Salvatore Paola, Baldessarini Ross J, Tohen Mauricio, Khalsa Hari-Mandir K, Sanchez-Toledo Jesus Perez, Zarate Carlos A, Vieta Eduard, Maggini Carlo
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2009 Apr;70(4):458-66. doi: 10.4088/jcp.08m04227. Epub 2008 Dec 30.
Since stability of DSM-IV diagnoses of disorders with psychotic features requires validation, we evaluated psychotic patients followed systematically in the McLean-Harvard International First Episode Project.
We diagnosed 517 patients hospitalized in a first psychotic illness by SCID-based criteria at baseline and at 24 months to assess stability of specific DSM-IV diagnoses.
Among 500 patients (96.7%) completing the study, diagnoses remained stable in 77.6%, ranking as follows: bipolar I disorder (96.5%) > schizophrenia (75.0%) > delusional disorder (72.7%) > major depressive disorder (MDD), severe, with psychotic features (70.1%) > brief psychotic disorder (61.1%) > psychotic disorder not otherwise specified (NOS) (51.5%) >> schizophreniform disorder (10.5%). Most changed diagnoses (22.4% of patients) were to schizoaffective disorder (53.6% of changes in 12.0% of subjects, from psychotic disorder NOS > schizophrenia > schizophreniform disorder = bipolar I disorder most recent episode mixed, severe, with psychotic features > MDD, severe, with psychotic features > delusional disorder > brief psychotic disorder > bipolar I disorder most recent episode manic, severe, with psychotic features). Second most changed diagnoses were to bipolar I disorder (25.9% of changes, 5.8% of subjects, from MDD, severe, with psychotic features > psychotic disorder NOS > brief psychotic disorder > schizophreniform disorder). Third most changed diagnoses were to schizophrenia (12.5% of changes, 2.8% of subjects, from schizophreniform disorder > psychotic disorder NOS > brief psychotic disorder = delusional disorder = MDD, severe, with psychotic features). These 3 categories accounted for 92.0% of changes. By logistic regression, diagnostic change was associated with nonaffective psychosis > auditory hallucinations > youth > male sex > gradual onset.
Bipolar I disorder and schizophrenia were more stable diagnoses than delusional disorder or MDD, severe, with psychotic features, and much more than brief psychotic disorder, psychotic disorder NOS, or schizophreniform disorder. Diagnostic changes mainly involved emergence of affective symptoms and were predicted by several premorbid factors. The findings have implications for revisions of DSM and ICD.
由于精神分裂症患者的DSM-IV诊断稳定性需要验证,我们在麦克莱恩-哈佛国际首发项目中对精神分裂症患者进行了系统随访评估。
我们依据基于SCID的标准,在基线和24个月时对517例首次患精神病性疾病住院的患者进行诊断,以评估特定DSM-IV诊断的稳定性。
在完成研究的500例患者(96.7%)中,77.6%的患者诊断保持稳定,排名如下:双相I型障碍(96.5%)>精神分裂症(75.0%)>妄想性障碍(72.7%)>重度伴精神病性特征的重度抑郁症(MDD)(70.1%)>短暂精神病性障碍(61.1%)>未特定的精神病性障碍(NOS)(51.5%)>>精神分裂症样障碍(10.5%)。大多数诊断改变(22.4%的患者)转变为分裂情感性障碍(占12.0%受试者中改变的53.6%,从未特定的精神病性障碍>精神分裂症>精神分裂症样障碍=双相I型障碍最近一次发作混合性、重度伴精神病性特征>MDD、重度伴精神病性特征>妄想性障碍>短暂精神病性障碍>双相I型障碍最近一次发作躁狂性、重度伴精神病性特征)。第二常见的诊断改变是转变为双相I型障碍(占改变的25.9%,占受试者的5.8%,从MDD、重度伴精神病性特征>未特定的精神病性障碍>短暂精神病性障碍>精神分裂症样障碍)。第三常见诊断改变是转变为精神分裂症(占改变的12.5%,占受试者的2.8%,从精神分裂症样障碍>未特定的精神病性障碍>短暂精神病性障碍=妄想性障碍=MDD、重度伴精神病性特征)。这三类占改变的92.0%。通过逻辑回归分析,诊断改变与非情感性精神病>幻听>年轻>男性>起病缓慢有关。
双相I型障碍和精神分裂症的诊断比妄想性障碍或重度伴精神病性特征的MDD更稳定,比短暂精神病性障碍、未特定的精神病性障碍或精神分裂症样障碍稳定得多。诊断改变主要涉及情感症状的出现,并由几个病前因素预测。这些发现对DSM和ICD的修订有启示意义。