Abstract

Prodromal Questionnaire (PQ) and Structured Interview for Prodromal Syndromes (SIPS) have been used as a two-stage process for identifying subjects at clinical high risk (CHR) of psychosis. The Prodromal Questionnaire-Brief version (PQ-B) contains 21 items derived from the PQ. The present study aimed to examine the psychometric properties of PQ-B in a Chinese help-seeking outpatient sample and to explore which items can better predict CHR diagnosis by SIPS and future transition to psychosis. In our preliminary epidemiological study, 1461 patients from a pool of 2101 individuals (15–45 years of age) completed the two-stage process. In the present study, 239 (20%) people were randomly selected among the sample who met the initial PQ-B screening criteria but had no positive diagnosis on SIPS, as well as 72 individuals with negative results on both PQ-B and SIPS, 89 prodromal and 105 psychotic subjects, yielding a total of 505 participants. The internal consistency coefficient for the PQ-B was good, with a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.897. The concordant validity of PQ-B with SIPS dichotomized diagnosis of prodrome/psychosis versus no psychosis was 0.54. To ensure 80% or a higher sensitivity and a certain specificity, 7 and 24 were respectively set as the cutoff points for the PQ-B total score and distress score for Chinese help-seeking outpatients. A logistic regression model based on six PQ-B items could allow predicting the psychotic diagnosis on SIPS, with an accuracy of 65.8%. Prodromal individuals who scored higher on the 12th item of PQ-B (Do you worry at times that something may be wrong with your mind?) were less likely to convert to psychosis. PQ-B is a useful instrument for screening CHR subjects, but the cutoff score may be higher than that recommended by the author scores for help-seeking individuals in outpatient clinics. Some specific PQ-B items may have significant predictive power on dichotomized SIPS diagnoses and deserve special attention from researchers in future studies.

Highlights

  • Study of psychosis risk syndromes has been based on research of early symptoms of schizophrenia[1]

  • The results showed that the Prodromal Questionnaire (PQ)-B possessed significant evaluative values with 80.7% AUC [95% Confidence Interval (CI): 0.769–0.846] for the total score and 81.1% for the distress score

  • Like previous studies[16, 21,22,23], our study showed that Prodromal Questionnaire-Brief Version (PQ-B) is a useful first-step instrument with good psychometric properties in the two-stage process for identifying subjects with prodromal psychosis

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Summary

Introduction

Study of psychosis risk syndromes has been based on research of early symptoms of schizophrenia[1]. Their study demonstrated that 73% of patients with schizophrenia underwent a prodromal phase, which lasted 5 years on average before the development of a full psychotic disorder. During the prodromal phase[3, 4], the so-called “ultra high risk” for psychosis, most of the patients experienced an emergence of sub-clinical psychotic symptoms and gradual functional decline, which were the main reasons for patient distress. These patients suffered distress and they were aware of their mental state, and usually sought help[1, 5]. Our previous epidemiological study[6] showed that most prodromal individuals were diagnosed with mood or anxiety disorders

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