Abstract

BackgroundBehavioral phenotypical continua from health to disease suggest common underlying mechanisms with quantitative rather than qualitative differences. Until recently, autism spectrum disorders and schizophrenia were considered distinct nosologic entities. However, emerging evidence contributes to the blurring of symptomatic and genetic boundaries between these conditions. The present study aimed at quantifying behavioral phenotypes shared by autism spectrum disorders and schizophrenia to prepare the ground for biological pathway analyses.MethodsSpecific items of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale were employed and summed up to form a dimensional autism severity score (PAUSS). The score was created in a schizophrenia sample (N = 1156) and validated in adult high-functioning autism spectrum disorder (ASD) patients (N = 165). To this end, the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS), the Autism (AQ) and Empathy Quotient (EQ) self-rating questionnaires were applied back to back with the newly developed PAUSS.ResultsPAUSS differentiated between ASD, schizophrenia and a disease-control sample and substantially correlated with the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule. Patients with ADOS scores ≥12 obtained highest, those with scores <7 lowest PAUSS values. AQ and EQ were not found to vary dependent on ADOS diagnosis. ROC curves for ADOS and PAUSS resulted in AuC values of 0.9 and 0.8, whereas AQ and EQ performed at chance level in the prediction of ASD.ConclusionsThis work underscores the convergence of schizophrenia negative symptoms and autistic phenotypes. PAUSS evolved as a measure capturing the continuous nature of autistic behaviors. The definition of extreme-groups based on the dimensional PAUSS may permit future investigations of genetic constellations modulating autistic phenotypes.

Highlights

  • Behavioral phenotypical continua from health to disease suggest common underlying mechanisms with quantitative rather than qualitative differences

  • Schizophrenia patients scoring above the last percentile of the PANSS autism severity score (PAUSS) distribution (PAUSS 30-52; referred to as ‘autistic schizophrenia patients’) scored higher than autism spectrum disorder (ASD) patients who were more severely impaired than non-autistic schizophrenia

  • As Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS) scores have been shown to be influenced by age and the intellectual functioning of a given subject [35], we evaluated correlations of ADOS and PAUSS with age and the estimated total

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Summary

Introduction

Behavioral phenotypical continua from health to disease suggest common underlying mechanisms with quantitative rather than qualitative differences. Autism spectrum disorders and schizophrenia were considered distinct nosologic entities. Sub-threshold deficits in social communication and restricted interests which do not meet formal criteria for an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) can be found in the general population [1,2,3,4]. Genetic risk factors simultaneously associate with several psychiatric diseases [13,14,15] This reflects their modulating individual behavioral phenotypes instead of diagnostic categories

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