European Psychiatry (Apr 2021)

Prediction of drop-out and functional impairment in recent-onset schizophrenia spectrum disorders

  • A. Mucci,
  • P. Bucci,
  • I. Winter Van Rossum,
  • C. Arango,
  • L. Baandrup,
  • B. Glenthøj,
  • P. Dazzan,
  • A. Demjaha,
  • P. Mcguire,
  • C. Martínez Díaz-Caneja,
  • S. Leucht,
  • R. Rodriguez-Jimenez,
  • R. Kahn,
  • S. Galderisi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.123
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64
pp. S35 – S36

Abstract

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Persistent negative symptoms are associated with worse outcome in both first-episode and chronic subjects with schizophrenia. The identification of these symptoms in recent-onset subjects is still controversial as retrospective data are often unavailable. The prospective assessment of persistence of negative symptoms might represent a valid alternative but the length of the persistence is still to be established. The present study investigated the prevalence of negative symptoms of moderate severity, unconfounded by depression and extrapyramidal symptoms at baseline in a large cohort of patients in the early stage of a schizophrenia-spectrum disorder, recruited to the OPTiMiSE trial. Persistent unconfounded negative symptoms were assessed at 4, 10 and 22 weeks of treatment. Symptomatic remission, attrition rate and psychosocial functioning was evaluated in subjects with short-term (4 weeks) persistent negative symptoms (PNS) and in those with negative symptoms that did not persist at follow-up and/or were confounded at baseline (N-PNS). Negative symptoms of moderate severity were observed in 59% of subjects at baseline and were associated to worse global functioning. PNS were observed in 7.9% of the cohort, unconfounded at both baseline and end of 4-week treatment. PNS subjects showed lower remission and higher attrition rates at the end of all treatment phases. Fifty-six percent of subjects completing phase 3 (clozapine treatment) had PNS, and 60% of them were non-remitters at the end of this phase. The presence of short-term PNS during the first phases of psychosis was associated with poor clinical outcome and resistance to antipsychotic treatment, including clozapine.

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