| Literature DB >> 31736802 |
Tais Silveira Moriyama1,2,3,4, Jim van Os4,5,6, Ary Gadelha2,3, Pedro Mario Pan2,3, Giovanni Abrahão Salum3,7, Gisele Gus Manfro3,7, Jair de Jesus Mari2,3, Eurípedes Constantino Miguel3,8, Luis Augusto Rohde3,7, Guilherme Vanoni Polanczyk3,8, Philip McGuire5, Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan2,3,4, Marjan Drukker4.
Abstract
Purpose: Psychotic experiences in childhood (such as hearing voices or being suspicious) represent an important phenotype for early intervention. However, these experiences can be defined in several ways: self-reported psychotic experiences (SRPE) rely exclusively on the child's report, clinically validated psychotic experiences (CRPE) are based on clinical assessment, and attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS) represents a categorization to do with clinical relevance in relation to severity. Very few studies have investigated how these distinctions impact clinical and other domains. The present study aims to compare SRPE, CRPE, and APS among children and adolescents.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; attenuated psychotic symptoms; psychiatric epidemiology; psychotic experiences; schizophrenia
Year: 2019 PMID: 31736802 PMCID: PMC6829673 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00782
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Frequency of self-reported (SRPE) and clinically relevant psychotic experiences (CRPE) per item for the overall sample and subsamples according to recruitment methodology (increased familial levels of psychopathology and randomly selected).
| Overall sample | Random subsample (randomly selected) | At-risk subsample(increased intra-familial levels of psychopathology)| | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAPE item | SRPE | CRPE | SRPE | CRPE | SRPE | CRPE |
| Do you ever hear voices when you are alone? | 250 (11.2%) | 129 (5.8%) | 76 (8.8%) | 43 (5%) | 174 (12.6%) | 86 (6.3%) |
| Do you ever hear voices talking to each other when you are alone? | 75 (3.35%) | 49 (2.2%) | 22 (2.6%) | 15 (1.7%) | 53 (3.9%) | 34 (2.5%) |
| Do you ever see objects, people, or animals that other people cannot see? | 124 (5.5%) | 74 (3.3%) | 33 (3.8%) | 19 (2.2%) | 91 (6.6%) | 55 (4%) |
| Do you ever feel as if you are being persecuted in some way? | 216 (9.6%) | 110 (4.9%) | 73 (8.5%) | 39(4.5%) | 143 (10.4%) | 71(5.2%) |
| Do you ever feel as if people seem to drop hints about you or say things with a double meaning? | 91 (4%) | 17 (0.8%) | 36 (4.2%) | 5(0.6%) | 55 (4%) | 12 (0.9%) |
| Do you ever feel as if there is a conspiracy against you? | 163 (7.3%) | 21 (0.9%) | 52 (6%) | 5 (0.6%) | 111 (8%) | 16 (1.2%) |
| Do you ever feel that people look at you oddly because of your appearance? | 163 (7.3%) | 19 (0.8%) | 58 (6.7%) | 7(0.8%) | 105 (7.6%) | 12 (0.9%) |
| Do you ever feel as if some people are not what they seem to be? | 335 (15%) | 14 (0.6%) | 126 (14.6%) | 4(0.5%) | 209 (15.2%) | 10 (0.7%) |
| Do you ever feel as if things in magazines or on TV were written especially for you? | 47 (2%) | 16 (0.7%) | 16 (1.9%) | 4(0.5%) | 31 (2.3%) | 12 (0.9%) |
| Do you ever feel as if a double has taken the place of a family member, friend or acquaintance? | 14 (0.6%) | 17 (0.8%) | 3 (0.4%) | 3 (0.4%) | 11 (0.8%) | 14 (1%) |
| Do you believe in the power of witchcraft, macumba, or supernatural things? | 248 (11%) | 14 (0.6%) | 83 (9.6%) | 7(0.8%) | 165 (12%) | 7 (0.5%) |
| Do you ever feel as if you are destined to be someone very important? | 311 (13.9%) | 10 (0.5%) | 106 (12.3%) | 1(0.1%) | 205 (14.9%) | 9 (0.7%) |
| Do you ever feel that you are a very special or unusual person? | 192 (8.6%) | 10 (0.5%) | 69 (8%) | 4(0.5%) | 123 (8.9%) | 6 (0.4%) |
| Do you ever think that people can communicate telepathically? | 59 (2.6%) | 14 (0.6%) | 20 (2.3%) | 3(0.4%) | 39 (2.8%) | 11 (0.8%) |
| Do you ever feel as if electrical devices such as computers can influence the way you think? | 75 (3.4%) | 10 (0.5%) | 30 (3.5%) | 5 (0.6%) | 45 (3.3%) | 5 (0.4%) |
| Do you ever feel as if the thoughts in your head are being taken away from you? | 34 (1.5%) | 28 (1.3%) | 16 (1.9%) | 12 (1.4%) | 18 (1.3%) | 16 (1.2%) |
| Do you ever feel as if the thoughts in your head are not your own? | 40 (1.8%) | 24 (1.1%) | 18 (2.1%) | 7 (0.8%) | 22 (1.6%) | 17 (1.2%) |
| Have your thoughts ever been so vivid that you were worried other people would hear them? | 72 (3.2%) | 42 (1.9%) | 22(2.6%) | 7(0.8%) | 50 (3.6%) | 35 (2.5%) |
| Do you ever had the sensation that you could hear your own thoughts? | 181 (8.1%) | 36 (1.6%) | 71(8.2%) | 9(1%) | 110 (8%) | 27 (2%) |
| Do you ever feel as if you are under the control of some force or power other than yourself? | 46 (2.1%) | 35 (1.6%) | 16(1.9%) | 8 (0.9%) | 30 (2.2%) | 27 (2%) |
Sample characteristics.
| Mean (SD) or | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 10.4 (1.9) |
| Gender (percentage of male) | 1,185 (52.9%) |
| SES | |
| A/B (the wealthiest) | 500 (22,6%) |
| C | 1,510 (68.2%) |
| D/E (the poorest) | 203 (9.2%) |
| SDQ impact score (0–10, the higher the worse) | 0.9 (1.5) |
| SDQ difficult score (0–40, the higher the worse) | 14.9 (7.9) |
| CBCL total (0–2, the higher the worse) | 0.26 (0.24) |
| DAWBA DSMIV (percentage per category of number of diagnosis) | |
| None diagnosis | 1,807 (75.3%) |
| One | 361 (15%) |
| Two | 166 (6.9%) |
| Three or more | 67 (2.8%) |
| IQ (points, the higher the better) | 101.6 (16.7) |
| DAWBA Children Youth Strengths Inventory (YSI) (0–48, the higher the better) | 35.4 (8.6) |
| Blunted affect (CAARMS, 0–4, the higher the worse) | |
| Absent | 2,015 (84.1%) |
| Questionable | 268 (11.2%) |
| Mild | 65 (2.7%) |
| Moderate | 38 (1.6%) |
| Moderately severe | 10 (0.4%) |
*Due to missing data, for some variables, the total number may differ from 2,241. IQ is available for 2,239 individuals, SES for 2,213 individuals, and positive attributes for 2,240.
Figure 1Frequencies of subjects across different categories of the presence of self-reported psychotic experiences (SRPE), clinically validated psychotic experiences (CRPE), and attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS).
Association of mutually exclusive categories of non-confirmed self-reported psychotic experiences (nSRPE), non-APS clinically relevant PE (nCRPE), and attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS) and demographic and clinical variables.
| nSRPE | nCRPE | APS | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 741 (33%) | 237 (11%) | 127 (6%) | ||
| Demographic and clinical characteristics | Regression coefficients ( | Between-coefficient differences | ||
| Age | ||||
| Gender (0 = female, 1 = male) | OR(1) = 0.71 (0.58–0.87), | OR(2) = 0.77 (0.57–1.03), | OR(3) = 0.63 (0.42–0.93), | OR(1) ≠ OR(2), χ2 = 0.25, |
| SES (0–46, the higher the wealthier) | B(1) = −0.4 (−0.9 to 0.1), | |||
| IQ (100 ± SD, the higher the better) | ||||
| SDQ difficult score (0–40, the higher the worse) |
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| CBCL total scores (0–2, the higher the worse) |
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| SDQ impact score (0–10, the higher the worse) |
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| DSMIV diagnosis (number of diagnosed disorders) |
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| DAWBA Children Youth Strengths Inventory (YSI) (0–48, the higher the better) |
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| Blunted affect (CAARMS, 0-6, the higher the worse) |
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†Modelled according to sample structure: multilevel regression models, with clinicians and schools as levels and state as a confounder. Models were adjusted for age, gender, SES, and IQ *p ≤ 0.05; **p ≤ 0.01; ***p ≤ 0.001 PE and CAARMS were evaluated by psychologists and IQ was tested by psychologists using WISC. All other measures rely on parents’ report.