Transdiagnostic cognitive biases in psychiatric disorders: A systematic review and network meta-analysis

Psychiatric disorders are characterized by cognitive deficits, which have been proposed as a transdiagnostic feature of psychopathology (“C” factor). Similarly, cognitive biases (e.g., in attention, memory, and interpretation) represent common tendencies in information processing that are often asso...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry 2024-02, Vol.129, p.110894-110894, Article 110894
Hauptverfasser: Lavigne, Katie M., Deng, Jiaxuan, Raucher-Chéné, Delphine, Hotte-Meunier, Adèle, Voyer, Chloe, Sarraf, Lisa, Lepage, Martin, Sauvé, Geneviève
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Psychiatric disorders are characterized by cognitive deficits, which have been proposed as a transdiagnostic feature of psychopathology (“C” factor). Similarly, cognitive biases (e.g., in attention, memory, and interpretation) represent common tendencies in information processing that are often associated with psychiatric symptoms. However, the question remains whether cognitive biases are also transdiagnostic or are specific to certain psychiatric disorders/symptoms. The current systematic review sought to address whether the proposed “C” factor of transdiagnostic cognitive dysfunction in psychopathology can be extended to cognitive biases. Overall, 31 studies comprising 4401 participants (2536 patients, 1865 non-clinical controls) met inclusion criteria, assessing 19 cognitive biases across 20 diagnostic categories, with most studies focusing on interpretation (k = 22) and attention (k = 11) biases and only 2 assessing memory biases. Traditional meta-analyses found a moderate effect size (g = 0.32) for more severe cognitive biases in all patients relative to non-clinical controls, as well as small but significant associations between interpretation biases and transdiagnostic symptom categories (general psychopathology: r = 0.20, emotion dysfunction: r = 0.17, psychotic symptoms: r = 0.25). Network meta-analyses revealed significant patient versus non-clinical control differences on attention and interpretation biases across diagnoses, as well as significant differences between diagnoses, with highest severity in panic disorder for attention biases and obsessive-compulsive disorder for interpretation biases. The current findings extend the big “C” interpretation of transdiagnostic cognitive dysfunction in psychiatric disorders to cognitive biases and transdiagnostic symptom dimensions. Results also suggest that while the presence of cognitive biases is transdiagnostic, bias severity differs across diagnoses, as in traditional neurocognitive deficits. •Prevalence of cognitive biases were assessed across 19 biases and 21 diagnoses.•Overall, patients showed more severe biases than controls.•Bias severity was associated with transdiagnostic symptom dimensions.•Network meta-analysis identified variability in bias severity across diagnoses.•Cognitive biases show similar transdiagnostic features to cognitive deficits.
ISSN:0278-5846
1878-4216
DOI:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2023.110894