| Literature DB >> 34240626 |
Piyal Sen1,2, Danielle Adewusi2, Alexandra I Blakemore1,3, Veena Kumari1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Low cholesterol has been linked with violent and suicidal behaviour in people with schizophrenia. This association, if consistently present, may be a promising biological marker that could assist clinicians in decision making regarding risk and treatment. We conducted a systematic review to assess whether there is a reliable association between lipid profile (total cholesterol, high- and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglycerides) and aggression, self-harm or suicide in people with schizophrenia, and whether effects are similar in males and females.Entities:
Keywords: Cholesterol; aggression; schizophrenia; sex; suicide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34240626 PMCID: PMC9036157 DOI: 10.1177/00048674211025608
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aust N Z J Psychiatry ISSN: 0004-8674 Impact factor: 5.598
The Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) quality appraisal ratings for included and excluded studies: case–control studies.
| Study | Study design | Comparable groups other than the presence or absence of the disease | Appropriate matching of cases and controls | Same criteria used for identification of cases and controls | Standard, valid and reliable measurement of exposure | Exposure measured in same way for cases and controls | Identification of confounding factors | Strategies to deal with confounding factors stated | Outcomes assessed in a standard, valid, reliable way | Exposure period of interest long enough to be meaningful | Appropriate statistical analysis used | Score (%) | Overall appraisal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Case control. Categorical observation between schizophrenia patients with and without a record of crime | Participants all male | 50 male schizophrenia patients with at least one crime record matched with 50 male schizophrenia patients without a crime record. | Schizophrenia diagnosis made according to DSM-IV in both cases and controls | Blood samples for TC, TG and ghrelin collected between 08.00 a.m. and 11.00 a.m. TC and TG levels were measured by Olympus Biochemical Autoanalyser, by spectrophotometric method using Olympus brand kits | Blood samples collected and examined for all subjects in the case and control group | Medication and diet identified as potential confounders | No strategy for dealing with confounders | Patients grouped into those with a criminal record and without a criminal record | Blood samples collected between 08.00 a.m. and 11.00 a.m. | 90 | Include | |
|
| Case control. Categorical observation between schizophrenia patients with violent, non-violent and no suicidal attempts (control group) | Participants all male. | 31 male schizophrenia patients with a suicide attempt matched with 15 male schizophrenia patients with no history of suicide | Schizophrenia diagnosis made according to ICD-10 in both cases and controls | Blood samples were collected at 7 a.m. after overnight fasting. TC determined enzymatically, immediately after blood collection. Assays done with commercial kits on Olympus AU 600 automatic analyser | Blood samples were collected from all subjects in the case and control group | Age and BMI identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in ANCOVA analysis | Patients grouped into those admitted following a suicide attempt and those without a history of suicide attempt | Blood samples collected after overnight fasting | ANOVA and ANCOVA used | 100 | Include |
|
| Case control. | Participants all male diagnosed with a psychotic illness | 30 inpatients with a psychotic illness with a history of violent crime matched through age, sex and BMI to 30 male psychotic inpatients without a history of violent crime | All psychotic illnesses diagnosed according to ICD-10 in both cases and controls | Blood sample obtained after a 12-hour overnight fasting. Biochemical assay used. TC, TG triglycerides and HDL-cholesterol were estimated by colorimetric method. VLDL and LDL cholesterol were calculated from Friedewald and Fredrickson’s formula | Blood sample obtained from each person selected for the study | Medication identified as potential confounder | No strategy for dealing with confounders | Patients grouped into those with a history of violent crime, which included homicide, rape, arson and grievous injury as per the Criminal Procedure Code of the Indian Law, and those without a history of violent crime | Blood sample obtained after a 12-hour overnight fasting | Pearson correlation coefficients used | 90 | Include |
|
| Case control. Categorical observation between patients and healthy controls (no psychiatric history), matched for age and sex | Suicide and non-suicide attempt groups were age matched according to sex – male controls were age matched to male attempters and female controls matched to female attempters | Case group, admitted after suicide attempt, consisted of 35 males and 76 females. | n/a – control group did not have a psychiatric diagnosis | Blood and urine samples taken within 24 hours of admission at 8:00 in the morning. | Blood and urine samples taken within 24 hours of admission from all the patients | Age identified as confounder | Confounders controlled in ANOVA | Severity of the suicidal intent was estimated with SIS | Blood and urine samples were taken within 24 hours of admission | ANOVA and linear regression analysis used | 100 | Include |
|
| Case control. | Participants all males diagnosed with a psychotic illness | None stated | All psychotic illnesses diagnosed according to ICD-10 in both cases and controls | The serum samples for assaying TC levels were collected always in the morning after 10 to 12 hours’ fast. The method for assaying was enzymatic | Blood samples taken in the morning after 10–12 hour fast | States that BMI did not explain differences in TC, suggesting that this may have been a potential confounder | No strategy for dealing with confounders | ‘Violent and dangerous’ psychiatric patients sent to his hospital by municipal psychiatric hospitals | Blood samples taken in the morning after 10–12 hour fast | Mann–Whitney | 80 | Include |
|
| Case control | All participants admitted during the same 2-month period in early 1995 | Case group consisted of 17 African Americans and control group consisted of 16 African Americans | Not specified | Method of measuring TC and TG not stated | TC and TG obtained from medical chart review for all patients | Age, sex and race identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in ANCOVA and logistic regression | Patients grouped into those who were violent, were secluded or restrained, and those who did not receive seclusion or restraint | Seclusion or restraint within 2-month period | ANCOVA and logistic regression used | 80 | Exclude on the basis of lack of recognised diagnostic classification system |
SD: standard deviation; DSM-IV: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.); TC: total cholesterol; TG: triglyceride; BMI: body mass index; ICD-10: International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision; ANCOVA: analysis of covariance; ANOVA: analysis of variance; HDL: high-density lipoprotein; VLDL: very low-density lipoprotein; LDL: low-density lipoprotein; SIS: Scale for Impact of Suicidality.
The Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) quality appraisal ratings for included and excluded studies: Case series studies.
| Study | Study design | Clear criteria for inclusion in case series | Condition measured in standard, reliable way for participants in case series | Valid methods used for identification of condition for participants in case series | Consecutive inclusion of participants | Complete inclusion of participants in case series | Clear reporting of demographics of participants | Clear reporting of clinical information of participants | Outcomes or follow-up results of cases clearly reported | Clear reporting of presentation site/clinic demographic information | Appropriate statistical analysis | Score (%) | Overall appraisal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Case series. Correlational observation. | Inclusion criteria: schizophrenia patients over the age of 16 who were admitted to the acute psychiatric ward in National Taiwan University Hospital | DSM-IV criteria used | DSM-IV classification used. | Patients were recruited in succession from April 2002 to March 2003 | Yes, | Age, gender, education, unemployment and being single all reported | Positive symptoms scores, negative symptoms scores, age at onset and BMI reported | Tables reporting relationships between schizophrenia and violence and explained in text. | National Taiwan University Hospital. Demographic information not specified | Logistic regression analysis used | 90 | Include |
|
| Case series. Categorical observation between psychiatric patients | Inclusion criteria: all patients admitted to Sveti Ivan Psychiatric Hospital were included. Exclusion criteria: Patients with psychiatric diagnosis of low prevalence were excluded | ICD-10 criteria used | ICD-10 classification used | All patients admitted from January 2005 to April 2005 | Yes, | Age: 17–89 | Schizophrenia, | Table shows mean and SD of TC in patients and explained in text. | Sveti Ivan Psychiatric Hospital, Zagreb, Croatia. | ANOVA test used | 90 | Include |
| Huang et al. (2000) | Case series. Categorical analysis – between paranoid and non-paranoid schizophrenic patients | Inclusion criteria: all patients admitted to the acute psychiatric inpatient unit in the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital | DSM-III-R criteria used | DSM-III-R classification used | All patients admitted from January to December 1995 | Yes, | Mean age = 10.8 | Mean BMI = 23 | Table shows mean and SD of TC in patients and explained in text. | Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. | 90 | Include |
DSM-IV: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.); BMI: body mass index; ICD-10: International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision; SD: standard deviation; TC: total cholesterol; ANOVA: analysis of variance; DSM-II-R: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (2nd ed., rev.).
The Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) quality appraisal ratings for included and excluded studies: cross-sectional studies.
| Study | Study design | Inclusion criteria clearly defined | Study subjects and setting described in detail | Exposure measured in a valid and reliable way | Objective, standard criteria used for measurement of condition | Confounders identified | Strategies to deal with confounders | Outcomes measured in a valid way | Appropriate statistical analysis | Score (%) | Overall appraisal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Cross-sectional | Not clearly defined. Descriptive characteristics and ICD classification given but no distinct inclusion criteria | Age, sex, education, employment and marital status given. | Fasting levels of TC, HDL, LDL and TG were collected and analysed | ICD-10 classification of schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder used | Age, sex, smoking status, cannabis use, dysphoria and BMI identified as potential confounders | Potential confounders controlled in logistic regression | Suicidal ideation assessed using the Diagnostic Interview for Psychosis | Multivariable logistic regression used | 87.5 | Include |
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| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria: a diagnosis within the schizophrenia or bipolar spectrum, age between 18 and 65 years, ability to give informed consent, and Norwegian language skills sufficient for valid assessments. Exclusion criteria: marked cognitive deficit (IQ scores below 70), neurological disorder and history of severe head trauma | Age, sex, race, smoking status and medication given. Study formed part of the TOP study, where patients with severe mental disorders were recruited from psychiatric inpatient and outpatient clinics of the major hospitals in Oslo, Norway | Venous blood samples were collected in the morning after an overnight fast of at least 8 hours. Levels of TC, LDL and HDL were measured | DSM-IV classification of psychiatric disorders used. | Age, sex, BMI and medication identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in logistic regression | Aggression measured using PANSS Excited Component. | Multinomial logistic regression used | 100 | Include |
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| Cross-sectional (with correlational analysis) | Inclusion criteria clearly defined: 18–65 years of age, DSM-IV criteria for schizophrenia and psychotic disorders, have available serum leptin measurements and able to provide consent to participate. Participants with a history of significant head injury, neurological disorder, mental retardation and autoimmune disease were excluded | Age, sex, ethnicity, education, smoking status and age of onset recorded. Subjects were recruited through the ongoing Norwegian TOP study | Fasting venous blood samples were obtained in the morning. Measurement and analysis of TC, TG, LDL and standard C-reactive protein were conducted | DSM-IV classification of psychiatric disorders used. | Age, sex, BMI, dietary habits, smoking, age of onset and duration of illness identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in logistic regression | Severity of suicidal behaviour measured using item 18 of IDS-C | Multinomial logistic regression used | 100 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria clearly defined: patients of either sex and those patients or accompanying relatives willing to give written informed consent for participation in study. Exclusion criteria: patients having comorbid physical disorders | Age, sex and marital status recorded. Patients recruited from inpatient and outpatient of AVBR Hospital | Blood sample for total cholesterol level was taken immediately after admission in psychiatry ward or on OPD basis | No DSM or ICD classification used for diagnosis | Mental illness, medication and dietary factors were identified as confounders | Confounders not handled within study | Patients grouped into recent suicide attempt, suicidal ideations but no attempts and no suicidal ideation or attempt | Chi-square test used | 75 | Exclude |
|
| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria clearly defined: all registered inpatients with suicidal behaviour (successful suicide and attempted suicide, in total), during the last 60 months | Age, sex, marital status and employment recorded. | Serum lipids, including TC, TG, LDL and HDL were analysed, having being collected as part of routine laboratory tests for all patients upon admission | DSM-IV classification of psychiatric disorders used | Confounders, such as age, sex, BMI and involuntary admission, were not identified | No strategy to deal with confounders | Retrospective evaluation identified in patients with suicidal behaviour (successful suicide and attempted suicide, in total) | 75 | Exclude | |
|
| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria clearly defined: admitted in the Psychiatry department in the course of the year 2014, to be aged 18 and older, and to have had a lipid panel test | Age, sex, weight, height, BMI, medication, history of diabetes, liver diseases and cardiovascular risk factors recorded. | Lipid panel test was done and TC, HDL, and TG were collected and analysed. LDL was calculated according to the Friedewald formula. | ICD-10 classification of psychiatric disorders used | Medical cause of HBL identified as confounder | Patients with medical cause of HBL excluded | Hetero-aggression, suicidal attempts and other self-injuries categorised as aggressive behaviours | Mann–Whitney tests for the quantitative variables and Fisher tests for the qualitative variables | 100 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional with longitudinal component | Inclusion criteria: all patients admitted to the acute psychiatric ward at Oslo University Hospital, Norway, between 21 March 2012 and 20 March 2013 | Age, gender, employment, education, marital status recorded. | Serum measures of TC and HDL in millimoles per litre (mmol/L) were obtained from routine blood tests at admission and analysed with ‘enzymatic colorimetric method’ for TC and ‘homogeneous enzymatic colorimetric method’ for HDL (‘Cobas 8000 c702’, Roche Diagnostics, Oslo, Norway) | ICD-10 classification of psychiatric disorders used | Involuntary admission and age identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in logistic regression | Violent behaviour measured using SOAS-R. | Uni-, bi- and multivariate binary logistic regression analyses used | 100 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria: patients admitted between January 2012 and December 2017, to Psychiatric Inpatient Unit (Desio Hospital, ASST Monza, Italy), psychiatric diagnosis classified by ICD-10, aged between 18 and 65 years, medically stable, not needing treatment for any physical condition. Exclusion criteria: subjects suffering from other mental disorders or mental retardation, serious physical illnesses or treated with thyroid hormone, antidiabetic, anticoagulant, anti-platelet, urate- and lipid-lowering agents | Age, sex, smoking status, BMI, and medication recorded | Information on TC, LDL and TG retrieved from routine blood samples drawn at approximately 8.00 a.m., after an overnight fasting. Blood tests carried out within 24 hours after hospitalisation | ICD-10 classification of psychiatric disorders used | Age and sex identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in logistic regression | Standard definitions used to distinguish violent (firearm, hanging, cutting, jumping, car exhaust, other violent methods) from non-violent (drug overdose and poisoning) attempt methods | Logistic regression analyses used | 100 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional with a longitudinal component | Inclusion criteria: all patients admitted from 21 March 2012 to 20 March 2013 from Oslo University Hospital | Age, sex, involuntary admission, employment, education status and marital status recorded | Serum measures of TC and HDL in millimoles per litre (mmol/L) were obtained from routine blood tests at admission and analysed with ‘enzymatic colorimetric method’ for TC and ‘homogeneous enzymatic colorimetric method’ for HDL | ICD-10 classification of psychiatric disorders used | Male gender, involuntarily admitted and psychosis identified as potential confounders | Confounders controlled in logistic regression | Violent behaviour measured using SOAS-R | Multivariate binary logistic regression used | 100 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional, cohort study. Categorical observation | Inclusion criteria: age 18–30, schizophrenia diagnosed by DSM-IV-TR, inpatients in the first episode of the illness and consent | Age, sex and duration of illness recorded | TC collected from routine blood investigation. Data TC were retrieved from the biochemistry database of the facility | DSM-IV-TR classification of schizophrenia used | Differences in socioeconomic status, metabolic profiles and dietary differences identified as confounders | No strategy to deal with confounders | SIS-MAP used to measure severity of suicidal behaviour | Pearson correlation analysis used | 87.5 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional. Categorical observation compared to age, sex and ethnicity matched healthy controls | Inclusion criteria: schizophrenia diagnosed with ICD-10 classification, antipsychotic-drug naïve or antipsychotic-drug free for at least 4 weeks (oral medication) or 8 weeks (depot medication), educated to at least class 5 | Age, sex, education, religion, marital status, family habitat and BMI recorded | Venous blood samples (5 mL) were drawn on weekdays between 7 and 9 a.m. after the participants had fasted for at least 12 hours. Samples were immediately delivered to the hospital laboratory and analysed for TC, HDL, LDL, VLDL and TGs using enzymatic auto-analyser | ICD-10 classification of schizophrenia used | Substance abuse, nutritional status and use of historical indices of violence identified as confounders | No strategy to deal with confounders | MOAS, IRS and BSI were used to quantify impulsivity, aggression and suicidality, respectively | Pearson’s correlation analysis used | 87.5 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional | Unclear inclusion criteria – stated that patients included met the inclusion criteria but did not specify the nature of the criteria | Age, sex, BMI, smoking status and alcoholic status were recorded. | Venepuncture was performed for all subjects between | DSM-IV classification of schizophrenia used | Medication identified as a potential confounder | No strategy to deal with confounders | Suicide attempts divided into two groups: lifetime suicide group (who had attempted suicide for more than 2 months) and recent suicide group (who had attempted suicide for less than 2 months) | Chi-square test and independent sample | 75 | Exclude |
|
| Cross-sectional cohort study | Inclusion criteria: schizophrenia diagnosis based on DSM-IV and confirmed using OPCRIT checklist, admitted to Lower Silesian Center of Mental Health (Wroclaw, Poland) | Age, sex. education, marital status, employment, weight, height, and BMI recorded. | Blood samples were obtained between 7.30 and 8.30 a.m. after at least 10 hours overnight fasting from the antecubital vein. TC determined using a Cobas 6000 analyser. Enzymatic methods used also to measure TC, HDL and TG. LDL was calculated using the Friedewald equation | DSM-IV classification of schizophrenia used | Age, BMI, chlorpromazine dosage and treatment duration identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in general linear model | Patients divided into two subgroups based on those who had a lifetime experience of suicidal ideation and those who did not. | General linear model and two-way ANOVA used | 100 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria: schizophrenia diagnosed by at least two psychiatrists according to DSM-IV criteria (SCID), acute exacerbation of schizophrenia | Age, sex and duration of illness recorded. | Fasting blood was drawn at 8:00 a.m. within 24–72 hours of admission to the outpatient clinic. Laboratory measures included concentrations of the following lipids: total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides and total lipids | Schizophrenia diagnosed by at least two psychiatrists according to DSM-IV criteria (SCID) | Potential confounder, such as age, smoking, involuntary admission and a previous history of suicide attempt, not identified | No strategy for dealing with confounders | Non-paired | 75 | Exclude | |
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| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria: schizophrenia, bipolar affective disorder or major depressive disorder, based on ICD-10, aged over 18 | Age, sex, number of admissions, BMI, socioeconomic status and comorbid disease recorded. | TC, HDL and TG were recorded at time of admission | ICD-10 classification of schizophrenia used | Previous history of suicide attempt identified as a potential confounder | No strategy for dealing with confounders | Patients grouped into two categories: patients who died by suicide and patients that did not | Independent | 85.7 | Include |
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| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria: male schizoaffective patients whose biochemical analyses from the time of admission were available, treated at Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital Zagreb, during the period of 18 months | Age, BMI, previous hospitalisation and duration of illness recorded | Venepuncture was performed for all subjects between 8 and 9 a.m. after 12-hour overnight fast. Immediately after collecting blood samples, TC, HDL and triglycerides were determined using enzyme method and commercial kits (Olympus Diagnostic, GmbH, Hamburg, Germany) on Olympus AU 600 automated analyser | ICD-10 classification used | Poor physical health, dietary habits, social and economical conditions identified as potential confounders | No strategy for dealing with confounders | Patients suicidal at hospital admission if suicidal ideation, suicide attempt, or both, was present. Suicidality was assessed positive if item 3 of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale | Nonparametric Spearman correlation coefficient test used | 85.7 | Include |
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| Cross-sectional with longitudinal follow-up over 12 months | Inclusion criteria: male patients diagnosed with Psychotic Disorder Not Otherwise Specified, admitted to Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital Zagreb, during the period of 12 months | Age, BMI, family status, Church attending, and family history of suicide or suicide attempt recorded | Blood samples were collected from all subjects at 8.00 a.m. after an overnight fasting. TC was determined enzymatically, immediately after the blood collection, using commercial kits | DSM-IV classification used | Age and BMI identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in ANCOVA test | ANOVA and ANCOVA | 100 | Include | |
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| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria: patients admitted to Korea University Medical Center emergency room consecutively after suicide attempt between January 1994 and July 2000 | Age, sex and BMI reported | All subjects fasted overnight. Samples of blood were drawn from the antecubital vein in a sitting position using a tourniquet between 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. For the suicidal patients, blood was collected within 48 hours after the suicide attempt. Five millilitres of blood was collected into a vacuum tube with no additives. Total serum cholesterol levels were measured by enzymatic procedures using a Hitachi 717 analyser | DSM-III-R classification used | Age, gender and BMI identified as confounders | Confounders controlled in ANOVA analysis | The severity of suicide attempt was evaluated according to the degree of resulting medical injury on the 5-point Medical Lethality Rating Scale (A.T. Beck, unpublished) | ANOVA and | 100 | Include |
|
| Cross-sectional | Unclear, only ‘patients on general psychiatric admission unit’ stated | Age, age at admission, sex recorded | Blood samples taken within first 3 days after admission under sober conditions in the morning. TC determined in an external laboratory centre providing continuous quality controls | ICD-10 classification used | Potential confounding factors, such as BMI, smoking, medication, involuntary admission, not identified | No strategy for dealing with confounders | Aggression assessed after discharge using MOAS, SDAS, SOAS, and VS | Spearman’s rank for correlations used | 62.5 | Exclude |
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| Cross-sectional | Inclusion criteria: TC measured immediately after admission (within 24 hours), blood sampling carried out in the morning of the day following admission, total protein level and red blood cell count simultaneously measured | Age, sex, psychical condition (injury, burn, intoxication or hypoxia) reported | TC measured immediately after admission (within 24 hours), blood sampling carried out in the morning of the day following admission | DSM-II III-R classification used | States that ‘potential confounders were adjusted for’ but no specification of what these were | Confounders controlled in ANCOVA analysis | Cases consisted of suicide attempters that were discharged alive | ANCOVA and Student’s | 87.5 | Include |
ICD: International Classification of Diseases; TC: total cholesterol; HDL: high-density lipoprotein; LDL: low-density lipoprotein; TG: triglyceride; ICD-10: International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision; BMI: body mass index; TOP: Thematically Organised Psychosis study; DSM-IV: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.); IDS-C: Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology; HBL: hypobetalipoproteinaemia characterised by LDL lower than fifth percentile for age and sex; SOAS-R: Staff Observation Aggression Scale–Revised; DSM-IV-TR: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text rev.); SIS-MAP: Scale for Impact of Suicidality – Management, Assessment and Planning of Care; VLDL: very low-density lipoprotein; MOAS: Modified Overt Aggression Scale; IRS: Impulsivity Rating Scale; BSI: Beck Scale for suicidal ideation; OPCRIT: Operational Criteria for Psychotic Illness checklist; ANOVA: analysis of variance; ANCOVA: analysis of covariance; DSM-III-R: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (3rd ed., rev.); SDAS: Social Dysfunction and Aggression Scale; SOAS: Staff Observation Aggression Scale; VS: Violence Scale; OPD: Out-patient department; LPT:Lipid panel test.
Details of the included studies and key findings.
| Study | Location | Study design | Psychiatric conditions included in study | Diagnostic classification | Total sample size (gender distribution) | Number of schizophrenia/schizoaffective/psychotic patients and gender distribution (male:female) | Case control groups | Age of participants (years) | Cholesterol measure/s examined in relation to aggression | Findings classified by aggression type | Other findings | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical against self | Physical against others | Physical against objects | Verbal | |||||||||||
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| Database of patients with psychotic disorders from Australia | Cross-sectional | Schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder | ICD-10 | 802 (540 males, 262 females) | 591 schizophrenia | Cases – patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder | 37.72 ± 10.92 | TC | Low HDL more likely to report current suicidal ideation (OR = 0.375, 95% CI = [0.14, 0.99]) | Confounders like psychological stress, impulsivity or serum cortisol were not included in the analysis. The HDL significance could be a type I error. The study was also conducted predominantly on community-dwelling patients with schizophrenia, not on acutely ill or inpatients with schizophrenia | |||
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| Inpatient and outpatient clinics of major hospitals in Oslo, Norway | Cross-sectional | Schizophrenia spectrum disorder | DSM-IV | 1001 (525 males, 476 females) | 601 | Cases – patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorder | >18 | TC | Highest levels of aggression scarcely represented among study participants. | ||||
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| Major hospitals in Oslo, Norway | Cross-sectional (with correlational analysis) | Schizophrenia | DSM-IV | 270 | 270 (161 males, 109 females) | Cases: patients with mild/moderate suicidal behaviour and severe suicidal behaviour with/without suicide attempts | 18–65 years | TC | Negative but non-significant and small correlations between TC ( | Lower levels of leptin significantly increased the risk of being in the mild to moderate or severe suicidal behaviour groups (OR = 0.4, 95% CI = [0.2, 2.8]; OR = 0.5, 95% CI = [0.3, 0.8], respectively). | |||
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| Nantes University Hospital, France | Cross-sectional | • Schizophrenia, schizotypal and delusional disorders | ICD-10 | 837 (of 839, 2 patients excluded due to secondary causes of HBL) (495 males, 342 females) | 300 (male:female ratio not provided) | Cases: patients | >18 | LDL (calculated according to the Friedewald formula) | No association found between low LDL and suicide attempts or self-injuries across the whole sample | Not assessed | Participants with low LDL (⩽50 mg/dL) characterised by a greater number of schizophrenia patients ( | Not assessed | |
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| Oslo University Hospital, Norway | Cross-sectional with longitudinal component | Psychosis | ICD-10 | Inpatient sample 348 (156 males, 192 females in inpatient sample) | Psychosis Group | Cases – patients admitted to an acute psychiatric ward | Inpatient: 18–83 | TC | TC link with violence was non-significant for men and women for inpatients. | ||||
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| Psychiatric Inpatient Unit at Desio Hospital, ASSD Monza, Italy | Cross-sectional | Schizophrenia spectrum | ICD-10 | 593 (328 males, 265 females) | 195 | Cases – patients with schizophrenia | >18 | TC | No association between recent suicide attempts and TC ( | Number of suicide attempts was relatively small | |||
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| Oslo University Hospital, Norway | Cross-sectional with a longitudinal component | • Psychosis | ICD-10 | 362 inpatients (158 males, 204 females); of these, 99 followed up at 3 months after discharge | 104 (male:female ratio not provided) | NA | >18 | TC | Not assessed | 59 (16%) inpatients | Not assessed | Findings not stated | At inpatient assessment, a statistically significant association, OR [95% CI] = 0.52 [0.28, 1.0], |
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| A tertiary general psychiatric centre (hospital name not provided), in India | Cross-sectional, cohort study. Categorical observation | Non-affective schizophrenia | DSM-IV | 60 (41 males, 19 females) | 60 (41 males, 19 females) | NA | 18–39 | TC | Lower levels of TC ( | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | An association was not found for men between low TC and suicidality. |
|
| Tertiary level referral centre and post-graduate teaching hospital in western Uttar Pradesh, India | Cross-sectional. Categorical observation compared to age, sex and ethnicity matched healthy controls | Paranoid and undifferentiated schizophrenia | ICD-10 | 120 (92 males, 28 females) | 60 (46 males, 14 females) | Cases: 60 adult schizophrenia patients | Cases: 32.40 ± 6.6 | TC | A significant negative correlation ( | A negative trend-level correlation ( | Findings not stated | Findings not stated | TC was significantly lower in the patient group compared to healthy controls ( |
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| National Taiwan University Hospital, Taiwan | Case series. Correlational observation | Schizophrenia | DSM-IV | 107 (33 males, 74 females) | 107 | NA | >16 | TC | Findings not stated | Four subgroups (with different violence trajectories) did not differ (at entry) in TC, | Findings not stated | The major manifestation of violence in this study was verbal aggression towards others | Cases with an increased level of overall aggression exhibited a trend towards smaller proportion of high LDL level ( |
|
| Lower Silesian Centre of Mental Health, Wroclaw, Poland | Cross-sectional cohort study | Schizophrenia | DSM-IV | 100 (53 males, 47 females) | 100 | Cases – 30 first-episode schizophrenia with lifetime experiences of suicidal ideation | Range: 18–43 | TC (mg/dL) | Association found between higher TC and suicidal ideation in females ( | This is offering a finding which is an opposite result to other studies mostly showing an association between low TC and suicidal risk, thus suggesting that the nature of lipid metabolism in patients experiencing suicidal ideation might be complex | |||
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| Psychiatric ward at University Hospital in Seoul, Korea | Cross-sectional | Schizophrenia | ICD-10 | 516 (males 252, females 264) | 246 | Cases – patients with schizophrenia who died by suicide | Schizophrenia patients with suicide: 29.1 ± 9.3 | TC | No difference between patients who died by suicide and controls in schizophrenia, including TC, triglyceride and HDL cholesterol | No standardised procedure for arriving at diagnoses | |||
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| Elazig Mental Hospital, Turkey | Case control. Categorical observation between schizophrenia patients with and without a record of crime | Schizophrenia | DSM-IV | 100 (all male) | 100 (all male) | Cases – 50 male, criminal schizophrenia patients | 19–59 | TC | Not assessed | 72% of crime included in the study were physical aggression against others, including homicide, assault and battery. | 14% of crime included damage to public property | Not assessed | |
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| University Hospital Zagreb, Croatia | Cross-sectional | Schizoaffective disorder | ICD-10 | 60 (all males) | 40 (20 with suicidal and 20 non-suicidal) | Cases – consecutively admitted patients with schizoaffective disorder with suicidal behaviour and consecutively admitted patients with schizoaffective disorder without suicidal behaviour | >18 | TC | Suicidal patients had significantly lower levels of TC ( | The authors claimed that this was the first study to show the relationship between reduced TC and suicidality in schizoaffective disorder | |||
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| Sveti Ivan Psychiatric Hospital, Croatia | Case series. Categorical observation between psychiatric patients | • Schizophrenia | ICD-10 | 677 (415 males, 262 females) | NA | 17–89 | TC | Patients with a history of non-violent suicidal attempt (drug poisoning) had significantly lower serum TC than those with schizophrenia ( | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | There was a similar difference between non-violent suicidal attempters and depressive disorder, stress reaction and personality disorders. | |
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| Clinical Hospital Centre, Zagreb, Croatia | Cross-sectional with longitudinal follow-up over 12 months | Psychotic Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (first episode of psychosis) | DSM-IV-TR | 81 (all males) | 27 | Cases – 27 consecutively admitted suicidal men in the first episode of psychosis and 27 consecutively admitted men in first episode of psychosis without suicidal behaviour | Suicidal patients: 29.70 ± 7.22 | TC | TC levels were significantly reduced in suicidal when compared to non-suicidal or healthy subjects, even after controlling for age and BMI ( | Platelet 5-HT concentration was significantly lower in suicidal than in non-suicidal patients or healthy controls ( | |||
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| Clinical Hospital Centre Zagreb, Croatia | Case control. Categorical observation between schizophrenia patients with violent, non-violent and no suicidal attempts (control group) | Schizophrenia | ICD-10 | 46 (all males) | 46 (all males) | Cases – 31 males suffering from schizophrenia, admitted after suicide attempt (15 non-violent attempters, 16 violent attempters) | Cases: 32.02 ± 8.21 | TC | Significantly lower TC in violent attempters compared to non-violent attempters ( | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Serum cortisol concentration significantly higher ( |
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| Central Institute of Psychiatry, Ranchi, India | Case control | • Schizophrenia (paranoid and undifferentiated) | ICD-10 | 60 (all males) | 46 – 23 in case group and 23 in control group, as the control group was matched to the case group by diagnosis (all males) | Cases – 30 male inpatients diagnosed with a psychotic illness with a history of violent crime | Cases: 33.17 ± 7.53 | TC | Significant positive correlation between HDL and suicidality ( | Violent crime was assessed in this study and included homicide, rape, arson and grievous injury. | Findings not stated | Not assessed | Though there was no significant association between higher HDL and TC in this study, higher HDL is known to be associated with lower total cholesterol |
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| Evangelismos General Hospital, Greece | Case control. Categorical observation between patients and healthy controls (no psychiatric history), matched for age and sex | • Schizophrenia | DSM-III-R | 173 (66 males, 107 females) | 16 | Cases – 111 | Schizophrenia group: 30.4 ± 9.9 | TC | Violent suicide attempters had a significantly lower TC level compared to controls ( | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significantly lower TC in the subgroup with schizophrenia ( |
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| Niuvanniemi Hospital, Finland | Case control | Schizophrenia, paranoid and other types | ICD-10 | 409 (all males) | 226 (all males) | Cases – male secluded patients (207 total, of which 165 schizophrenia patients) | 15–71 | TC | Low (below 5.3 mmol/L) TC level was deemed to be a marker ( | Findings not stated | Findings not stated | Findings not stated | Patients who had been secluded as a result of violent behaviour ( |
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| Korea University Medical Centre, Korea | Cross-sectional | Schizophrenia | DSM-III-R | 693 (327 males, 366 females) | 64 (40 males and 24 females) | Cases – suicide attempters with schizophrenia ( | Cases: age not specified but mean age for the whole patient group 38.1, with SD 17.0 | TC | Risk to self – no significant difference in serum TC levels found in suicide attempters with schizophrenia compared to non-suicidal attempts as well as normal controls | Total serum TC levels among suicide attempters was significantly lower ( | |||
| Huang et al. (2000) | Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Kaohsiung, Taiwan | Case series. Categorical analysis – between paranoid and non-paranoid schizophrenic patients | Schizophrenia | DSM-III-R | 213 (gender distribution not specified) | 106 (47 males, 59 females) | Cases – psychiatric patients with any kind of diagnosis. | 30.6 ± 10.8 | TC | No significant differences ( | No significant differences ( | Not assessed | Not assessed | No significant difference ( |
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| Tokyo University Hospital, Tokyo | Cross-sectional | Schizophrenia spectrum disorders | DSM-III-R | 173 (99 males, 74 females) | 66 | Cases – patients with schizophrenia admitted with suicide attempt | 37 suicide attempters: age not specified but mean age for whole sample: 40 ± 16.7 | TC | No significant difference in TC levels between suicidal and non-suicidal groups in schizophrenia spectrum disorders | Significantly lower TC in suicide attempters than controls with mood disorders and with personality or neurotic disorders | |||
ICD-10: International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision; TC: total cholesterol; TG: triglyceride; HDL: high-density lipoprotein; OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; DSM-IV: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.); LDL: low-density lipoprotein; HBL: Hypobetalipoproteinaemia characterised by LDL lower than fifth percentile for age and sex; VLDL: very low-density lipoprotein; BSI: Beck Scale for suicidal ideation; MOAS: Modified Overt Aggression Scale; IRS: Impulsivity Rating Scale; DSM-IV-TR: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text rev.); BMI: body mass index; DSM-III-R: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (3rd ed., rev.); APA 1: Apolipoprotein A1; PANSS-EC: Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale–Excited Component.
Figure 1.Flow chart of study selection.