PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Predictors of adult outcomes in clinically- and legally-ascertained youth with externalizing problems.

  • Richard Border,
  • Robin P Corley,
  • Sandra A Brown,
  • John K Hewitt,
  • Christian J Hopfer,
  • Michael C Stallings,
  • Tamara L Wall,
  • Susan E Young,
  • Soo Hyun Rhee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206442
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. e0206442

Abstract

Read online

Externalizing problems (EP), including rule-breaking, aggression, and criminal involvement, are highly prevalent during adolescence, but the adult outcomes of adolescents exhibiting EP are characterized by heterogeneity. Although many youths' EP subside after adolescence, others' persists into adulthood. Characterizing the development of severe EP is essential to prevention and intervention efforts. Multiple predictors of adult antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) and legal outcomes of a large sample (N = 1205) of clinically- or legally-ascertained adolescents (ages 12-19 years) with severe EP were examined. Many psychosocial predictors hypothesized to predict persistence of EP demonstrated zero-order associations with adult outcomes, but accounted for little unique variation after accounting for baseline conduct disorder symptoms (CD) and demographic factors. Baseline measures of intelligence, which explained independent variation in legal outcomes, provided the only consistent exception to this pattern, though future work is needed to parse these effects from those of socioeconomic factors. CD severity during adolescence is a parsimonious index of liability for persistence of EP into adulthood that explains outcome variance above and beyond all other demographic and psychosocial predictors in this sample.