Back to Search Start Over

Negative Symptom Trajectories in Individuals at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis: Differences Based on Deficit Syndrome, Persistence, and Transition Status.

Authors :
Tran, Tanya
Tran, Tanya
Spilka, Michael J
Raugh, Ian M
Strauss, Gregory P
Bearden, Carrie E
Cadenhead, Kristin S
Cannon, Tyrone D
Cornblatt, Barbara A
Keshavan, Matcheri
Mathalon, Daniel H
McGlashan, Thomas H
Perkins, Diana O
Seidman, Larry J
Stone, William S
Tsuang, Ming T
Walker, Elaine F
Woods, Scott W
Addington, Jean M
Tran, Tanya
Tran, Tanya
Spilka, Michael J
Raugh, Ian M
Strauss, Gregory P
Bearden, Carrie E
Cadenhead, Kristin S
Cannon, Tyrone D
Cornblatt, Barbara A
Keshavan, Matcheri
Mathalon, Daniel H
McGlashan, Thomas H
Perkins, Diana O
Seidman, Larry J
Stone, William S
Tsuang, Ming T
Walker, Elaine F
Woods, Scott W
Addington, Jean M
Source :
Schizophrenia bulletin open; vol 4, iss 1, sgad014; 2632-7899
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background and hypothesisNegative symptom trajectory in clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis is ill defined. This study aimed to better characterize longitudinal patterns of change in negative symptoms, moderators of change, and differences in trajectories according to clinical subgroups. We hypothesized that negative symptom course will be nonlinear in CHR. Clinical subgroups known to be more severe variants of psychotic illness-deficit syndrome (DS), persistent negative syndrome (PNS), and acute psychosis onset-were expected to show more severe baseline symptoms, slower rates of change, and less stable rates of symptom resolution.Study designLinear, curvilinear, and stepwise growth curve models, with and without moderators, were fitted to negative symptom ratings from the NAPLS-3 CHR dataset (N = 699) and within clinical subgroups.Study resultsNegative symptoms followed a downward curvilinear trend, with marked improvement 0-6 months that subsequently stabilized (6-24 months), particularly among those with lower IQ and functioning. Clinical subgroups had higher baseline ratings, but distinct symptom courses; DS vs non-DS: more rapid initial improvement, similar stability of improvements; PNS vs non-PNS: similar rates of initial improvement and stability; transition vs no transition: slower rate of initial improvement, with greater stability of this rate.ConclusionsContinuous, frequent monitoring of negative symptoms in CHR is justified by 2 important study implications: (1) The initial 6 months of CHR program enrollment may be a key window for improving negative symptoms as less improvement is likely afterwards, (2) Early identification of clinical subgroups may inform distinct negative symptom trajectories and treatment needs.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Schizophrenia bulletin open; vol 4, iss 1, sgad014; 2632-7899
Notes :
application/pdf, Schizophrenia bulletin open vol 4, iss 1, sgad014 2632-7899
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391575736
Document Type :
Electronic Resource