Osugo Martin, Zahid Uzma, Selvaggi Pierluigi, Chilimidos Alexandria, Finelli Valeria, Chapman George E, Whitehurst Thomas, Onwordi Ellis Chika, Murray Robin M, Wall Matthew B, Marques Tiago Reis, Mehta Mitul A, Howes Oliver D
Department of Psychosis Studies, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
Psychiatric Imaging Group, Medical Research Council, London Institute of Medical Sciences, Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK.
Mol Psychiatry. 2025 Jul 19. doi: 10.1038/s41380-025-03116-8.
Dopamine D2/D3 receptor modulation with antipsychotics is thought to affect cognitive function, but causal evidence in humans is scant, and largely limited to single administrations. Clarifying this is of importance given the widespread use of antipsychotics, and to understand the role of D2/D3 signalling in human cognition. We therefore conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study following sustained administration of either a dopamine D2/D3 receptor antagonist (amisulpride at 400 mg daily) or a D2/D3 partial agonist (aripiprazole at 10 mg daily) to two separate samples of healthy humans (total n = 50) for 7 days per condition. We assessed cognitive function using a computerised visuospatial working memory (VS-WM) task, and sustained attention and response inhibition using the Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART). We found that both amisulpride and aripiprazole caused impairments in VS-WM function compared to placebo on the Balanced Integration Score (amisulpride: p = 0.0079; aripiprazole: p = 0.015). Both antipsychotics impaired VS-WM performance in terms of response latency (amisulpride: p = 5.5 × 10; aripiprazole: p = 0.022), but did not affect response accuracy. Response latency deficits were not correlated with motor impairments induced by either drug, and we also found no effect of either drug on the SART measures, or on subjective alertness, suggesting that D2/D3 antagonism or partial agonism did not cause a generalised cognitive or motor deficit but specifically impaired cognition during VS-WM. This study provides the first causal evidence in healthy humans that working memory function is impaired following either sustained antagonism or partial agonism of D2/D3 receptors by antipsychotic drugs.
抗精神病药物对多巴胺D2/D3受体的调节被认为会影响认知功能,但人类的因果证据很少,且主要限于单次给药。鉴于抗精神病药物的广泛使用,以及了解D2/D3信号在人类认知中的作用,阐明这一点很重要。因此,我们进行了一项双盲、安慰剂对照的交叉研究,对两组健康人类样本(共50人)分别持续给予多巴胺D2/D3受体拮抗剂(阿立哌唑,每日400毫克)或D2/D3部分激动剂(阿立哌唑,每日10毫克),每种情况持续7天。我们使用计算机化的视觉空间工作记忆(VS-WM)任务评估认知功能,并使用持续注意力反应任务(SART)评估持续注意力和反应抑制。我们发现,与安慰剂相比,阿立哌唑和阿立哌唑在平衡整合评分上均导致VS-WM功能受损(阿立哌唑:p = = 0.0079;阿立哌唑:p = = 0.015)。两种抗精神病药物在反应潜伏期方面均损害了VS-WM表现(阿立哌唑:p = = 5.5 × × 10;阿立哌唑:p = = 0.022),但不影响反应准确性。反应潜伏期缺陷与两种药物引起的运动障碍无关,我们还发现两种药物对SART测量或主观警觉性均无影响,这表明D2/D3拮抗或部分激动不会导致全身性认知或运动缺陷,而是特异性损害VS-WM期间的认知。这项研究提供了首个在健康人类中的因果证据,即抗精神病药物持续拮抗或部分激动D2/D3受体后,工作记忆功能会受损。