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T184. THE ROLE OF ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MORE SEVERE TYPE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA

BACKGROUND: The prevalence of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) in psychotic patients ranges from 45 to 91%. Some authors argue that the risk of developing psychosis is higher in subjects who were exposed to multiple types of ACEs and that trauma multiplicity has a negative clinical impact in psy...

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Autores principales: Prokopez, Cintia, Vallejos, Miguel, Fuentes, Pamela, Caporusso, Gabriela, Alberio, German, Cozzarin, Linda, Farinola, Romina, Chiapella, Luciana, Daray, Federico
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7234402/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.744
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author Prokopez, Cintia
Vallejos, Miguel
Fuentes, Pamela
Caporusso, Gabriela
Alberio, German
Cozzarin, Linda
Farinola, Romina
Chiapella, Luciana
Daray, Federico
author_facet Prokopez, Cintia
Vallejos, Miguel
Fuentes, Pamela
Caporusso, Gabriela
Alberio, German
Cozzarin, Linda
Farinola, Romina
Chiapella, Luciana
Daray, Federico
author_sort Prokopez, Cintia
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The prevalence of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) in psychotic patients ranges from 45 to 91%. Some authors argue that the risk of developing psychosis is higher in subjects who were exposed to multiple types of ACEs and that trauma multiplicity has a negative clinical impact in psychosis, while others argue that specific types of trauma are related to specific features of disease, taking away importance at the dose-response hypothesis. Most of the studies about ACEs and schizophrenia have been conducted in North America or Western Europe and there is a lack of information on this topic in developing regions, excluding the possibility of finding regional differences in ACEs frequency and its consequences. The present research provides information about the prevalence of ACEs in schizophrenic patients and in a control sample, and explores the clinical impact of trauma multiplicity in a schizophrenic adult population of Argentina. METHODS: An observational, multicentric and cross-sectional study was conducted at three different hospitals located in Buenos Aires. One hundred patients with schizophrenia and 50 subjects without a mental disease were recruited. Information about adverse childhood experiences was obtained from the Spanish version of the Adverse Childhood Experiences questionnaire (ACE-Q). Clinical severity of schizophrenia was measured with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) and with the hallucination subscale of the Psychotic Symptom Rating Scale (PSYRATS), suicidal behavior with the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS), treatment adherence with the Drug Attitude Inventory (DAI-10), global functioning with the Global Assessment Functioning Scale (GAF), theory of mind with the Hinting Task test and emotional processing with the Reading the mind in the eyes test. To analyze the impact of trauma multiplicity on clinical variables of schizophrenia, the patient sample was divided into 2 groups according to the number of ACEs suffered. As a cut-off point, a statistical criterion corresponding to the median number of ACEs was chosen and the sample was divided between those who suffered 0–4 ACEs and those with 5 or more ACEs. Statistical analysis was carried out using SAS software. RESULTS: The prevalence of at least one ACE in schizophrenic patients was almost double in comparison with the control group (92% vs 54%). Patients with trauma multiplicity showed a PANSS-N score lower than the group with lower number of ACEs (0–4 ACEs= 24.51 ± 5.17 vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 21.04 ± 4.22; p= <0.001). PSYRATS score was higher in patients with 5 or more ACEs (0–4 ACEs= 6 points, Q1-Q3: 3–18 vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 12 points, Q1-Q3: 5–23; p= 0.042). Patients with 5 or more ACEs scored higher in death ideation (0–4 ACEs= 22 (40.00%) vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 28 (62.22%); p= 0.027). The prevalence of suicidal attempts was also higher (0–4 ACEs= 22 (40.00%) vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 27 (60.00%); p= 0.047), as well as the median number of suicide attempts (0–4 ACEs= 0 (0–1) vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 1 (0–2); p= 0.039). Also, women with 5 or more ACEs showed higher suicidal ideation score (0–4 ACEs= 0 (0–1) vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 2 (0–4); p= 0.035). No other clinical variables under study showed differences between the groups. DISCUSSION: Trauma multiplicity is associated with less negative symptoms, greater suicidal behavior and auditory hallucinations resistant to antipsychotic therapy. Further studies should be done to determine if this might be a specific endophenotype of schizophrenia. The high prevalence of ACEs in our study could be explained by the questionnaire applied, as it includes a large number of ACEs in comparison with others and it could also be linked to regional and cultural characteristics, as there is little information about ACEs prevalence of in South America.
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spelling pubmed-72344022020-05-23 T184. THE ROLE OF ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MORE SEVERE TYPE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA Prokopez, Cintia Vallejos, Miguel Fuentes, Pamela Caporusso, Gabriela Alberio, German Cozzarin, Linda Farinola, Romina Chiapella, Luciana Daray, Federico Schizophr Bull Poster Session III BACKGROUND: The prevalence of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) in psychotic patients ranges from 45 to 91%. Some authors argue that the risk of developing psychosis is higher in subjects who were exposed to multiple types of ACEs and that trauma multiplicity has a negative clinical impact in psychosis, while others argue that specific types of trauma are related to specific features of disease, taking away importance at the dose-response hypothesis. Most of the studies about ACEs and schizophrenia have been conducted in North America or Western Europe and there is a lack of information on this topic in developing regions, excluding the possibility of finding regional differences in ACEs frequency and its consequences. The present research provides information about the prevalence of ACEs in schizophrenic patients and in a control sample, and explores the clinical impact of trauma multiplicity in a schizophrenic adult population of Argentina. METHODS: An observational, multicentric and cross-sectional study was conducted at three different hospitals located in Buenos Aires. One hundred patients with schizophrenia and 50 subjects without a mental disease were recruited. Information about adverse childhood experiences was obtained from the Spanish version of the Adverse Childhood Experiences questionnaire (ACE-Q). Clinical severity of schizophrenia was measured with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) and with the hallucination subscale of the Psychotic Symptom Rating Scale (PSYRATS), suicidal behavior with the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS), treatment adherence with the Drug Attitude Inventory (DAI-10), global functioning with the Global Assessment Functioning Scale (GAF), theory of mind with the Hinting Task test and emotional processing with the Reading the mind in the eyes test. To analyze the impact of trauma multiplicity on clinical variables of schizophrenia, the patient sample was divided into 2 groups according to the number of ACEs suffered. As a cut-off point, a statistical criterion corresponding to the median number of ACEs was chosen and the sample was divided between those who suffered 0–4 ACEs and those with 5 or more ACEs. Statistical analysis was carried out using SAS software. RESULTS: The prevalence of at least one ACE in schizophrenic patients was almost double in comparison with the control group (92% vs 54%). Patients with trauma multiplicity showed a PANSS-N score lower than the group with lower number of ACEs (0–4 ACEs= 24.51 ± 5.17 vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 21.04 ± 4.22; p= <0.001). PSYRATS score was higher in patients with 5 or more ACEs (0–4 ACEs= 6 points, Q1-Q3: 3–18 vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 12 points, Q1-Q3: 5–23; p= 0.042). Patients with 5 or more ACEs scored higher in death ideation (0–4 ACEs= 22 (40.00%) vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 28 (62.22%); p= 0.027). The prevalence of suicidal attempts was also higher (0–4 ACEs= 22 (40.00%) vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 27 (60.00%); p= 0.047), as well as the median number of suicide attempts (0–4 ACEs= 0 (0–1) vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 1 (0–2); p= 0.039). Also, women with 5 or more ACEs showed higher suicidal ideation score (0–4 ACEs= 0 (0–1) vs. ≥ 5 ACEs= 2 (0–4); p= 0.035). No other clinical variables under study showed differences between the groups. DISCUSSION: Trauma multiplicity is associated with less negative symptoms, greater suicidal behavior and auditory hallucinations resistant to antipsychotic therapy. Further studies should be done to determine if this might be a specific endophenotype of schizophrenia. The high prevalence of ACEs in our study could be explained by the questionnaire applied, as it includes a large number of ACEs in comparison with others and it could also be linked to regional and cultural characteristics, as there is little information about ACEs prevalence of in South America. Oxford University Press 2020-05 2020-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7234402/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.744 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Poster Session III
Prokopez, Cintia
Vallejos, Miguel
Fuentes, Pamela
Caporusso, Gabriela
Alberio, German
Cozzarin, Linda
Farinola, Romina
Chiapella, Luciana
Daray, Federico
T184. THE ROLE OF ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MORE SEVERE TYPE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
title T184. THE ROLE OF ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MORE SEVERE TYPE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_full T184. THE ROLE OF ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MORE SEVERE TYPE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_fullStr T184. THE ROLE OF ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MORE SEVERE TYPE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_full_unstemmed T184. THE ROLE OF ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MORE SEVERE TYPE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_short T184. THE ROLE OF ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MORE SEVERE TYPE OF SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_sort t184. the role of adverse childhood experiences in the development of a more severe type of schizophrenia
topic Poster Session III
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7234402/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.744
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