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Basic Symptoms Are Associated With Age in Patients With a Clinical High-Risk State for Psychosis: Results From the PRONIA Study

In community studies, both attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS) and basic symptoms (BS) were more frequent but less clinically relevant in children and adolescents compared to adults. In doing so, they displayed differential age thresholds that were around age 16 for APS, around age 18 for perceptive...

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Autores principales: Walger, Helene, Antonucci, Linda A., Pigoni, Alessandro, Upthegrove, Rachel, Salokangas, Raimo K. R., Lencer, Rebekka, Chisholm, Katharine, Riecher-Rössler, Anita, Haidl, Theresa, Meisenzahl, Eva, Rosen, Marlene, Ruhrmann, Stephan, Kambeitz, Joseph, Kambeitz-Ilankovic, Lana, Falkai, Peter, Ruef, Anne, Hietala, Jarmo, Pantelis, Christos, Wood, Stephen J., Brambilla, Paolo, Bertolino, Alessandro, Borgwardt, Stefan, Koutsouleris, Nikolaos, Schultze-Lutter, Frauke
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7707000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33312133
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.552175
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author Walger, Helene
Antonucci, Linda A.
Pigoni, Alessandro
Upthegrove, Rachel
Salokangas, Raimo K. R.
Lencer, Rebekka
Chisholm, Katharine
Riecher-Rössler, Anita
Haidl, Theresa
Meisenzahl, Eva
Rosen, Marlene
Ruhrmann, Stephan
Kambeitz, Joseph
Kambeitz-Ilankovic, Lana
Falkai, Peter
Ruef, Anne
Hietala, Jarmo
Pantelis, Christos
Wood, Stephen J.
Brambilla, Paolo
Bertolino, Alessandro
Borgwardt, Stefan
Koutsouleris, Nikolaos
Schultze-Lutter, Frauke
author_facet Walger, Helene
Antonucci, Linda A.
Pigoni, Alessandro
Upthegrove, Rachel
Salokangas, Raimo K. R.
Lencer, Rebekka
Chisholm, Katharine
Riecher-Rössler, Anita
Haidl, Theresa
Meisenzahl, Eva
Rosen, Marlene
Ruhrmann, Stephan
Kambeitz, Joseph
Kambeitz-Ilankovic, Lana
Falkai, Peter
Ruef, Anne
Hietala, Jarmo
Pantelis, Christos
Wood, Stephen J.
Brambilla, Paolo
Bertolino, Alessandro
Borgwardt, Stefan
Koutsouleris, Nikolaos
Schultze-Lutter, Frauke
author_sort Walger, Helene
collection PubMed
description In community studies, both attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS) and basic symptoms (BS) were more frequent but less clinically relevant in children and adolescents compared to adults. In doing so, they displayed differential age thresholds that were around age 16 for APS, around age 18 for perceptive BS, and within the early twenties for cognitive BS. Only the age effect has previously been studied and replicated in clinical samples for APS. Thus, we examined the reported age effect on and age thresholds of 14 criteria-relevant BS in a patient sample at clinical-high risk of psychosis (N = 261, age 15–40 yrs.), recruited within the European multicenter PRONIA-study. BS and the BS criteria, “Cognitive Disturbances” (COGDIS) and “Cognitive-perceptive BS” (COPER), were assessed with the “Schizophrenia Proneness Instrument, Adult version” (SPI-A). Using logistic regressions, prevalence rates of perceptive and cognitive BS, and of COGDIS and COPER, as well as the impact of social and role functioning on the association between age and BS were studied in three age groups (15–18 years, 19–23 years, 24–40 years). Most patients (91.2%) reported any BS, 55.9% any perceptive and 87.4% any cognitive BS. Furthermore, 56.3% met COGDIS and 80.5% COPER. Not exhibiting the reported differential age thresholds, both perceptive and cognitive BS, and, at trend level only, COPER were less prevalent in the oldest age group (24–40 years); COGDIS was most frequent in the youngest group (15–18 years). Functional deficits did not better explain the association with age, particularly in perceptive BS and cognitive BS meeting the frequency requirement of BS criteria. Our findings broadly confirmed an age threshold in BS and, thus, the earlier assumed link between presence of BS and brain maturation processes. Yet, age thresholds of perceptive and cognitive BS did not differ. This lack of differential age thresholds might be due to more pronounced the brain abnormalities in this clinical sample compared to earlier community samples. These might have also shown in more frequently occurring and persistent BS that, however, also resulted from a sampling toward these, i.e., toward COGDIS. Future studies should address the neurobiological basis of CHR criteria in relation to age.
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spelling pubmed-77070002020-12-11 Basic Symptoms Are Associated With Age in Patients With a Clinical High-Risk State for Psychosis: Results From the PRONIA Study Walger, Helene Antonucci, Linda A. Pigoni, Alessandro Upthegrove, Rachel Salokangas, Raimo K. R. Lencer, Rebekka Chisholm, Katharine Riecher-Rössler, Anita Haidl, Theresa Meisenzahl, Eva Rosen, Marlene Ruhrmann, Stephan Kambeitz, Joseph Kambeitz-Ilankovic, Lana Falkai, Peter Ruef, Anne Hietala, Jarmo Pantelis, Christos Wood, Stephen J. Brambilla, Paolo Bertolino, Alessandro Borgwardt, Stefan Koutsouleris, Nikolaos Schultze-Lutter, Frauke Front Psychiatry Psychiatry In community studies, both attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS) and basic symptoms (BS) were more frequent but less clinically relevant in children and adolescents compared to adults. In doing so, they displayed differential age thresholds that were around age 16 for APS, around age 18 for perceptive BS, and within the early twenties for cognitive BS. Only the age effect has previously been studied and replicated in clinical samples for APS. Thus, we examined the reported age effect on and age thresholds of 14 criteria-relevant BS in a patient sample at clinical-high risk of psychosis (N = 261, age 15–40 yrs.), recruited within the European multicenter PRONIA-study. BS and the BS criteria, “Cognitive Disturbances” (COGDIS) and “Cognitive-perceptive BS” (COPER), were assessed with the “Schizophrenia Proneness Instrument, Adult version” (SPI-A). Using logistic regressions, prevalence rates of perceptive and cognitive BS, and of COGDIS and COPER, as well as the impact of social and role functioning on the association between age and BS were studied in three age groups (15–18 years, 19–23 years, 24–40 years). Most patients (91.2%) reported any BS, 55.9% any perceptive and 87.4% any cognitive BS. Furthermore, 56.3% met COGDIS and 80.5% COPER. Not exhibiting the reported differential age thresholds, both perceptive and cognitive BS, and, at trend level only, COPER were less prevalent in the oldest age group (24–40 years); COGDIS was most frequent in the youngest group (15–18 years). Functional deficits did not better explain the association with age, particularly in perceptive BS and cognitive BS meeting the frequency requirement of BS criteria. Our findings broadly confirmed an age threshold in BS and, thus, the earlier assumed link between presence of BS and brain maturation processes. Yet, age thresholds of perceptive and cognitive BS did not differ. This lack of differential age thresholds might be due to more pronounced the brain abnormalities in this clinical sample compared to earlier community samples. These might have also shown in more frequently occurring and persistent BS that, however, also resulted from a sampling toward these, i.e., toward COGDIS. Future studies should address the neurobiological basis of CHR criteria in relation to age. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7707000/ /pubmed/33312133 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.552175 Text en Copyright © 2020 Walger, Antonucci, Pigoni, Upthegrove, Salokangas, Lencer, Chisholm, Riecher-Rössler, Haidl, Meisenzahl, Rosen, Ruhrmann, Kambeitz, Kambeitz-Ilankovic, Falkai, Ruef, Hietala, Pantelis, Wood, Brambilla, Bertolino, Borgwardt, Koutsouleris and Schultze-Lutter. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychiatry
Walger, Helene
Antonucci, Linda A.
Pigoni, Alessandro
Upthegrove, Rachel
Salokangas, Raimo K. R.
Lencer, Rebekka
Chisholm, Katharine
Riecher-Rössler, Anita
Haidl, Theresa
Meisenzahl, Eva
Rosen, Marlene
Ruhrmann, Stephan
Kambeitz, Joseph
Kambeitz-Ilankovic, Lana
Falkai, Peter
Ruef, Anne
Hietala, Jarmo
Pantelis, Christos
Wood, Stephen J.
Brambilla, Paolo
Bertolino, Alessandro
Borgwardt, Stefan
Koutsouleris, Nikolaos
Schultze-Lutter, Frauke
Basic Symptoms Are Associated With Age in Patients With a Clinical High-Risk State for Psychosis: Results From the PRONIA Study
title Basic Symptoms Are Associated With Age in Patients With a Clinical High-Risk State for Psychosis: Results From the PRONIA Study
title_full Basic Symptoms Are Associated With Age in Patients With a Clinical High-Risk State for Psychosis: Results From the PRONIA Study
title_fullStr Basic Symptoms Are Associated With Age in Patients With a Clinical High-Risk State for Psychosis: Results From the PRONIA Study
title_full_unstemmed Basic Symptoms Are Associated With Age in Patients With a Clinical High-Risk State for Psychosis: Results From the PRONIA Study
title_short Basic Symptoms Are Associated With Age in Patients With a Clinical High-Risk State for Psychosis: Results From the PRONIA Study
title_sort basic symptoms are associated with age in patients with a clinical high-risk state for psychosis: results from the pronia study
topic Psychiatry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7707000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33312133
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.552175
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