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Psychiatric comorbidity in individuals atā€risk for psychosis: Relationships with symptoms, cognition and psychosocial functioning

Authors :
Wai Sau Chung
Suet In Chan
Man Kin Ng
Wai Ching Yan
W.C. Chang
Lai Ming Hui
Ho Ming Lee
Chung Mun Ng
Lap Tak Poon
Hoi Ching Lee
Pui Fai Pang
Sai Yu Lui
Kit Wa Chan
Wai Chung Lam
WS Yeung
Shirley Sanyin Chiu
Kwun Nam Chan
Y C Wong
Lam Wai Choy
Shiu Yin Chong
Kwok Ling Chan
Tak Lam Lo
Charles Wai Hong Chan
Yi Man Mo
Ming Cheuk Wong
Man Wa Siu
Eric Y.H. Chen
Source :
Early Intervention in Psychiatry. 15:616-623
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Aim Psychiatric comorbidity frequently occurs with at-risk mental state (ARMS) for psychosis. Its relationships with psychopathology, cognition and functioning, however, remain to be further clarified. We aimed to examine prevalence and correlates of psychiatric comorbidity, and its associations with psychosocial functioning and subjective quality-of-life (QoL) in a representative sample of Chinese ARMS individuals. Methods One hundred ten help-seeking participants aged 15 to 40 years with ARMS were recruited from a specialized early psychosis service in Hong Kong. ARMS status was verified by comprehensive assessment of at-risk mental state (CAARMS). Comorbid Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition non-psychotic psychiatric disorders at baseline were ascertained using diagnostic interview and medical record review. Assessments encompassing symptom profiles, psychosocial functioning, subjective QoL and a brief cognitive battery were conducted. Results Forty-nine (44.5%) ARMS participants were diagnosed as having comorbid non-psychotic psychiatric disorders at baseline, primarily depressive and anxiety disorders. Binary multiple logistic regression analysis revealed that female gender, more severe depressive symptoms, higher suicidality and poorer global cognitive functioning were independently associated with comorbid diagnosis status. ARMS participants with psychiatric comorbidity displayed significantly more limited extended social networks and poorer subjective QoL than those without psychiatric comorbidity. Conclusion Comorbid disorders were frequently observed in Chinese ARMS individuals, and were linked to poorer cognition and higher suicide risk. Our findings underscore a potential critical role of psychiatric comorbidity in determining social functioning and subjective QoL in at-risk individuals. Further longitudinal research is required to clarify trajectories of comorbid disorder status and its prospective impact on clinical and functional outcomes in ARMS populations.

Details

ISSN :
17517893 and 17517885
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Early Intervention in Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3321e7f4d70d33f02cd740ef33a07381
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/eip.12992