Kirkbride James B, Hameed Yasir, Ankireddypalli Gayatri, Ioannidis Konstantinos, Crane Carolyn M, Nasir Mukhtar, Kabacs Nikolett, Metastasio Antonio, Jenkins Oliver, Espandian Ashkan, Spyridi Styliani, Ralevic Danica, Siddabattuni Suneetha, Walden Ben, Adeoye Adewale, Perez Jesus, Jones Peter B
From the PsyLife Group, Division of Psychiatry, UCL, London; the Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; the Norfolk & Suffolk Foundation Trust, Norwich, Norfolk, United Kingdom; the North Essex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, Chelmsford, Essex, United Kingdom; and the Cambridgeshire & Peterborough Foundation Trust, and NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) East of England, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom.
Am J Psychiatry. 2017 Feb 1;174(2):143-153. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2016.16010103. Epub 2016 Oct 24.
Few studies have characterized the epidemiology of first-episode psychoses in rural or urban settings since the introduction of early intervention psychosis services. To address this, the authors conducted a naturalistic cohort study in England, where such services are well established.
All new first-episode psychosis cases, 16-35 years old, presenting to early intervention psychosis services in the East of England were identified during 2 million person-years follow-up. Presence of ICD-10 F10-33 psychotic disorder was confirmed using OPCRIT [operational criteria for psychotic illness]. Incidence rate ratios were estimated following multivariable Poisson regression, adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, neighborhood-level deprivation, and population density.
Of 1,005 referrals, 687 participants (68.4%) fulfilled epidemiological and diagnostic criteria for first-episode psychosis (34.0 new cases per 100,000 person-years; 95% CI=31.5-36.6). Median age at referral was similar for men (22.5 years; interquartile range: 19.5-26.7) and women (23.4 years; interquartile range: 19.5-29.1); incidence rates were highest for men and women before 20 years of age. Rates increased for ethnic minority groups (incidence rate ratio: 1.4; 95% CI=1.1-1.6), as well as with lower socioeconomic status (incidence rate ratio: 1.3; 95% CI=1.2-1.4) and in more urban (incidence rate ratio: 1.4;95%CI=1.0-1.8) and deprived (incidence rate ratio: 2.1; 95% CI=1.3-3.3) neighborhoods, after adjustment for confounders.
Pronounced variation in psychosis incidence, peaking before 20 years old, exists in populations served by early intervention psychosis services. Excess rates were restricted to urban and deprived communities, suggesting that a threshold of socioenvironmental adversity may be necessary to increase incidence. This robust epidemiology can inform service development in various settings about likely population-level need.
自早期干预精神病服务引入以来,很少有研究描述农村或城市环境中首发精神病的流行病学特征。为解决这一问题,作者在英国开展了一项自然队列研究,该国此类服务已相当成熟。
在200万人年的随访期间,识别出所有16至35岁、前往英格兰东部早期干预精神病服务机构就诊的新首发精神病病例。使用OPCRIT[精神病性疾病操作标准]确认是否存在ICD-10 F10-33精神病性障碍。在多变量泊松回归分析中估计发病率比,并对年龄、性别、种族、社会经济地位、社区层面的贫困程度和人口密度进行调整。
在1005例转诊病例中,687名参与者(68.4%)符合首发精神病的流行病学和诊断标准(每10万人年34.0例新病例;95%置信区间=31.5-36.6)。男性(22.5岁;四分位间距:19.5-26.7)和女性(23.4岁;四分位间距:19.5-29.1)转诊时的中位年龄相似;20岁之前男性和女性的发病率最高。在调整混杂因素后,少数族裔群体的发病率有所上升(发病率比:1.4;95%置信区间=1.1-1.6),社会经济地位较低者(发病率比:1.3;95%置信区间=1.2-1.4)以及城市地区(发病率比:1.4;95%置信区间=1.0-1.8)和贫困地区(发病率比:2.1;95%置信区间=1.3-3.3)的发病率也有所上升。
在接受早期干预精神病服务的人群中,精神病发病率存在显著差异,在20岁之前达到峰值。发病率过高仅限于城市和贫困社区,这表明可能需要一定程度的社会环境逆境阈值来提高发病率。这种稳健的流行病学情况可为不同环境下的服务发展提供有关可能的人群层面需求的信息。