| Literature DB >> 31178767 |
Aaltsje Malda1,2, Nynke Boonstra1,3, Hans Barf3, Steven de Jong4, Andre Aleman2,5, Jean Addington6, Marita Pruessner7,8, Dorien Nieman9, Lieuwe de Haan9, Anthony Morrison10,11, Anita Riecher-Rössler12, Erich Studerus12, Stephan Ruhrmann13, Frauke Schultze-Lutter14, Suk Kyoon An15, Shinsuke Koike16,17,18,19, Kiyoto Kasai16,17,18,19, Barnaby Nelson20,21, Patrick McGorry20,21, Stephen Wood20,21,22, Ashleigh Lin23, Alison Y Yung20,21,24,25, Magdalena Kotlicka-Antczak26, Marco Armando27,28, Stefano Vicari29, Masahiro Katsura29, Kazunori Matsumoto29,30,31, Sarah Durston32, Tim Ziermans9,33, Lex Wunderink1,34, Helga Ising35, Mark van der Gaag35,36, Paolo Fusar-Poli37,38,39,40, Gerdina Hendrika Maria Pijnenborg2,41.
Abstract
Background: The Clinical High Risk state for Psychosis (CHR-P) has become the cornerstone of modern preventive psychiatry. The next stage of clinical advancements rests on the ability to formulate a more accurate prognostic estimate at the individual subject level. Individual Participant Data Meta-Analyses (IPD-MA) are robust evidence synthesis methods that can also offer powerful approaches to the development and validation of personalized prognostic models. The aim of the study was to develop and validate an individualized, clinically based prognostic model for forecasting transition to psychosis from a CHR-P stage.Entities:
Keywords: clinical high risk; individual patient data meta-analysis; prognosis; psychosis; risk prediction; schizophrenia
Year: 2019 PMID: 31178767 PMCID: PMC6537857 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Flow chart of the study.
Overview of studies utilized for the development and validation of the prognostic prediction model.
| Study | Country | Inclusion period | CHR | Positive psychotic symptoms | Negative psychotic symptoms | Functioning | Transition criteria | N (% m) | Age (M, SD) | Follow-up (months) | Transition status at last follow-up (n, %) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADAPT | Can | 2008–2010 | SIPS/SOPS | SIPS/SOPS | SIPS/SOPS | GAF | SIPS/SOPS | 49 (73.4%) | 21.3 (3,9) | 24 | 3 (6.1%) |
| CAYR* | Can | 2005–2014 | CAARMS | BPRS | SANS | GAF | CAARMS | 176 (55.7%) | 19.3 (4.0) | 12 | 16 (9.0%) |
| DUPS-A | NLD | 2002–2006 | SIPS/SOPS | SIPS/SOPS | SIPS/SOPS | GAF | PANSS | 69 (66.7%) | 20.0 (3.7) | 36 | 18 (26.1%) |
| EDIE-NL | NLD | 2008–2012 | CAARMS | CAARMS | CAARMS | SOFAS | CAARMS | 195 (49.2%) | 22.7 (5.4) | 18 | 32 (16.4%) |
| EDIE-UK | UK | 1999–2002 | PANSS | PANSS | PANSS | GAF | PANSS | 58 (68.9%) | 22.2 (4.5) | 36 | 13 (22.4%) |
| FePSY* | CH | 2000–2015 | BSIP | BPRS | SANS | GAF | BPRS | 133 (31.8%) | 24.2 (5.2) | 12–78 | 38 (28.8%) |
| FETZ | D | 1998–2003 | SIPS/SOPS | SIPS/SOPS | SIPS/SOPS | SOFAS | BPRS | 161 (63.3%) | 25.3 (6.1) | 12–72 | 72 (44.7%) |
| GRAPE | KOR | 2007–2011 | SIPS/SOPS | SAPS | SANS | QLS | SCID-I | 60 (58.3%) | 19.7 (3.3) | 20,7 | 14 (23.3%) |
| INSTEP* | JPN | 2008–2013 | SIPS/SOPS | PANSS | PANSS | GAF | SIPS/SOPS | 53 (56.6%) | 24.0 (8.4) | 36 | 6 (11.3%) |
| OASIS* | UK | 2013–2016 | CAARMS | CAARMS | CAARMS | GAF | CAARMS | 51 (58.8%) | 22.8 (5.2) | 17,7 | 16 (31.4%) |
| PACE | AUS | 1993–2006 | CAARMS | BPRS | SANS | GAF | CAARMS | 415 (48.2%) | 19.4 (3.4) | 12–168 | 114 (27.7%) |
| PORT* | POL | 2010–2016 | CAARMS | CAARMS | CAARMS | SOFAS | PANSS | 107 (45.8%) | 18.8 (3.5) | 12–84 | 20 (18.7%) |
| Rome* | ITA | 2012–2013 | SIPS/SOPS | PANSS | PANSS | cGAS | SIPS/SOPS | 19 (52.6%) | 15.3 (1.3) | 12–24 | 5 (26.3%) |
| SAFE | JPN | 2004–2012 | CAARMS | PANSS | PANSS | GAF | CAARMS | 106 (62.3%) | 20.0 (4.4) | 28.8 | 14 (13.2%) |
| DUPS-U | NLD | 2003–2006 | SIPS/SOPS | SIPS/SOPS | SIPS/SOPS | mGAF | SIPS/SOPS | 25 (40.0%) | 16.6 (1.6) | 60 | 7 (28%) |
AUS, Australia; BPRS, Brief Psychotic Rating Scale; BSIP, Basel Screening Instrument for Psychosis; CAARMS, Comprehensive Assessment of At Risk Mental State; CAN, Canada; cGAS, children Global Assessment Scale; CH, Switzerland; DSM-IV, Diagnostical and Statistical Manual of mental disorders version IV; GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning scale; ITA, Italy; JPN, Japan; KOR, South Korea; m, male; M, mean; mGAF, modified Global Assessment of Functioning scale; NLD, the Netherlands; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale’ POL, Poland; QLS, Quality of Life Scale; SANS, Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms; SD, standard deviation; SIPS/SOPS, Structured Interview of Prodromal Symptoms/Scale of Prodromal Symptoms; CHR, Ultra High Risk; UK, United Kingdom.
*Data from the specified study, yet not identical to the data in the published paper, for instance, a subsample of the study or sample with a shortened or prolonged follow-up then reported in the original paper.
Summary of study characteristics.
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BPRS, Brief Psychotic Rating Scale; BSIP, Basel Screening Instrument for Psychosis; CAARMS, Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental State; CBT, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy; cGAS, children Global Assessment Scale; CHR, clinical high risk; GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning scale; mGAF, modified Global Assessment of Functioning scale; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; QLS, Quality of Life Scale; RCT, Randomized Controlled Trial; SANS, Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms; SCID-I, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV; SIPS/SOPS, Structured Interview of Prodromal Symptoms/Scale of Prodromal Symptoms.
Predictor variables and accompanying VIF.
| Dependent | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Age | GRD | APS | BLIPS | Pos Sx | Neg Sx | Functioning | ||
| Independent | Gender | — | 1.029 | 1.028 | 1.028 | 1.028 | 1.028 | 1.005 | 1.028 |
| Age | 1.021 | — | 1.022 | 1.022 | 1.020 | 1.012 | 1.016 | 1.022 | |
| GRD | 7.857 | 7.875 | — | 1.026 | 1.599 | 7.877 | 7.877 | 7.877 | |
| APS | 15.127 | 15.157 | 1.975 | — | 1.790 | 15.122 | 15.162 | 15.142 | |
| BLIPS | 9.848 | 9.848 | 2.004 | 1.165 | — | 9.851 | 9.870 | 9.855 | |
| Positive Sx | 1.415 | 1.404 | 1.419 | 1.415 | 1.416 | — | 1.208 | 1.418 | |
| Negative Sx | 1.833 | 1.867 | 1.879 | 1.879 | 1.879 | 1.599 | — | 1.339 | |
| Functioning | 1.586 | 1.589 | 1.590 | 1.588 | 1.587 | 1.589 | 1.133 | — | |
APS, attenuated psychotic symptoms; BLIPS, brief limited psychotic symptoms; GRD, genetic risk and deterioration; Sx, symptoms; VIF, variance inflation factor.
Figure 2Forest plot of the discriminative ability of the model in the individual studies and its 95% CI, assessed with the C-statistics.
Figure 3Forest plot of the external validation of calibration slope and its 95% CI in the individual studies.
Variables and intercepts of the final model.
| Variable | Intercept: | T | SE of Mean | Sign. | 95% confidence interval | |
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| Lower | Upper | |||||
| Intercept | 7.543328648 | 51.792 | .14565 | <.001 | 7.251 | 7.836 |
| Sex—female | 0.179071582 | 13.247 | .01352 | <.001 | 0.152 | 0.206 |
| Age | −0.048979637 | −42.162 | .00116 | <.001 | −0.051 | −0.047 |
| APS—yes | −0.369616434 | −7.737 | .04777 | <.001 | −0.466 | −0.274 |
| BLIPS—yes | −0.738429338 | −15.950 | .04630 | <.001 | −0.831 | −0.645 |
| Functioning: GAF score | 0.006634737 | 4.059 | .00163 | <.001 | 0.003 | 0.010 |
| Negative psychotic symptoms: SIPS/SOPS—total score | −0.054490819 | −14.542 | .00375 | <.001 | −0.062 | −0.047 |
| Positive psychotic symptoms: SIPS/SOPS—total score | −0.092850985 | −16.356 | .00574 | <.001 | −0.105 | −0.082 |
APS, attenuated psychotic symptoms; BLIPS, Brief Limited Psychotic Symptoms; GRD, Genetic Risk and Deterioration; SE, Standard Error; Sign, significance level; SIPS/SOPS, Structured Interview of Prodromal Symptoms/Scale of Prodromal Symptoms.