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Journal Article

Citation

Wollman SC, Hauson AO, Hall MG, Connors EJ, Allen KE, Stern MJ, Stephan RA, Kimmel CL, Sarkissians S, Barlet BD, Flora-Tostado C. Am. J. Drug Alcohol Abuse 2019; 45(1): 11-25.

Affiliation

California School of Professional Psychology, Clinical Pyschology PhD Program , San Diego , CA , USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/00952990.2018.1517262

PMID

30359116

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Research has demonstrated that patients with opioid use disorders (OUD; including both opioid abuse and/or dependence) have poorer neuropsychological functioning compared to healthy controls; however, the pattern and robustness of the findings remain unknown.

OBJECTIVES: This study meta-analyzed the results from previous research examining the neuropsychological deficits associated with opioids across 14 neurocognitive domains.

METHOD: Articles comparing patients with OUD to healthy controls were selected based on detailed inclusion/exclusion criteria and variables of interest were coded. In total, 61 studies were selected for the analyses. These consisted of 2580 patients with OUD and 2102 healthy control participants (15.9% female). Drug-related variables were analyzed as potential moderators.

RESULTS: The largest effect size difference in neuropsychological performance was observed in complex psychomotor ability. With the exception of the motor and processing speed domains, which showed no group differences, small-to-medium effect sizes were associated with all neurocognitive domains examined. Meta-regression revealed that increases in the length of abstinence were associated with decreases in effect sizes of the complex psychomotor domain. Additionally, attentional ability predicted effect size differences in executive functioning as well as verbal memory ability. Although the majority of meta-analyzed studies demonstrated significant differences between patients with OUD and controls, the average raw scores for patients with OUD in these studies typically fell within the normal range.

CONCLUSION: The pattern of neuropsychological performance among patients with OUD appears to reflect mild generalized cognitive dysfunction, with a large effect in complex psychomotor abilities.


Language: en

Keywords

Neuropsychology; heroin; meta-analysis; opiates; opioid use disorder; opioids

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