Background: Cognitive impairment is a feature of severe mental illness (SMI; schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder). Psychotic forms of SMI may be associated with greater cognitive impairment, but it is unclear if this differential impairment pre-dates illness onset or whether it reflects a consequence of the disorder. To establish if there is a developmental impairment related to familial risk of psychotic SMI, we investigated cognition in offspring of parents with psychotic and non-psychotic SMI.
Method: Participants included 360 children and youth (mean age 11.10, SD 4.03, range 6-24), including 68 offspring of parents with psychotic SMI, 193 offspring of parents with non-psychotic SMI, and 99 offspring of control parents. The cognitive battery assessed a range of functions using standardized tests and executive function tasks from the Cambridge Automated Neuropsychological Test Battery.
Results: Compared to controls, offspring of parents with psychotic SMI performed worse on overall cognition (β = -0.32; p < 0.001) and 6 of 15 cognitive domains, including verbal intelligence, verbal working memory, processing speed, verbal learning and memory, verbal fluency, and sustained attention. Offspring of parents with non-psychotic SMI performed worse than controls on 3 of the 15 domain specific cognitive tests, including verbal intelligence, visual memory and decision-making.
Conclusions: Widespread mild-to-moderate cognitive impairments are present in young offspring at familial risk for transdiagnostic psychotic SMI. Offspring at familial risk for non-psychotic SMI showed fewer and more specific impairments in the domains of verbal intelligence, visual memory and decision-making.
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Cognition; Major depressive disorder; Offspring; Processing speed; Psychotic symptoms; Schizophrenia; Severe mental illness; Spatial working memory; Sustained attention; Transdiagnostic; Verbal learning; Verbal working memory.
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