Abstract

IntroductionAccumulating evidence for the co-occurrence autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) at both the diagnostic and symptom levels raises important questions about the nature of their association and the effect of their co-occurrence on the individual’s phenotype and functional outcome. Research comparing adults with ASD and SPD, as well as the impact of their co-occurrence on outcomes is extremely limited. We investigated executive functioning in terms of response inhibition and sustained attention, candidate endophenotypes of both conditions, in adults with ASD, SPD, comorbid ASD and SPD, and neurotypical adults using both categorical and dimensional approaches.MethodsA total of 88 adults (Mean Age = 37.54; SD = 10.17): ASD (n = 26; M/F = 20/6); SPD (n = 20; M/F = 14/6); comorbid ASD and SPD (n=9; M/F=6/3) and neurotypicals (n=33; M/F=23/10) completed the Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) in both its fixed and random forms. Positive and autistic symptom severity was assessed with the positive subscale of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSSpos) and the PANSS Autism Severity Score (PAUSS), respectively.ResultsControlling for full scale IQ, working memory and medication dosage, group analyses revealed that the comorbid group committed fewer omission errors than the ASD group on the fixed SART, and fewer omission errors than the ASD and SPD groups on the random SART. The individual difference analyses of the entire sample revealed that the PANSSpos and PAUSS interactively reduced omission errors in both the fixed and random SARTs, as well as increased d’ scores, indicative of improved overall performance. We observed no significant results for commission errors or reaction time.ConclusionsConcurrent elevated levels of autistic and positive psychotic symptoms seem to be associated with improved sustained attention abilities (reduced omission errors) but not inhibition (commission errors). Our findings highlight the importance of investigating the concurrent effect of ASD and SPD at both the symptom and diagnostic levels, and raise important questions for future research regarding the clinical and behavioral phenotypes of adults with dual diagnosis and, more generally, about the nature of the relationship between ASD and SPD.

Highlights

  • Accumulating evidence for the co-occurrence autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) at both the diagnostic and symptom levels raises important questions about the nature of their association and the effect of their co-occurrence on the individual’s phenotype and functional outcome

  • Since we examine sustained attention and inhibition with The Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) [18], our survey of the literature has primarily focused on studies that have utilized this task in particular in both its random and fixed versions

  • Results showed that while the overall performance of the Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and SPD groups on the intra-/extra-dimensional set-shifting (IED) task was worse than the typically developing group, the overall performance of the comorbid ASD and SPD (CM) group was significantly better than the ASD and SPD groups, and not significantly different from the typically developing group

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Summary

Introduction

Accumulating evidence for the co-occurrence autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) at both the diagnostic and symptom levels raises important questions about the nature of their association and the effect of their co-occurrence on the individual’s phenotype and functional outcome. It has been recommended that informing etiological and phenotypic overlaps between ASD and SSD would require the utilization of a dual-diagnosis cohort compared with two control groups, each singly diagnosed with ASD or SSD [11], and that the development of a multidimensional model for understanding the relationship between these two spectra would require cohorts to be described not solely by diagnosis, and by using dimensional measures that cut across diagnostic boundaries [11,12,13,14] To fill in this gap, the current study investigated executive functioning in terms of response inhibition and sustained attention in adults with ASD, SPD, comorbid ASD and SPD (CM), and neurotypical adults using both categorical and dimensional approaches

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