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Trajectories of symptom severity and functioning over a three-year period in a psychosis high-risk sample: a secondary analysis of the Neurapro trial

journal contribution
posted on 2020-01-01, 00:00 authored by J A Hartmann, S J Schmidt, P D McGorry, M Berger, G E Berger, E Y H Chen, L de Haan, I B Hickie, S Lavoie, C Markulev, N Mossaheb, D H Nieman, M Nordentoft, A Polari, A Riecher-Rössler, M R Schäfer, M Schlögelhofer, S Smesny, A Thompson, S K Verma, H P Yuen, Alison YungAlison Yung, G P Amminger, B Nelson
The Ultra-High Risk (UHR) for psychosis group is known to be heterogeneous with diverse outcomes. This study aimed to: 1. Identify subclasses of UHR individuals based on trajectories of symptomatic and functional change over time, 2. Identify predictors of these trajectories. A sample of 304 UHR individuals participating in the Neurapro trial were followed over an average of 40 months. All participants received cognitive-behavioural case management (CBCM). Symptomatic and functional profiles were investigated using latent class growth analysis. Multinomial regression was employed to investigate predictors of classes. Identified trajectories showed mostly parallel slopes (i.e. improving symptoms/functioning over time), which were primarily distinct regarding the severity of symptomatology/level of functioning at baseline (i.e. the intercept). Higher symptomatic/lower functioning classes were predicted by higher substance use, older age, female gender, and lower cognitive functioning. No divergent trajectories were identified as all classes improved over time. This may reflect effective treatment through CBCM, natural illness course, or effective engagement with mental health services. Nonetheless, classes highest in symptoms/lowest in functioning still showed considerable impairment during follow-up, highlighting the need for targeted intervention in these subgroups. The study emphasizes the need for more clinical attention directed towards UHR patients being female or using substances.

History

Journal

Behaviour research and therapy

Volume

124

Article number

103527

Pagination

1 - 9

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0005-7967

eISSN

1873-622X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal