Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation in cognition and brain networks: A randomised clinical trial in patients with multiple sclerosis
Author
Date
2025Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/11351/13079DOI
10.1016/j.nicl.2025.103775
ISSN
2213-1582
WOS
001463019100001
PMID
40184878
Abstract
This study evaluated the efficacy of the computerised Guttmann, NeuroPersonalTrainer® (GNPT) cognitive rehabilitation (CR) and characterised the induced changes in cerebral networks in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). This multicentre, double-blind, randomised clinical trial compared upward intensity training (active treatment) to low-intensity static training (static treatment). Cognition was assessed using the Brief Repeatable battery before and after 12 weeks of training and at 10-months follow-up, and patients were classified as having a mild or severe cognitive impairment (CI). Brain MRI pre- and post-CR were analysed using an advanced tractography algorithm, based on multishell diffusion MRI, to obtain node-based graph metrics (local efficiency and strength) from microscopic fractional anisotropy. Seventy MS patients completed the study (age 48.9 ± 8.8, disease duration 16.8 ± 9.0 years); active treatment: 36, static treatment: 34. Verbal memory improved significantly post-CR in both groups (55 % active; 34 % static treatment), accompanied by increases in local efficiency and strength in multimodal regions. At follow-up, verbal memory declined in both groups but remained above the pre-CR assessment (−25 % and −17 %, respectively). Patients with severe-CI (n = 36) showed improvement only with active treatment, while those with mild-CI (n = 34) improved regardless of intensity treatment. Network changes were more pronounced in patients in active treatment and in those with severe-CI. Quality of life did not change at post-CR, and cognitive improvement was influenced by cognitive reserve (p = 0.011). In MS, GNPT temporarily improves verbal memory and increases network connectivity, reinforcing the CR as a valuable tool for enhancing cognitive skills and promoting neuronal plasticity.
Keywords
Cognitive rehabilitation; Multiple sclerosis; Structural networksBibliographic citation
Lopez-Soley E, Martinez-Heras E, Vivo F, Calvi A, Alba-Arbalat S, Romero-Pinel L, et al. Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation in cognition and brain networks: A randomised clinical trial in patients with multiple sclerosis. NeuroImage Clin. 2025;46:103775.
Audience
Professionals
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