Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Stony Brook University School of Medicine, NY 11794-8790, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2011 Nov;168(11):1186-94. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2011.11010048. Epub 2011 Jun 15.
Diagnostic shifts have been prospectively examined in the short term, but the long-term stability of diagnoses has rarely been evaluated. The authors examined diagnostic shifts over a 10-year follow-up period.
A cohort of 470 first-admission patients with psychotic disorders was systematically assessed at baseline and at 6-month, 2-year, and 10-year follow-ups. Longitudinal best-estimate consensus diagnoses were formulated after each assessment.
At baseline, the diagnostic distribution was 29.6% schizophrenia spectrum disorders, 21.1% bipolar disorder with psychotic features, 17.0% major depression with psychotic features, 2.4% substance-induced psychosis, and 27.9% other psychoses. At year 10, the distribution changed to 49.8%, 24.0%, 11.1%, 7.0%, and 8.1%, respectively. Overall, diagnoses were changed for 50.7% of study participants at some point during the study. Most participants who were initially diagnosed with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder retained the diagnosis at year 10 (89.2% and 77.8%, respectively). However, 32.0% of participants (N=98) originally given a non-schizophrenia diagnosis had gradually shifted to a schizophrenia diagnosis by year 10. The second largest shift was to bipolar disorder (10.7% of those not given this diagnosis at baseline). Changes in the clinical picture explained many diagnostic shifts. In particular, poorer functioning and greater negative and psychotic symptom ratings predicted a subsequent shift to schizophrenia. Better functioning and lower negative and depressive symptom ratings predicted the shift to bipolar disorder.
First-admission patients with psychotic disorders run the risk of being misclassified at early stages in the illness course, including more than 2 years after first hospitalization. Diagnosis should be reassessed at all follow-up points.
已经前瞻性地检查了短期的诊断转变,但很少评估诊断的长期稳定性。作者检查了 10 年随访期间的诊断转变。
对一组 470 名首次入院的精神病患者进行了队列研究,在基线和 6 个月、2 年和 10 年的随访中进行了系统评估。在每次评估后,制定了纵向最佳估计共识诊断。
在基线时,诊断分布为 29.6%的精神分裂症谱系障碍、21.1%的伴有精神病特征的双相情感障碍、17.0%的伴有精神病特征的重性抑郁障碍、2.4%的物质所致精神障碍和 27.9%的其他精神病。在第 10 年,分布分别变为 49.8%、24.0%、11.1%、7.0%和 8.1%。总体而言,在研究期间的某个时间点,有 50.7%的研究参与者的诊断发生了变化。最初被诊断为精神分裂症或双相情感障碍的大多数参与者在第 10 年仍保留该诊断(分别为 89.2%和 77.8%)。然而,32.0%的参与者(N=98)最初被诊断为非精神分裂症,到第 10 年逐渐转为精神分裂症诊断。其次最大的转变是双相情感障碍(基线时未被诊断为该疾病的患者中有 10.7%)。临床症状的变化解释了许多诊断转变。特别是,较差的功能和更大的阴性和精神病症状评分预测随后会转为精神分裂症。较好的功能和较低的阴性和抑郁症状评分预测转为双相情感障碍。
首次入院的精神病患者在疾病早期存在误诊风险,包括首次住院后 2 年以上。应在所有随访点重新评估诊断。