European Psychiatry (Apr 2024)

Sex differences in diagnostic stability in first episode psychosis after 1-year follow-up

  • B. Jiménez-Fernández,
  • A. Toll-Privat,
  • D. Bergé-Baquero,
  • N. V. Motta-Rojas,
  • M. Delgado-Marí,
  • T. Legido-Gil,
  • L. Martínez-Sarduní,
  • T. Legido-Gil,
  • J. Cuevas-Esteban,
  • A. Mané-Santacana

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2024.975
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67
pp. S470 – S471

Abstract

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Introduction Diagnostic stability is a controversial issue in first episode psychosis (FEP) due to heterogenous symptoms and unclear affective symptoms. Differencing affective and non-affective psychoses is important as treatment strategies are different. Initial affective symptomatology has low specificity for predicting the subsequent diagnosis of affective psychosis. Sex has proven to be relevant for clinical and functional outcomes but it remains unclear how sex may contribute to diagnosis switch of FEP. Objectives To determine the role of sex in diagnostic stability in a sample of FEP after 1-year follow-up. Methods Diagnoses of FEP patients from Hospital del Mar of Barcelona were assessed at baseline and 1 year after. Univariate analyses was perfomed for all diagnoses and dichotomic variable (affective/non-affective). Logistic regression model was perfomed to know which variables predict diagnosis switch. Results 256 patients were enrolled. No differences were found at baseline between completers and non-completers (Table 1). No significant differences between men and women at baseline diagnosis were found, neither all diagnoses (p=0.274) nor the dichotomic variable affective/non-affective (p=0.829) (Table 2AB). Significant differences were found at 1-year follow-up between men and women, for all diagnoses (p=0.043) and the dichotomic variable (p=0.039). Sex was the only variable that predicted diagnosis switch (Figure 1), PANSS, CDSS, YMRS, GAF and cannabis did not. Table 1. Baseline characteristics of participants Completers (n=188) Non-completers (n=68) p Women (n, %) 71 (37.8) 30 (44.1) 0.111 Age (M, IQR) 24 (20-28) 22 (20-28) 0.899 Cannabis use (M, IQR) 5.5 (0-18) 7 (0-21) 0.231 DUP (M, IQR) 45 (12.5-130) 36 (11.25-115.75) 0.213 PANSS (m, sd) 44.55 (10.17) 40.93 (10.42) 0.761 CDSS (M, IQR) 2 (0-7) 3 (0-5.5) 0.199 YMRS (m, sd) 19 (9.64) 17.6 (9.15) 0.845 GAF (M, IQR) 30 (25-50) 30 (25-35) 0.114 TABLE 2A and 2B. Diagnosis comparison (n, %) Baseline 1-year follow-up Men Women Total Men Women Total Psychosis NOS 69 (59) 39 (54.9) 108 (57.4) 28 (23.9) 10 (14.1) 38 (20.2) Schizophreniform disorder 22 (18.8) 16 (22.5) 38 (20.2) 14 (12 9 (12.7) 23 (12.2) Induced psychosis 4 (3.4) 0 (0) 4 (2.1) 15 (12.8) 4 (5.6) 19 (10.1) Affective psychosis 17 (14.5) 9 (12.7) 26 (13.8) 24 (20.5) 25 (35.2) 49 (26.1) Schizophrenia 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (0.4) 30 (25.6) 14 (19.7) 44 (23.4) Brief psychotic disorder 5 (4.3) 7 (9.9) 12 (6.4) 6 (5.1) 8 (11.3) 14 (7.4) Baseline 1-year follow-up Men Women Total Men Women Total Affective psychosis 17 (14.5) 9 (12.7) 26 (13.8) 24 (20.5) 25 (35.2) 49 (26.1) Non-affective psychosis 100 (85.5) 62 (87.3) 162 (86.2) 93 (79.5) 46 (64.8) 139 (73.9) Image: Conclusions Sex has proven to be the main predictor of switching initial diagnosis of FEP. Disclosure of Interest None Declared