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Dimensional structure of first episode psychosis

Authors :
Carlo Marchesi
Katia De Santi
Carla Comacchio
Emanuela Leuci
Elena Bettini
Massimo Cellini
Paola Rucci
Chiara Bonetto
Jacopo Lenzi
Antonio Lasalvia
Maurizio Miceli
Doriana Cristofalo
Paolo Santonastaso
Giovanni de Girolamo
Angelo Fioritti
Daniela Ghigi
Paolo Ossola
Laura Iozzino
Silvio Scarone
Anna Meneghelli
Matteo Tonna
Sarah Tosato
Francesca Pileggi
Angela Veronese
Stefano Torresani
Armando D'Agostino
Mirella Ruggeri
Tonna M.
Ossola P.
Marchesi C.
Bettini E.
Lasalvia A.
Bonetto C.
Lenzi J.
Rucci P.
Iozzino L.
Cellini M.
Comacchio C.
Cristofalo D.
D'Agostino A.
de Girolamo G.
De Santi K.
Ghigi D.
Leuci E.
Miceli M.
Meneghelli A.
Pileggi F.
Scarone S.
Santonastaso P.
Torresani S.
Tosato S.
Veronese A.
Fioritti A.
Ruggeri M.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Aim Current diagnostic systems, DSM-5 and ICD-10, still adopt a categorical approach to classify psychotic disorders. The present study was aimed at investigating the structure of psychotic symptomatology in both affective and non-affective psychosis from a dimensional approach. Methods Participants with a first episode psychosis (FEP) were recruited from a cluster-randomized controlled trial (GET-UP PIANO TRIAL), offered to all Community Mental Health Centres (CMHCs) located across two northern Italian regions. After clinical stabilization, patients were assessed with a comprehensive set of psychopathological measures including the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and the Bech-Rafaelsen Mania Rating Scale. A two-step cluster analysis was performed. Results Overall, 257 FEP patients (male, n = 171, 66.5%; mean age = 24.96 ± 4.56) were included in the study. The cluster analysis revealed a robust four-cluster solution: delusional-persecutory (n = 82; 31.9%), depressed (n = 95; 37%), excited (n = 26; 10.1%) and negative-disorganized (n = 54; 21%), thus suggesting a quadripartite structure with both affective and non-affective dimensions. Among non-affective dimensions, negative and disorganization symptoms constituted a unique construct apart from positive symptoms. Conclusions Symptom dimensions may represent a useful tool for dissecting the indistinct and non-specific psychopathology of FEP in order to better target specific interventions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97d68af7087ed58d84adbe6a2e940794