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Six-month buprenorphine-naloxone treatment is associated with neurocognitive function improvement in opioid dependence

Abhishek Ghosh, Tathagata Mahintamani, DevenderK Rana, Debasish Basu, SurendraK Mattoo

2022Indian Journal of Psychiatry17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background and Aim: The number of longitudinal studies on cognitive functions in patients on buprenorphine-based agonist treatment is limited. Our objective was to assess the change in neurocognitive functions over the first 6 months of buprenorphine-naloxone (BNX) treatment for opioid dependence (OD) and compare cognitive functions on BNX and controls. Methods: We selected 60 patients with OD aged 18 to 55 years and 20 sex-matched controls; and excluded patients with other substance dependence, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), head injury, epilepsy, and severe mental illness. We assessed patients thrice: at baseline, 3, and 6 months and Controls once. Cognitive tests included Wisconsin card sorting test (WCST), Iowa gambling task (IGT), trail making tests A and B (TMT-A and B), verbal and visual N-back test (NBT), and standard progressive matrices (SPM). We measured with-in group effect size with Cohen's D (d). Results: A total of 24 participants completed at least one follow-up; 17 completed both follow-up assessments. All participants were men. At baseline, the patients performed worse than healthy controls in IGT, TMT-A, and B, and visual and verbal NBT. At 3 months, the performance of visual NBT improved significantly (d = 1.2 for NBT1; 1.3 for NBT2). At 6 months, additional performance improvements were seen in WCST ("perseverative error" d = 1.2), IGT ("net total score" d = 1.2), TMT-A (d = 1.1), and verbal NBT ("omission error" d = 1.7). Except for visual-NBT, results did not differ between patients and controls at both follow-ups. Conclusion: Cognitive flexibility, decision making, attention, working memory, and psychomotor speed showed improvements over 6 months of a stable dose of BNX.

Topics & Concepts

Wisconsin Card Sorting TestNeurocognitiveIowa gambling taskBuprenorphineCognitive flexibilityPsychologyMedicineVerbal learningCognitionOpioidNeuropsychologyAudiologyInternal medicinePsychiatryReceptorOpioid Use Disorder TreatmentNeurotransmitter Receptor Influence on BehaviorSubstance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes
Six-month buprenorphine-naloxone treatment is associated with neurocognitive function improvement in opioid dependence | Litcius