The course of negative symptom in first episode psychosis and the relationship with social recovery

Brioney Gee, Jo Hodgekins*, David Fowler, Max Marshall, Linda Everard, Helen Lester, Peter B. Jones, Tim Amos, Swaran P. Singh, Vimal Sharma, Nick Freemantle, Max Birchwood

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Aims: To investigate trajectories of negative symptoms during the first 12 months of treatment for first episode psychosis (FEP), their predictors and relationship to social recovery. Method: 1006 participants were followed up for 12 months following acceptance into Early Intervention in Psychosis services. Negative symptom trajectories were modelled using latent class growth analysis (LCGA) and predictors of trajectories examined using multinomial regression. Social recovery trajectories - also modelled using LCGA - of members of each negative symptom trajectory were ascertained and the relationship between negative symptom and social recovery trajectories examined. Results: Four negative symptom trajectories were identified: Minimal Decreasing (63.9%), Mild Stable (13.5%), High Decreasing (17.1%) and High Stable (5.4%). Male gender and family history of non-affective psychosis predicted stably high negative symptoms. Poor premorbid adolescent adjustment, family history of non-affective psychosis and baseline depression predicted initially high but decreasing negative symptoms. Members of the Mild Stable, High Stable and High Decreasing classes were more likely to experience stably low functioning than the Minimal Decreasing class. Conclusions: Distinct negative symptom trajectories are evident in FEP. Only a small subgroup present with persistently high levels of negative symptoms. A substantial proportion of FEP patients with elevated negative symptoms at baseline will achieve remission of these symptoms within 12 months. However, elevated negative symptoms at baseline, whether or not they remit, are associated with poor social recovery, suggesting targeted interventions for service users with elevated baseline negative symptoms may help improve functional outcomes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)165-171
Number of pages7
JournalSchizophrenia Research
Volume174
Issue number1-3
Early online date28 Apr 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2016

Keywords

  • Early intervention
  • Functioning
  • Longitudinal
  • Negative symptoms
  • Recovery

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