| Literature DB >> 33726883 |
S Galderisi1, S Kaiser2, I Bitter3, M Nordentoft4,5,6, A Mucci1, M Sabé2, G M Giordano1, M Ø Nielsen5,6,7, L B Glenthøj4,6, P Pezzella1, P Falkai8, S Dollfus9,10,11, W Gaebel12.
Abstract
Negative symptoms of schizophrenia remain a major therapeutic challenge. The progress in the conceptualization and assessment is not yet fully reflected by treatment research. Nevertheless, there is a growing evidence base regarding the effects of biological and psychosocial interventions on negative symptoms. The importance of the distinction between primary and secondary negative symptoms for treatment selection might seem evident, but the currently available evidence remains limited. Good clinical practice is recommended for the treatment of secondary negative symptoms. Antipsychotic treatment should be optimized to avoid secondary negative symptoms due to side effects and due to positive symptoms. For most available interventions, further evidence is needed to formulate sound recommendations for primary, persistent, or predominant negative symptoms.However, based on currently available evidence recommendations for the treatment of undifferentiated negative symptoms (including both primary and secondary negative symptoms) are provided. Although it has proven difficult to formulate an evidence-based recommendation for the choice of an antipsychotic, a switch to a second-generation antipsychotic should be considered for patients who are treated with a first-generation antipsychotic. Antidepressant add-on to antipsychotic treatment is an option. Social skills training is recommended as well as cognitive remediation for patients who also show cognitive impairment. Exercise interventions also have shown promise. Finally, access to treatment and to psychosocial rehabilitation should be ensured for patients with negative symptoms. Overall, there is definitive progress in the field, but further research is clearly needed to develop specific treatments for negative symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Negative symptoms; schizophrenia; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33726883 PMCID: PMC8057437 DOI: 10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Psychiatry ISSN: 0924-9338 Impact factor: 5.361
Systematic search strategies.
| Database | Search syntax | Number of retrieved documents | Date of search |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medline (PubMed) | (Schizophrenia AND “negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND avolition) OR (Schizophrenia AND apathy) OR (Schizophrenia AND anhedonia) OR (Schizophrenia AND alogia) OR (Schizophrenia AND asociality) OR (Schizophrenia AND amotivation) OR (Schizophrenia AND “social withdrawal”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “blunted affect”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “affective flattening”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “persistent negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “predominant negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “prominent negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “primary negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “deficit schizophrenia”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “lack of motivation”) | 6,438 | December 9, 2019 |
| Filters: Languages, English; Species, Human | |||
| Search in [Title/Abstract] | |||
| No time limit | |||
| Scopus | (Schizophrenia AND “negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND avolition) OR (Schizophrenia AND apathy) OR (Schizophrenia AND anhedonia) OR (Schizophrenia AND alogia) OR (Schizophrenia AND asociality) OR (Schizophrenia AND amotivation) OR (Schizophrenia AND “social withdrawal”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “blunted affect”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “affective flattening”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “persistent negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “predominant negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “prominent negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “primary negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “deficit schizophrenia”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “lack of motivation”) | 9,863 | December 9, 2019 |
| Filters: Languages, English; Species, Human | |||
| Search in [Title/Abstract/Keywords] | |||
| No time limit | |||
| PsychINFO | (Schizophrenia AND “negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND avolition) OR (Schizophrenia AND apathy) OR (Schizophrenia AND anhedonia) OR (Schizophrenia AND alogia) OR (Schizophrenia AND asociality) OR (Schizophrenia AND amotivation) OR (Schizophrenia AND “social withdrawal”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “blunted affect”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “affective flattening”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “persistent negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “predominant negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “prominent negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “primary negative symptoms”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “deficit schizophrenia”) OR (Schizophrenia AND “lack of motivation”) | 10,481 | December 9, 2019 |
| Filters: Languages, English; Species, Human | |||
| Search in [Title/Abstract/Keywords] | |||
| No time limit | |||
Figure 1.Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses flowchart of studies retrieved in the systematic literature search.
*11,905 duplicates; 1,826 studies other than meta-analysis, randomized controlled trial, review, cohort study, open study, descriptive study, expert opinion; 843 studies published in journal not indexed in Embase or Medline; 2,895 studies on pathophysiological mechanisms of negative symptoms; 5,813 articles not related to any topic; 1,792 articles related to the assessment of negative symptoms; 158 studies conducted in animals.
**Outdated; concerns about quality of meta-analytic procedures or of the original studies; addressed population/intervention/outcome not usable for formulation of recommendations.
Grading of evidence.
| Grade | Features of quantitative studies | Features of reviews |
|---|---|---|
| I—Generalizable studies | Randomized controlled trials. Surveys sampling a large and representative group of persons from the general population or from a large range of service settings. Analytic procedures comprehensive and clear usually including multivariate analyses or statistical modeling. Results can be generalized to settings or stakeholder groups other than those reported in the study. | Systematic reviews or meta-analyses |
| II—Conceptual studies | Uncontrolled, blinded clinical trials. Surveys sampling a restricted group of persons or a limited number of service providers or settings. May be limited to one group about which little is known or a number of important subgroups. Analytic procedures comprehensive and clear. Results have limited generalizability. | Unsystematic reviews with a low degree of selection bias employing clearly defined search strategies |
| III—Descriptive studies | Open, uncontrolled clinical trials. Description of treatment as usual. Survey sampling not representative since it was selected from a single specialized setting or a small group of persons. Mainly records experiences and uses only a limited range of analytical procedures, like descriptive statistics. Results have limited generalizability. | Unsystematic reviews with a high degree of selection bias due to undefined or poorly defined search strategies |
| IV—Single case study | Case studies. Provides survey data on the views or experiences of a few individuals in a single setting. Can provide insight in unexplored contexts. Results cannot be generalized. | Editorials |
Note. Modified from Gaebel et al. [21].
Grading of recommendations.
| Grade | Description |
|---|---|
| A | At least on study or review rated as I and directly applicable to the target population OR a body of evidence consisting principally of studies and/or reviews rated as I, directly applicable to the target population, and demonstrating overall consistency of results. |
| B | A body of evidence including studies and/or reviews rated as II, directly applicable to the target population, and demonstrating overall consistency of results OR extrapolated evidence from studies and/or reviews rated as I or II. |
| C | A body of evidence including studies and/or reviews rated as II-III, directly applicable to the target population, and demonstrating overall consistency of results OR extrapolated evidence from studies and/or reviews rated as II or III. |
| D | Level of evidence rated as III or IV OR extrapolated evidence from studies and/or reviews rated as III or IV OR expert consensus. |
Note. Modified from Gaebel et al. [21].
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | Depression, positive symptoms, and side effects should be treated in patients presenting with negative symptoms. The treatment of these problems should follow available guidelines for their treatment as there is no evidence for a specific approach in patients presenting with negative symptoms. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | In a patient presenting with negative symptoms and comorbid depression, a switch to an antipsychotic with antidepressant properties should be considered. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | In a patient presenting with negative symptoms and comorbid depression, add-on antidepressant treatment should be considered. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | If the trial with an add-on antidepressant is not associated with an improvement of negative symptoms and/or depression, the antidepressant should be discontinued to avoid polypharmacy. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | In a patient presenting with negative symptoms and comorbid depression, cognitive behavior therapy should be considered. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| C | In a patient presenting with negative symptoms that are considered to be secondary to positive symptoms, antipsychotic treatment can be optimized by following existing recommendations regarding dose range and switching of medications. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | In a patient presenting with negative symptoms that are considered to be secondary to treatment-resistant positive symptoms, a trial with clozapine should be considered. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| C | In patients with negative symptoms considered to be secondary to positive symptoms, CBT can be considered. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| C | If a patient with negative symptoms shows extrapyramidal and/or sedative side effects, a reduction of the antipsychotic dose or a switch to an antipsychotic with lower risk for extrapyramidal and/or sedative side effects can be considered. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | For patients with negative symptoms who are treated with a first-generation antipsychotic, a switch to a second-generation antipsychotic should be considered. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | If negative symptoms do not improve after optimization of antipsychotic treatment, a trial with an add-on antidepressant should be considered for patients with negative symptoms after careful evaluation of risks and benefits. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | If the trial with an add-on antidepressant is not associated with an improvement of negative symptoms and/or depression, the antidepressant should be discontinued to avoid polypharmacy. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | Social skills training should be offered to patients with negative symptoms, but no specific recommendation for patients with primary negative symptoms can be given. Furthermore, the available evidence does not allow recommending one specific program for social skills training. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| C | Cognitive remediation can be considered for patients with negative symptoms, in particular for those who also show cognitive impairment. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| C | Exercise can be considered for persons suffering from negative symptoms as part of an integrated treatment plan also aiming at improving physical health. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | The access to care for patients with negative symptoms should have a low-threshold and should be facilitated by assertive community interventions. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | Patients with negative symptoms should have access to rehabilitation interventions such as supported employment and supported housing. |
| Grade | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| B | Early intervention services should be provided for patients with a first episode of psychosis. There is evidence that the use of these services can improve negative symptoms. |