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Verbal Memory Impairment in Polydrug Ecstasy Users: A Clinical Perspective

Kim P. C. Kuypers, Eef L. Theunissen, Janelle H. P. van Wel, Elizabeth B. de Sousa Fernandes Perna, A.M.W. Linssen, Anke Sambeth, Benjamin G. Schultz, Johannes G. Ramaekers

PLoS ONE February 23, 2016 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0149438 via OpenAlex

Summary

Verbal memory performance in people who use Ecstasy (MDMA) does not differ from that of healthy non-users when they are not under the drug's influence, and there is substantial evidence supporting no long-term memory deficit. Clinically significant memory impairment—defined as performance more than 1.5 standard deviations below the average of healthy controls—was absent during abstinence. However, during acute MDMA intoxication, verbal memory was impaired. Pooled data from four experimental studies compared 65 Ecstasy users tested on placebo with 65 matched drug-naïve controls. History of use did not predict memory impairment. The findings suggest that Ecstasy/MDMA use does not cause clinically deficient long-term verbal memory.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Pooled analysis of experimental studies with placebo control Placebo-controlled Peer reviewed
Sample size 130
Population Ecstasy users and healthy drug-naïve controls
Topics MDMA
Keywords Memory impairment Verbal memory Placebo
Citations 23
Key finding Verbal memory performance of Ecstasy users during abstinence does not differ from that of healthy controls, with substantial evidence for no long-term clinically deficient memory.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ecstasy use has been associated with short-term and long-term memory deficits on a standard Word Learning Task (WLT). The clinical relevance of this has been debated and is currently unknown. The present study aimed at evaluating the clinical relevance of verbal memory impairment in Ecstasy users. To that end, clinical memory impairment was defined as decrement in memory performance that exceeded the cut-off value of 1.5 times the standard deviation of the average score in the healthy control sample. The primary question was whether being an Ecstasy user (E-user) was predictive of having clinically deficient memory performance compared to a healthy control group. METHODS: WLT data were pooled from four experimental MDMA studies that compared memory performance during placebo and MDMA intoxication. Control data were taken from healthy volunteers with no drug use history who completed the WLT as part of a placebo-controlled clinical trial. This resulted in a sample size of 65 E-users and 65 age- and gender-matched healthy drug-naïve controls. All participants were recruited by similar means and were tested at the same testing facilities using identical standard operating procedures. Data were analyzed using linear mixed-effects models, Bayes factor, and logistic regressions. RESULTS: Findings were that verbal memory performance of placebo-treated E-users did not differ from that of controls, and there was substantial evidence in favor of the null hypothesis. History of use was not predictive of memory impairment. During MDMA intoxication of E-users, verbal memory was impaired. CONCLUSION: The combination of the acute and long-term findings demonstrates that, while clinically relevant memory impairment is present during intoxication, it is absent during abstinence. This suggests that use of Ecstasy/MDMA does not lead to clinically deficient memory performance in the long term. Additionally, it has to be investigated whether the current findings apply to more complex cognitive measures in diverse 'user categories' using a combination of genetics, imaging techniques and neuropsychological assessments.

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