| Literature DB >> 33811552 |
María José Valdés-Florido1, Álvaro López-Díaz1,2,3, Fernanda Jazmín Palermo-Zeballos1, Nathalia Garrido-Torres4, Paula Álvarez-Gil5, Iván Martínez-Molina4, Victoria Eugenia Martín-Gil4, Elena Ruiz-Ruiz6, Macarena Mota-Molina7, María Paz Algarín-Moriana8, Antonio Hipólito Guzmán-Del Castillo8, Ángela Ruiz-Arcos9, Rafael Gómez-Coronado9, Sara Galiano-Rus10, Alfonso Rosa-Ruiz11, Juan Luis Prados-Ojeda6, Luis Gutierrez-Rojas12, Benedicto Crespo-Facorro13,14,15,16, Miguel Ruiz-Veguilla2,3,4,17.
Abstract
This study aimed to characterize the clinical profile of patients with brief psychotic disorders (BPD) triggered by the psychosocial distress derived from the COVID-19 crisis. A multicenter study was conducted from March 14 to May 14, 2020 (the peak weeks of the pandemic in Europe). All consecutive patients presenting non-affective psychotic episodes with a duration of untreated psychosis of less than 1 month and whose onset was related to the COVID-19 crisis were recruited, but only those patients meeting Diagnostic Statistical Manual 5th edition (DSM-5) criteria for "BPD with marked stressors" (DSM-5 code: 298.8) during follow-up were finally included. Patients' sociodemographic and clinical characteristics were collected at baseline and summarized with descriptive statistics. During the study period, 57 individuals with short-lived psychotic episodes related to the emotional stress of the COVID-19 pandemic were identified, of whom 33 met DSM-5 criteria for "BPD with marked stressors". The mean age was 42.33 ± 14.04 years, the gender distribution was almost the same, and the majority were rated as having good premorbid adjustment. About a quarter of the patients exhibited suicidal symptoms and almost half presented first-rank schizophrenia symptoms. None of them were COVID-19 positive, but in more than half of the cases, the topic of their psychotic features was COVID-19-related. The coronavirus pandemic is triggering a significant number of BPD cases. Their risk of suicidal behavior, their high relapse rate, and their low temporal stability make it necessary to closely monitor these patients over time.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Psychoses; Schizophrenia; Stress; Suicide
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33811552 PMCID: PMC8019303 DOI: 10.1007/s00406-021-01256-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci ISSN: 0940-1334 Impact factor: 5.270
Summary of published reports on the onset of psychotic disorders in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic during the first months of the outbreak: results of a scoping review
| Authors | Date of publication | Country | Design | Sample size | BPD according to DSM criteria | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bernard-Valnet et al. [ | April 2020 | Switzerland | Case report | 2 | No | Two COVID-19-positive women were diagnosed with acute meningoencephalitis. One of them developed psychotic symptoms |
| Colizzi et al. [ | April 2020 | Italy | Case report | 1 | No | A 16-year-old male with somatic symptom disorder experienced brief psychotic symptoms triggered by the fear of having COVID-19 |
| Finatti et al. [ | May 2020 | Italy | Case series | 3 | Yes | Two men and one woman with no past history of psychiatric disorders had BPD in the context of the mandatory nationwide quarantine. One of them had suicidal symptoms |
| Fischer et al. [ | April 2020 | Germany | Case report | 1 | No | A male patient showed acute exacerbation of schizophrenia with psychotic content related to COVID-19 |
| Hu et al. [ | February 2020 | China | Observational study | N/S | N/A | This preprint reported an increase in incidence of first-episode schizophrenia in elderly adults during the early stages of the pandemic in China |
| Huarcaya et al. [ | April 2020 | Perú | Case report | 1 | No | A 38-year-old woman with no psychiatric history developed acute psychotic symptoms in response to her fear of COVID-19 contagion |
| Martin EB Jr [ | March 2020 | USA | Case series | 3 | N/S | Three women employed at the same hospital presented brief stress-related psychoses related to the COVID-19 healthcare crisis. One of them developed suicidal symptoms in the context of her delusional beliefs |
| Mehra et al. [ | April 2020 | India | Case report | 2 | No | Two elderly patients (a 72-year-old man and a 60-year-old woman) experienced a recurrence of depression triggered by the fear of contracting COVID-19. The woman's depression had psychotic features |
| Ovejero et al. [ | April 2020 | Spain | Case report | 1 | No | A 41-year-old woman with bipolar disorder had a manic episode with psychotic symptoms in which COVID-19 infection was a delusional topic |
| Rentero et al. [ | May 2020 | Spain | Case series | N/S | N/S | Clinicians from a consultation-liaison psychiatry unit reported that several patients from their hospital were experiencing psychotic symptoms as an acute neuropsychiatric manifestation of COVID-19 infection |
| Valdés-Florido et al. [ | April 2020 | Spain | Case series | 4 | Yes | Two men and two women, one of whom had a past history of BPD, showed reactive psychoses attributed to the psychological distress caused by the COVID-19 healthcare and economic crisis. Two of these patients were suicidal at the time of evaluation |
| Weise et al. [ | April 2020 | Germany | Case report | 1 | No | Psychotic symptoms and severe suicidal behavior of a woman in her mid-60 s with delusional disorder worsened as a result of the coronavirus pandemic |
| Zulfiki et al. [ | February 2020 | Malaysia | Case report | 1 | Yes | A 31-year-old man with no past history of psychiatric disorders had a BPD caused by psychosocial stress from the COVID-19 pandemic |
BPD Brief psychotic disorder; DSM Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; N/A Not Applicable; N/S Not Specified; USA United States of America
Note: To identify articles matching the scope of this review, a literature search was conducted in PubMed/Medline, Web of Science and Scopus databases from inception to 14 May 2020 using the following terms and strategy: (COVID-19 OR SARS-Cov-2 OR 2019-ncov OR coronavirus) AND (psychosis OR psychotic OR schizophrenia). The systematic search followed PRISMA guidelines [40] (see flowchart in Supplementary appendix)
Fig. 1Patient recruitment diagram
Sociodemographic, clinical and psychopathological characteristics
| Total sample ( | |
|---|---|
| Sociodemographic characteristics | |
| Age (years), mean ± SD | 42.33 ± 14.04 |
| Gender (male), | 15 (45.5%) |
| Ethnicity (European Caucasian), | 28 (84.8%) |
| Marital status (unmarried), | 14 (42.4%) |
| Cohabitation (living alone), | 5 (15.2%) |
| Education, | |
| Higher education | 9 (27.3%) |
| Complete secondary education | 15 (45.5%) |
| Incomplete secondary education | 9 (27.3%) |
| Occupation (unemployed), | 15 (45.5%) |
| Clinical characteristics | |
| Premorbid psychosocial adjustment †, | |
| Good premorbid adjustment | 27 (81.8%) |
| Poor premorbid adjustment | 6 (18.2%) |
| Past psychiatric records, | |
| BPD | 12 (36.4%) |
| Depressive disorder | 3 (9.1%) |
| Anxiety disorder | 3 (9.1%) |
| Hoarding disorder | 1 (3%) |
| History of substance use, | 5 (15.2%) |
| Family history of psychosis, | 7 (21.2%) |
| First-episode psychosis, | 21 (63.6%) |
| Abrupt onset (< 48 h) of psychotic symptoms, | 14 (42.4%) |
| DUP (days), median (IQR) | 5 (3.75–11.5) |
| Suicidal symptoms, | 8 (24.2%) |
| COVID-19 screening results (negative), | 33 (100%) |
| Inpatient status, | 28 (84.8%) |
| Duration of the psychotic episode until clinical remission (days), median (IQR) | 15 (7.75–25.75) |
| Psychotic psychopathological features | |
| Delusions, | 28 (84.8%) |
| Hallucinations, | 14 (42.4%) |
| Disorganized speech, | 13 (39.4%) |
| Grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior, | 15 (45.5%) |
| First-rank symptoms of schizophrenia | 15 (45.5%) |
| Content of psychotic symptoms related to the COVID-19 pandemic, | 19 (57.6%) |
BPD brief psychotic disorder; IQR interquartile range; SD standard deviation; DUP duration of untreated psychosis
†The sum of the following sociodemographic variables was used as an indicator of poor premorbid adjustment: being unmarried, unemployed, and low education