4.4 Article

Symptom dimensions stability over time in recent onset psychosis: A prospective study

Journal

SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH
Volume 246, Issue -, Pages 126-131

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2022.06.019

Keywords

Schizophrenia; Psychosis; Differentiation; Dedifferentiation; Factor structure; PANSS

Categories

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [320030_122419]
  2. FNS SYNAPSY [320030-158776]

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This study investigated symptom differentiation or dedifferentiation over time in recent onset psychosis and found no evidence for either. The results suggested a high degree of specificity of the symptoms, with specific symptoms accounting for a significant proportion of the variance.
Background: The factorial structure of schizophrenia symptoms has been much debated but little is known on its degree of unicity, specificity as well as its dynamic over time. Symptom differentiation is a phenomenon according to which patients' symptoms could differentiate from one another during illness to form more independent, distinct dimensions. On the contrary, symptom dedifferentiation is an increase in the correlations between those symptoms over time. The goal of this study was to investigate symptom differentiation or dedifferentiation over time in recent onset psychosis using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. Methods: A confirmatory factor analysis model based on the consensus five-factor model of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale for schizophrenia was estimated on seven different time points over a three-year period. A general factor capturing common variance between every symptom was also included. Explained common variance was computed for the general factor and each specific factor.Results: Three hundred and sixty-two recent onset psychosis patients were assessed. Results showed no evidence for either symptom differentiation or dedifferentiation over time. Specific symptoms accounted for >70 % of the variance suggesting a high degree of specificity of the symptomatology.Conclusions: Overall, this study adds support for a highly multidimensional approach to clinical symptom assessment with an explicit focus on depression. The premise behind the staging approach being inherently onedimensional, implications for further research is discussed.

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