Abstract

BackgroundThis twin study investigated whether autistic traits during childhood were associated with adolescent psychotic experiences.MethodsData were collected from a community sample of approximately 5000 twin pairs, which included 32 individuals with diagnosed autism spectrum conditions (ASC). Parents rated autistic traits in the twins at four points between ages 8–16 years. Positive, negative, and cognitive psychotic experiences were assessed at age 16 years using self- and parent-report scales. Longitudinal twin analyses tested the associations between these measures.ResultsAutistic traits correlated weakly or nonsignificantly with positive psychotic experiences (paranoia, hallucinations, and grandiosity), and modestly with cognitive psychotic experiences (cognitive disorganisation). Higher correlations were observed for parent-rated negative symptoms and self-reported anhedonia, although the proportion of variance in both accounted for by autistic traits was low (10 and 31 %, respectively). The majority of the genetic influences on negative symptoms and anhedonia were independent of autistic traits. Additionally, individuals with ASC displayed significantly more negative symptoms, anhedonia, and cognitive disorganisation than controls.ConclusionsAutistic traits do not appear to be strongly associated with psychotic experiences in adolescence; associations were also largely restricted to negative symptoms. Of note, the degree to which the genetic and environmental causes of autistic traits influenced psychotic experiences was limited. These findings thus support a phenotypic and etiological distinction between autistic traits and psychotic experiences.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13229-015-0037-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • This twin study investigated whether autistic traits during childhood were associated with adolescent psychotic experiences

  • All other estimates were modest (.00–.21); only negative symptoms and anhedonia were included in twin-model fitting

  • The MZ crosstrait cross-twin correlations between negative symptoms and autistic traits, and anhedonia and autistic traits were higher than the DZ estimates

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Summary

Introduction

This twin study investigated whether autistic traits during childhood were associated with adolescent psychotic experiences. While historically viewed as childhood schizophrenia, evidence on psychotic disorders in individuals with ASC is mixed. While some studies report a very low prevalence of psychotic disorders amongst individuals with ASC [2,3,4], others have reported prevalence as high as 13 % [5]. Psychotic experiences are milder manifestations of psychotic symptoms that commonly present in adolescence [6,7,8,9]. While evidence on clinical psychotic disorders in individuals with ASC is inconsistent, psychotic experiences appear relatively commonly in individuals with ASC [10, 11].

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