Cognitive improvement in patients with major depressive disorder after personalised multi domain training in the CERT-D study

Psychiatry Res. 2023 Dec:330:115590. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115590. Epub 2023 Nov 5.

Abstract

The CERT-D program offers a new treatment approach addressing disturbed cognitive and psychosocial functioning in major depressive disorder (MDD). The current analysis of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) comprises two objectives: Firstly, evaluating the program's efficacy of a personalised versus standard treatment and secondly, assessing the treatment's persistence longitudinally. Participants (N = 112) were randomised into a personalised or standard treatment group. Both groups received 8 weeks of cognitive training, followed by a three-month follow-up without additional training. The type of personalised training was determined by pre-treatment impairments in the domains of cognition, emotion-processing and social-cognition. Standard training addressed all three domains equivalent. Performance in these domains was assessed repeatedly during RCT and follow-up. Treatment comparisons during the RCT-period showed benefits of personalised versus standard treatment in certain aspects of social-cognition. Conversely, no benefits in the remaining domains were found, contradicting a general advantage of personalisation. Exploratory follow-up analysis on persistence of the program's effects indicated sustained intervention outcomes across the entire sample. A subsequent comparison of clinical outcomes between personalised versus standard treatment over a three-month follow-up period showed similar results. First evidence suggests that existing therapies for MDD could benefit from an adjunct administration of the CERT-D program.

Keywords: Cognitive remediation; Cognitive training; Emotion processing; Functional impairment; Major depressive disorder; Social-cognition.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Cognition
  • Depressive Disorder, Major* / drug therapy
  • Depressive Disorder, Major* / therapy
  • Humans
  • Treatment Outcome