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Affective cognition in bipolar disorder: A systematic review by the ISBD targeting cognition task force

K W Miskowiak, I Seeberg, H L Kjaerstad, K E Burdick, A Martinez-Aran, C M Bonnin, C R Bowie, A F Carvalho, P Gallagher, G Hasler, B Lafer, C López-Jaramillo, T Sumiyoshi, R S McIntyre, A Schaffer, R J Porter, S Purdon, I J Torres, L N Yatham, A H YoungL V Kessing, T E Van Rheenen, E Vieta

101 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Impairments in affective cognition are part of the neurocognitive profile and possible treatment targets in bipolar disorder (BD), but the findings are heterogeneous. The International Society of Bipolar Disorder (ISBD) Targeting Cognition Task Force conducted a systematic review to (I) identify the most consistent findings in affective cognition in BD, and (II) provide suggestions for affective cognitive domains for future study and meta-analyses.

METHODS: The review included original studies reporting behavioural measures of affective cognition in BD patients versus controls following the procedures of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) statement. Searches were conducted on PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE and PsychInfo from inception until November 2018.

RESULTS: A total of 106 articles were included (of which nine included data for several affective domains); 41 studies assessed emotional face processing; 23 studies investigated reactivity to emotional words and images; 3 investigated explicit emotion regulation; 17 assessed implicit emotion regulation; 31 assessed reward processing and affective decision-making. In general, findings were inconsistent. The most consistent findings were trait-related difficulties in facial emotion recognition and implicit emotion regulation, and impairments in reward processing and affective decision-making during mood episodes. Studies using eye-tracking and facial emotion analysis revealed subtle trait-related abnormalities in emotional reactivity.

CONCLUSION: The ISBD Task Force recommends facial expression recognition, implicit emotion regulation and reward processing as domains for future research and meta-analyses. An important step to aid comparability between studies in the field would be to reach consensus on an affective cognition test battery for BD. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Original languageEnglish
JournalBipolar Disorders
Volume21
Issue number8
Pages (from-to)686-719
Number of pages34
ISSN1398-5647
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Sept 2019

Keywords

  • affective cognition
  • bipolar disorder
  • emotional cognition
  • reward processing
  • social cognition

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