Abstract

BackgroundPrincipal component analyses (PCA) studies show that schizophrenia symptoms are usually grouped into five domains. However, to infer a latent dimensional structure, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) is more appropriate than PCA. Most CFA studies addressing the five-factor model yielded poor fit indices. One single study achieved a good fit using a multilevel CFA structure with the interviewers as level. Other possible reasons for sample heterogeneity and subsequent poor model adjustments, such as differences in patients’ clinical profiles across clinical units and clinical staging, were not measured in this study. We aimed to replicate the effect of the CFA multilevel analyses and evaluate the possible influence of other heterogeneity sources as levels, i.e., clinical staging, on the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) five-factor structure.Methods700 patients with schizophrenia at four different centers had their PANSS analyzed. A Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) was conducted using the following fit index: Comparative Fit Index (CFI) and Non-Normed Fit Index (NNFI) >0.95, the Root Mean Square Errors of Approximation (RMSEA) <0.06, and Weighted Root Mean Square Residual (WRMR) <1.0. Thereafter, we performed multilevel analyses considering the following levels: i) centers, ii) interviewers and iii) clinical staging for schizophrenia (first episode, treatment-resistant schizophrenia and non-treatment resistant schizophrenia).ResultsThe mean (SD) age was 34.9 (10.3) years, mean age of onset was 21.7 (7.5), mean duration of illness means was 13.2 (9.7) years, and 64.3% of the sample was male. The CFA model without multilevel analyses yielded poor fit indices: RMSEA = 0.102 (90% CI: 0.097 – 0.107; Cfit was <0.001), CFI = 0.921 and NNFI = 0.906 and WRMR = 1.952. When the multilevel analysis was applied, all models reached an acceptable fit: i) centers: RMSEA = 0.044 (90% CI: 0.038 – 0.049; CFit = 0.964), CFI = 0.981, NNFI = 0.977, and WRMR = 1.860; ii) interviewers: RMSEA = 0.047 (90% CI: 0.041 – 0.053; CFit = 0.765), CFI = 0.947, NNFI = 0.938, and WRMR = 1.531; iii) clinical stage: RMSEA = 0.052 (90% CI: 0.046 – 0.058; CFit = 0.274), CFI = 0.988, NNFI = 0.985, and WRMR = 2.433.DiscussionGood CFA model fits were only achieved when the multilevel structure was applied. Besides the bias generated by data collection (i.e., local of data collection and raters), the clinical staging is a potential source of variability to consider in schizophrenia dimensional structure. As dimensional approaches gain relevance to reduce heterogeneity in schizophrenia and to investigate their biological substrates, reliable methods to address latent dimensions are required.

Highlights

  • Individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have symptoms, including social and sensory deficits, and neurobiological alterations that overlap with schizophrenia

  • P300 event-related potentials (ERP) were extracted from ongoing EEG collected at baseline in response to Target and Novel auditory and visual stimuli, each presented on 10% of trials within streams of 80% standard stimuli in the same modality

  • Whereas all CHR individuals who do not convert share a common pattern of attenuated ERP amplitudes reflecting attention allocation to target and novel auditory and visual stimuli, CHR/ASD+ who convert have a unique pattern of globally heightened P300 responses to infrequent novel and target stimuli

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Summary

Background

Late-onset schizophrenia (LOS) differs from early-onset schizophrenia (EOS) in several ways including predominance of women, better premorbid social adjustment and lower severity of positive/negative symptoms. There were no differences between LOS and EOS in the positive, negative, and general scores of PANSS measured at admission and 1 year after. LOS patients had significantly higher score of PANSS N2 item (Emotional withdrawal) both at admission (LOS: 4.00 ± 1.34; EOS: 3.43 ± 1.52) and 1 year after (LOS: 3.50 ± 1.00; EOS: 2.91 ± 1.05) than EOS. On the contrary to previous findings, LOS patients had more severe emotional withdrawal and it was related to worse functioning. This finding may be due to cultural specificity in Korea; further studies with larger samples are needed for confirmation.

Findings
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