Long-term trajectories of positive and negative symptoms in first episode psychosis: a 10 year follow-up study in the OPUS cohort

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Long-term trajectories of positive and negative symptoms in first episode psychosis : a 10 year follow-up study in the OPUS cohort. / Austin, Stephen; Mors, Ole; Budtz-Jørgensen, Esben; Secher, Rikke Gry; Hjorthøj, Carsten; Bertelsen, Mette; Jeppesen, Pia; Petersen, Lone Nørgard; Thorup, Anne Amalie Elgaard; Nordentoft, Merete.

In: Schizophrenia Research, Vol. 168, No. 1-2, 10.2015, p. 84-91.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Austin, S, Mors, O, Budtz-Jørgensen, E, Secher, RG, Hjorthøj, C, Bertelsen, M, Jeppesen, P, Petersen, LN, Thorup, AAE & Nordentoft, M 2015, 'Long-term trajectories of positive and negative symptoms in first episode psychosis: a 10 year follow-up study in the OPUS cohort', Schizophrenia Research, vol. 168, no. 1-2, pp. 84-91. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2015.07.021

APA

Austin, S., Mors, O., Budtz-Jørgensen, E., Secher, R. G., Hjorthøj, C., Bertelsen, M., Jeppesen, P., Petersen, L. N., Thorup, A. A. E., & Nordentoft, M. (2015). Long-term trajectories of positive and negative symptoms in first episode psychosis: a 10 year follow-up study in the OPUS cohort. Schizophrenia Research, 168(1-2), 84-91. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2015.07.021

Vancouver

Austin S, Mors O, Budtz-Jørgensen E, Secher RG, Hjorthøj C, Bertelsen M et al. Long-term trajectories of positive and negative symptoms in first episode psychosis: a 10 year follow-up study in the OPUS cohort. Schizophrenia Research. 2015 Oct;168(1-2):84-91. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2015.07.021

Author

Austin, Stephen ; Mors, Ole ; Budtz-Jørgensen, Esben ; Secher, Rikke Gry ; Hjorthøj, Carsten ; Bertelsen, Mette ; Jeppesen, Pia ; Petersen, Lone Nørgard ; Thorup, Anne Amalie Elgaard ; Nordentoft, Merete. / Long-term trajectories of positive and negative symptoms in first episode psychosis : a 10 year follow-up study in the OPUS cohort. In: Schizophrenia Research. 2015 ; Vol. 168, No. 1-2. pp. 84-91.

Bibtex

@article{c3ef1e110c3d4dd395837d0726be65cd,
title = "Long-term trajectories of positive and negative symptoms in first episode psychosis: a 10 year follow-up study in the OPUS cohort",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: Knowledge about course of illness can help clinicians to develop effective interventions and improve treatment outcomes. The goal of this study was to construct positive and negative symptom trajectories based on structured clinical assessments collected over 10years within a cohort of people with first episode psychosis.METHOD: A cohort of 496 people with first episode psychosis (ICD-10, F20-28) originally recruited for the OPUS study (1998-2000) and treated in community psychiatric services were rated on clinical symptoms at 5 different occasions across ten years. Psychopathology was assessed using the Scales for Assessment of Positive and Negative Symptoms. Symptom trajectories were constructed using Latent Class Analysis.RESULTS: Five distinct trajectories were identified for positive symptoms (response - 47%, delayed response - 12%, relapse - 15%, non-response - 13% and episodic response - 13%). Four distinct trajectories were identified for negative symptoms (response - 28%, delayed response - 19%, relapse - 26% and non-response - 27%). Multivariable regression analysis of baseline characteristics identified that longer duration of untreated psychosis (OR 1.27-1.47, p<0.05) and substance abuse (OR 3.47-5.90, p<0.01) were associated with poorer positive symptom trajectories (higher levels of psychotic symptoms) while poor social functioning (OR 1.34-5.55, p<0.05), disorganized symptoms (OR 2.01-2.38, p<0.05) and schizophrenia diagnosis (OR 5.70-8.86, p<0.05) were associated with poorer negative symptom trajectories (higher levels of negative symptoms). A proportion of people displayed significant changes in symptoms several years after diagnosis.CONCLUSIONS: Trajectories of illness for positive and negative symptoms were heterogeneous among people with first episode psychosis. Positive symptoms showed a general pattern of reduction and stabilization over time while negative symptoms typically showed less variation over the ten years. Results have implications for the focus, timing and length of interventions in first episode psychosis.",
author = "Stephen Austin and Ole Mors and Esben Budtz-J{\o}rgensen and Secher, {Rikke Gry} and Carsten Hjorth{\o}j and Mette Bertelsen and Pia Jeppesen and Petersen, {Lone N{\o}rgard} and Thorup, {Anne Amalie Elgaard} and Merete Nordentoft",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",
year = "2015",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1016/j.schres.2015.07.021",
language = "English",
volume = "168",
pages = "84--91",
journal = "Schizophrenia Research",
issn = "0920-9964",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "1-2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Long-term trajectories of positive and negative symptoms in first episode psychosis

T2 - a 10 year follow-up study in the OPUS cohort

AU - Austin, Stephen

AU - Mors, Ole

AU - Budtz-Jørgensen, Esben

AU - Secher, Rikke Gry

AU - Hjorthøj, Carsten

AU - Bertelsen, Mette

AU - Jeppesen, Pia

AU - Petersen, Lone Nørgard

AU - Thorup, Anne Amalie Elgaard

AU - Nordentoft, Merete

N1 - Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PY - 2015/10

Y1 - 2015/10

N2 - OBJECTIVE: Knowledge about course of illness can help clinicians to develop effective interventions and improve treatment outcomes. The goal of this study was to construct positive and negative symptom trajectories based on structured clinical assessments collected over 10years within a cohort of people with first episode psychosis.METHOD: A cohort of 496 people with first episode psychosis (ICD-10, F20-28) originally recruited for the OPUS study (1998-2000) and treated in community psychiatric services were rated on clinical symptoms at 5 different occasions across ten years. Psychopathology was assessed using the Scales for Assessment of Positive and Negative Symptoms. Symptom trajectories were constructed using Latent Class Analysis.RESULTS: Five distinct trajectories were identified for positive symptoms (response - 47%, delayed response - 12%, relapse - 15%, non-response - 13% and episodic response - 13%). Four distinct trajectories were identified for negative symptoms (response - 28%, delayed response - 19%, relapse - 26% and non-response - 27%). Multivariable regression analysis of baseline characteristics identified that longer duration of untreated psychosis (OR 1.27-1.47, p<0.05) and substance abuse (OR 3.47-5.90, p<0.01) were associated with poorer positive symptom trajectories (higher levels of psychotic symptoms) while poor social functioning (OR 1.34-5.55, p<0.05), disorganized symptoms (OR 2.01-2.38, p<0.05) and schizophrenia diagnosis (OR 5.70-8.86, p<0.05) were associated with poorer negative symptom trajectories (higher levels of negative symptoms). A proportion of people displayed significant changes in symptoms several years after diagnosis.CONCLUSIONS: Trajectories of illness for positive and negative symptoms were heterogeneous among people with first episode psychosis. Positive symptoms showed a general pattern of reduction and stabilization over time while negative symptoms typically showed less variation over the ten years. Results have implications for the focus, timing and length of interventions in first episode psychosis.

AB - OBJECTIVE: Knowledge about course of illness can help clinicians to develop effective interventions and improve treatment outcomes. The goal of this study was to construct positive and negative symptom trajectories based on structured clinical assessments collected over 10years within a cohort of people with first episode psychosis.METHOD: A cohort of 496 people with first episode psychosis (ICD-10, F20-28) originally recruited for the OPUS study (1998-2000) and treated in community psychiatric services were rated on clinical symptoms at 5 different occasions across ten years. Psychopathology was assessed using the Scales for Assessment of Positive and Negative Symptoms. Symptom trajectories were constructed using Latent Class Analysis.RESULTS: Five distinct trajectories were identified for positive symptoms (response - 47%, delayed response - 12%, relapse - 15%, non-response - 13% and episodic response - 13%). Four distinct trajectories were identified for negative symptoms (response - 28%, delayed response - 19%, relapse - 26% and non-response - 27%). Multivariable regression analysis of baseline characteristics identified that longer duration of untreated psychosis (OR 1.27-1.47, p<0.05) and substance abuse (OR 3.47-5.90, p<0.01) were associated with poorer positive symptom trajectories (higher levels of psychotic symptoms) while poor social functioning (OR 1.34-5.55, p<0.05), disorganized symptoms (OR 2.01-2.38, p<0.05) and schizophrenia diagnosis (OR 5.70-8.86, p<0.05) were associated with poorer negative symptom trajectories (higher levels of negative symptoms). A proportion of people displayed significant changes in symptoms several years after diagnosis.CONCLUSIONS: Trajectories of illness for positive and negative symptoms were heterogeneous among people with first episode psychosis. Positive symptoms showed a general pattern of reduction and stabilization over time while negative symptoms typically showed less variation over the ten years. Results have implications for the focus, timing and length of interventions in first episode psychosis.

U2 - 10.1016/j.schres.2015.07.021

DO - 10.1016/j.schres.2015.07.021

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26265299

VL - 168

SP - 84

EP - 91

JO - Schizophrenia Research

JF - Schizophrenia Research

SN - 0920-9964

IS - 1-2

ER -

ID: 161247657