial programme alone for patients with first-episode schizophrenia (the NEUROCOM trial): a study protocol for a centrally randomised, observer-blinded multi-centre clinical trial

Lone Vesterager, Torben Østergaard Christensen, Birthe B Olsen, Gertrud Krarup, Hysse B Forchhammer, Marianne Melau, Christian Nyfeldt Gluud, Merete Nordentoft

    14 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Background: Up to 85% of patients with schizophrenia demonstrate cognitive dysfunction in at least one domain.
    Cognitive dysfunction plays a major role in functional outcome. It is hypothesized that addition of cognitive
    training to a comprehensive psychosocial programme (OPUS) enhances both cognitive and everyday functional
    capacity of patients more than the comprehensive psychosocial programme alone.
    Methods: The NEUROCOM trial examines the effect on cognitive functioning and everyday functional capacity of
    patients with schizophrenia of a 16-week manualised programme of individual cognitive training integrated in a
    comprehensive psychosocial programme versus the comprehensive psychosocial programme alone. The cognitive
    training consists of four modules focusing on attention, executive functioning, learning, and memory. Cognitive
    training involves computer-assisted training tasks as well as practical everyday tasks and calendar training. It takes
    place twice a week, and every other week the patient and trainer engage in a dialogue on the patient’s cognitive
    difficulties, motivational goals, and progress in competence level. Cognitive training relies on errorless learning
    principles, scaffolding, and verbalisation in its effort to improve cognitive abilities and teach patients how to apply
    compensation strategies as well as structured problem solving techniques. At 16-week post-training and at tenmonths
    follow-up, assessments are conducted to investigate immediate outcome and possible long-term effects of
    cognitive training. We conduct blinded assessments of cognition, everyday functional capacity and associations
    with the labour market, symptom severity, and self-esteem.
    Discussion: Results from four-month and ten-month follow-ups have the potential of reliably providing
    documentation of the long-term effect of CT for patients with schizophrenia.
    Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00472862.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalTrials
    Volume12
    Pages (from-to)35
    Number of pages9
    ISSN1745-6215
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 9 Feb 2011

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Cognitive training plus a comprehensive psychosocial programme (OPUS) versus the comprehensive psychosocial programme alone for patients with first-episode schizophrenia (the NEUROCOM trial): a study protocol for a centrally randomised, observer-blinded multi-centre clinical trial'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this