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Rnic, Katerina; Jung, Young-Eun; Torres, Ivan; Chakrabarty, Trisha; LeMoult, Joelle; Vaccarino, Anthony L.; Morton, Emma; Bhat, Venkat; Giacobbe, Peter; McInerney, Shane; Frey, Benicio N.; Milev, Roumen V.; Müller, Daniel; Ravindran, Arun V.; Rotzinger, Susan; Kennedy, Sidney H.; Lam, Raymond W.
Journal of affective disorders, 12/2021, Volume: 295Journal Article
•Cognitive self-appraisals are sensitive to escitalopram treatment for MDD.•Increases in self-appraisals were associated with treatment response and remission.•Changes in self-appraisals were associated with improvements in functional outcomes.•Self-appraisals are a key correlate of MDD-related impairment and treatment outcome.•Cognitive self-appraisals may represent a mechanism underlying risk and recovery. Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is characterized by objective and subjective cognitive deficits. Discrepancies between objective and subjective cognitive performance can reflect under- to over-estimations of cognitive abilities, and these discrepancies are referred to as cognitive self-appraisals. Despite evidence that low self-appraisals are associated with depression, the modifiability of self-appraisals and their association with treatment outcome remains unclear. The current study examined whether self-appraisals change following antidepressant treatment. Furthermore, we investigated the association of self-appraisals with treatment outcome. As part of the CAN-BIND-1 clinical trial, 154 patients with MDD completed measures of objective and subjective cognitive abilities, depressive symptoms, and functional outcomes (work productivity, psychosocial functioning, and quality of life) at baseline and post-escitalopram treatment. Self-appraisals were calculated based on discrepancies between objective and subjective cognitive abilities, with higher scores indicating overestimation of cognitive abilities. Baseline self-appraisals were not predictive of treatment outcomes. However, self-appraisals increased from pre- to post-treatment. Moreover, pre-post treatment increases in self-appraisals were associated with positive treatment response and remission, decreases in depressive symptoms, and improvements in work productivity, psychosocial functioning, and quality of life. The pre-post intervention design precluded examining the temporal precedence of change in self-appraisals versus depressive symptoms and functional outcomes. Findings are the first to demonstrate that self-appraisals are treatment-sensitive and are associated with treatment outcomes and recovery from MDD. Cognitive self-appraisals may represent a key marker of treatment response and a valuable target for assessment and intervention, as well as a potential mechanism underlying risk and recovery.
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