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Title: Schizophrenia Prediction and Prevention: What Do We Know?


1
Schizophrenia Prediction and Prevention What Do
We Know?
  • Puru Thapa, M.D., M.P.H.
  • Associate Professor
  • Department of Psychiatry, UAMS
  • Staff Psychiatrist, Arkansas State Hospital
  • 03/15/2014

2
Objectives
  • Review definition, epidemiology and etiology of
    schizophrenia
  • Understand the concept of levels of preventions
  • Critically review the strategies of prevention in
    schizophrenia and evidence
  • Consider future directions

3
Schizophrenia
  • Syndrome characterized by psychosis and
    dysfunction and probably the most devastating
    mental illness with great distress to the
    individual and families with heavy costs and
    burden to society
  • Treated with antipsychotics and psychosocial
    support and rehab

4
Schizophrenia DSM-5 Criteria
  • Two (or more) of the following, each present for
    a significant portion of time during a 1-month
    period (or less if successfully treated). At
    least one of these must be (1), (2), or (3)
  • 1 Delusions
  • 2 Hallucinations
  • 3 Disorganized speech
  • 4 Disorganized or catatonic behavior
  • 5 Negative symptoms
  • Social/occupational dysfunction

5
Schizophrenia DSM-5 Criteria
  • Duration continuous signs persist for at least
    six months
  • Exclude schizoaffective or mood disorder
  • Exclude general medical condition or substance
    induced
  • Relationship to a pervasive developmental disorder

6
Schizophrenia - Costs
  • Cost of Schizophrenia in the US in 2002
  • Direct Costs 30.3 billion dollars
  • Indirect Costs 32.4 billion dollars
  • Total Costs 62.7 billion dollars
  • Mental anguish/distress to individuals affected
    and to families
  • Wu EQ and colleagues, J Clin Psych
    2005661122-1129

7
Schizophrenia - Epidemiology
  • Life time prevalence approximately 1
  • Incidence estimated .01 to .02
  • Risk slightly higher in males than females
  • Age of onset males 15-25 years, females 25-35
    years

8
Phases of Schizophrenia
  • Premorbid
  • Contributes to vulnerability to schizophrenia
  • Prodromal
  • Change from premorbid functioning and extends
    time of onset of frank psychotic symptoms
  • Average length 2 5 years
  • Impairment in psychosocial functioning
  • Psychotic
  • Onset of frank psychotic symptoms
  • Acute phase, Early recovery phase (first 6 months
    after acute treatment), Late recovery phase (6-18
    months)
  • Period following recovery from first episode up
    to 5 years is Critical Period for up to 80
    relapse

9
Prodrome
  • Early prodromal symptoms non-specific sleep
    disturbance, anxiety, irritability, depressed
    mood, poor concentration and fatigue, and
    behavioral symptoms, such as deterioration in
    role functioning and social withdrawal
  • Late prodromal symptoms positive symptoms, such
    as perceptual abnormalities, ideas of reference,
    and suspiciousness herald imminent onset of
    psychosis
  • Prodrome really based on retrospective
    reconstruction

10
Schizophrenia - Etiology
  • Etiology unknown can be conceptualized as a
    clinical syndrome that is the final common
    pathway of multiple different etio-pathogenetic
    processes. Similar to concept of Congestive
    Heart Failure or Nephrotic Syndrome
  • Neurodevelopmental factors during perinatal
    period, genetics
  • Neurodegenerative
  • Other factors season of birth, paternal age,
    diet during pregnancy, obstetrical complications,
    etc.
  • Stress-Diathesis Model of disease causation

11
Stress-Diathesis Model
  • Diathesis Inherited vulnerability bad genes
  • Stress Environmental insult physical,
    emotional, environmental
  • This model offers our best explanation of
    schizophrenia cause

12
Genes/Environment
  • Genetic predisposition
  • 1 parent with schizophrenia
    12
  • Both parents
    40
  • Dizygotic twin of schizophrenia patient 12
  • Monozygotic twin 47
  • Environmental
  • Intrauterine trauma? (physical, drugs, etc)
  • Later trauma or stress? Often the 1st psychotic
    break happens during a stressful period such as
    going away to college, military, etc.

13
Challenges in Prevention of Schizophrenia
  • Disorder with unclear etiology
  • No objective marker or test to diagnosis
  • Rare disease
  • Antecedent factors and prodromal symptoms are not
    specific high number of false positives

14
Predictive Value
Gold Standard
Without Disease
With Disease
Test Results
True Positive (TP)
False Positive (FP)
Positive
Negative
False Negative (FN)
True Negative (TN)
PPV TP/(TPFP) or a/(ab) 80/(80100) 44
NPV TN/(FNTN) or d/(cd) 800/(80020) 98
15
Epidemiology and Prevention
  • To identify high-risk subgroups in population
  • Why?
  • Identification of high risk groups may identify
    modifiable risk factors.
  • Can direct preventive efforts at such groups
    such as screening programs for early detection of
    disease

16
Levels of Prevention
  • Primary
  • Prevention of disease by altering susceptibility
    or reducing exposure for susceptible individuals
  • e.g., immunization, exercise
  • Secondary
  • Early detection and treatment of disease
  • e.g., breast cancer screening, screening for
    disease (occult blood in stool for
    colon cancer)
  • Tertiary
  • Limitation of disability and rehabilitation
  • Alleviation of disability resulting from disease
    and attempts to restore function (Post-stroke
    rehabilitation)
  • Prevention can be population-based or high risk
    group approach

17
Primary Prevention of Schizophrenia
  • Limited understanding about etiology and
    pathogenesis of schizophrenia
  • Long latency between primary insult and onset of
    schizophrenia
  • Much research ongoing but not currently feasible

18
Tertiary Prevention
  • Tertiary prevention reducing the burden of
    disease by optimizing treatment and
    rehabilitation and reducing relapse
  • In Schizophrenia, with tertiary prevention if
    remission rates increase, then prevalence may
    fall with lower burden
  • Very important to address but disease has already
    manifest

19
Secondary Prevention
  • Secondary prevention - modify course of illness
    by early detection, intervention and possibly
    prevention
  • Potentially feasible through intervention at the
    prodromal phase
  • Aim is to reduce full transition from prodromal
    to schizophrenia
  • Interventions could
  • Delay onset of illness
  • Mitigate profile of illness to milder or less
    disabling
  • Hope is to reduce cost and burden of disease

20
  • How Do We Define the Population to Target for
    Secondary Prevention?

21
Genetically Vulnerable Population
  • Research has focused on genetically vulnerable
    individuals
  • Unable to identify which individuals within
    genetic high-risk group will eventually develop
    schizophrenia with sufficient predictive value to
    justify intervention
  • Problem with this approach is that of low
    sensitivity since nearly 80 of affected
    individuals with schizophrenia have no 1st degree
    relatives and nearly 60 have negative family
    history

22
Factors Predicting Schizophrenia Spectrum
Outcomes in Offsprings of Schizophrenia Patients
  • Maternal influenza during gestation
  • Obstetrical complications
  • Neurointegrative deficits in infancy
  • Separation during first year of life
  • Social, affective, and motor coordination
    deficits in early childhood
  • Social dysfunction in later childhood
  • Attention deficits, neuribehavioral deficits and
    poor motor coordination in preadolescence
  • Teacher rated timidity and day dreaming behaviors
    at age 15 years
  • Absence of protective family environment

23
  • Prodromal Phase Focus of Intervention

24
Why Intervention in Prodromal Phase?
  • Neurobiological deficit processes associated with
    severity and chronicity with schizophrenia are
    already present at time of first episode
  • Evidence suggests early treatment can result in
    significant reduction in morbidity and better
    quality of life
  • DUP Duration of untreated psychosis is defined
    as time between onset of first psychotic symptoms
    and first adequate treatment
  • Average DUP is 1 2 years
  • Longer DUP associated with male gender, poor
    premorbid functioning, insidious onset of
    psychosis, and presence of negative symptoms
  • A review of 25 DUP studies showed two thirds of
    them had better outcome on one or more measures
    for shorter DUP and none showed better outcomes
    with longer DUP

25
Why Intervention in Prodromal Phase?
  1. Treatment in prodrome may prevent or delay onset
  2. Important to treatment prodromal symptoms
    themselves to relieve distress for parents and
    families

26
Specialized Early Intervention Programs
  • PACE Personal Assessment and Crisis Evaluation
    clinic, Melbourne, Australia
  • RAP Hillside Recognition and Prevention
    Program, NY
  • EDIE Early Detection and Intervention
    Evaluation Program, Manchester, UK
  • PRIME Prevention through Risk Identification,
    Management, and Education Program, Yale Univ, CT
  • CARE Cognitive Assessment and Risk Evaluation
    Clinic in San Diego, CA

27
Prevention Strategies
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Cognitive/Cognitive Behavior Therapy
  • Case Management

28
McGorry et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
200259921-928
  • Design Single blind (researchers) randomized
    controlled trial comparing two treatments in 59
    patients (age 14-30 years) at ultra-high risk
  • Interventions
  • Needs Based (focus on needs based supportive
    therapy re social, family issues, case
    management) vs
  • Specific Preventive (Needs Based and low dose
    risperidone and cognitive behavior therapy)
  • Outcome progression to frank psychosis lasting a
    week or more
  • Treatment duration 6 months. After this all
    patients were offered Needs Based Intervention.
  • Assessment at baseline, 6 months, 12 months

29
Note 43 of 59 (73) did not progress to
psychosis at 12 months
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McGorry et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
200259921-928
  • Number Needed to Treat (NNT) 4. (NNT 13 for
    antihypertensives to prevent stroke)
  • In other words, 4 ultra-high risk patients would
    need to be treated to prevent 1 patient from
    progressing to psychosis over a 6 month period
  • Conclusions Specific pharmacotherapy and
    psychotherapy reduces risk of early transition to
    psychosis in these patients but unclear which
    modality more contributory
  • Ethical dilemma 73 did not transition to
    psychosis. Is using AP justified?

32
Potential Benefits of Prepsychotic Interventions.
McGorry et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
200259921-928
  • Patients more easily engaged and can receive
    treatments regardless of whether preventive
    treatment may be ineffective or unnecessary
  • Those who progress to psychosis have developed a
    level of trust enabling them to accept treatment,
    have minimal DUP and reduced comorbidity
  • Psychosocial impact of psychosis may be
    diminished and better chance to recover

33
McGlashan et al. Am J Psychiatry. 2006163790-799
  • Design Double blind randomized controlled trial
    comparing two treatments in 59 patients (age
    14-30 years) at ultra-high risk
  • Interventions
  • Olanzapine (Dose 5-15 mg/d) N31
  • Placebo N29
  • Outcome progression to frank psychosis
  • Treatment duration 1 year a second year of
    follow-up with no treatment

34
At one year, 16.1 of olanzapine and 37.9 of
placebo converted to psychosis (p.08).
Olanzapine group had more improvement in
symptoms. At two years, most were lost to
follow-up but of remaining no difference
35
McGlashan et al. Am J Psychiatry. 2006163790-799
  • Treatment difference not significant
  • Olanzapine group had improvement in symptoms
  • Major side effect of olanzapine GUESS?
  • Authors admit study had low power - they tried
    to recruit more subjects but were not successful

36
Cornblatt et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
200768(4)546-557
  • Design Prospective naturalistic treatment study
    of adolescents (mean age 15.8 years) considered
    to be prodromal (i.e., prepsychotic)
  • Interventions
  • Antidepressants (N20)
  • Second generation antipsychotics (N28)
  • Outcome progression to frank psychosis defined
    as a score of 6 in any 1 of 5 positive symptom
    scale of the SOPS (Scale of Prodromal Symptoms)
    lasting 2 weeks or more
  • Treatment duration at least 6 months (mean
    duration 30.5 months).
  • Recognition and Prevention Program (RAP), Zucker
    Hillside Hospital, NY

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Cornblatt et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
200768(4)546-557
  • Results
  • 12 of 48 subjects (25) converted to psychosis
  • 0 from the AD group (N20)
  • 12 (43) from the AP group (N28)
  • BUT, 11 of 12 converters were non-adherent to
    the AP

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Cornblatt et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
200768(4)546-557
  • Non-random assignment limits comparison of AD
    with AP
  • But number of adolescents with prodromal features
    did well on AD
  • True prevention or False Positive? Underscores
    retrospective nature of prodrome and challenge in
    prevention.

42
  • Van Os J, Delespaul P. Toward a world consensus
    on prevention of schizophrenia. Dialogues in
    Clinical Neuroscience. 2005 753-67.

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53
Challenges
  • Unclear understanding of disease and lack of
    better early identification of high risk
    individuals with lower false positives.
    Promising research describing better
    endophenotypes.
  • Stigma especially relevant because of high
    degree of false positives
  • Lack of resources

54
Conclusions
  • Primary prevention of schizophrenia continues to
    be elusive because of our inadequate
    understanding of etiology resulting in high
    degree of false positives
  • Selective intervention shows promise but use of
    pharmacotherapy for prevention still not
    established
  • Have to consider issues of stigma and public
    awareness and education
  • Lack of resources for preventive activity

55
Bibliography
  • Brown AS, McGrath JJ. The Prevention of
    Schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Bulletin. 2011
    37(2)257-261.
  • Brown AS, Patterson PH. Maternal Infection and
    Schizophrenia Implications for Prevention.
    Schizophrenia Bulletin. 2011 37(2)284-290.
  • Cornblatt BA, Lencz T, Smith CW et al. Can
    antidepressants be used to treat the
    schizophrenia prodrome? Results of a prospective,
    naturalistic treatment study of adolescents.
    Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 2007 68546-557.
  • Cornblatt BA, Auther AM. Treating early
    Psychosis who, what, and when? Dialogues in
    Clinical Neuroscience. 2005 7(1)39-49
  • Kirkbridge JB, Jones PB. The Prevention of
    Schizophrenia- What Can We Learn From
    Eco-Epidemiology? Schizophrenia Bulletin. 2011
    37(2)262-271.
  • Knapp M, Mangalore R, Simon J. The global costs
    of schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Bulletin. 2004
    30(2)279-293.

56
Bibliography
  • Lee C, McGlashan TH, Woods SW. Prevention of
    Schizophrenia Can it be achieved? CNS Drugs.
    2005 19(3)193-206.
  • McEvoy JP. The costs of schizophrenia. Journal
    of Clinical Psychiatry, 2007 68 (suppl 14) 4-7.
  • McGlashan TH, Zipursky RB, Perkins D et al.
    Randomized, double-blind trial of olanzapine
    versus placebo in patients prodromally
    symptomatic for psychosis. American Journal of
    Psychiatry. 2006 163790-799.
  • McGorry PD, Killackey E, Yung AR. Early
    intervention in psychotic disorders detection
    and treatment of the first episode and the
    critical early stages. The Medical Journal of
    Australia. 2007 187(7 suppl)S8-S10.
  • McGorry PD, Yung AR, Phillips LJ et al.
    Randomized controlled trial of interventions
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    first episode psychosis in a clinical sample with
    subthreshold symptoms. Archives of General
    Psychiatry. 2002 59921-928.

57
Bibliography
  • Tsuang MT, Stone WS, Auster TL. Prevention of
    schizophrenia. Expert review of
    Neurotherapeutics. 2010 10(7)1165-1174.
  • Van Os J, Delespaul P. Toward a world consensus
    on prevention of schizophrenia. Dialogues in
    Clinical Neuroscience. 2005 753-67.
  • Wu EQ, Birnbaum HG, Shi L et al. The economic
    burden of schizophrenia in the United States in
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    661122-1129. McGrath JJ, Brown AS, St Clair D.
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  • Yung AR, Killackey E, Hetrick SE et al. The
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