Abstract
Introduction: Approximately 10% of patients with psychotic disorders receive the diagnosis “Psychotic disorder not otherwise specified” (PNOS). However, there is a lack of knowledge about the clinical presentations captured by this diagnosis in the mental health services. Therefore, we examined the symptom profiles of participants with PNOS compared to participants with bipolar disorder (BD) and schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SZ) diagnoses.Methods: We here included 1,221 participants from the Thematically Organized Psychosis-study at Oslo University Hospital; 792 with SZ, 283 with BD, and 146 with PNOS, assessed with SCID-I for DSM-IV. The participants with PNOS were categorized into subgroups based on SCID information. The GAF, PANSS, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), and Drug Use Disorders Identification Test (DUDIT) were used to assess function, clinical symptoms, and substance use.Results: In the PNOS group, 44% did not meet the criteria for any specific psychotic disorder, 35.5% had contradictory information making a specific diagnosis difficult, and 20.5% had inadequate information to make a specific diagnosis. The most frequent reason for a PNOS diagnosis was difficulty ruling out a substance-induced psychotic disorder (n = 41, 28%). Participants with PNOS were younger and more often first-episode than participants with BD and SZ. They were intermediate between BD and SZ for GAF scores (BD>PNOS>SZ) and PANSS scores (BD<PNOS<SZ) and more often scored above the clinical cut-off for substance misuse as measured by the AUDIT (BD = PNOS<SZ), DUDIT (BD = SZ<PNOS) and for the combination of both these measures.Conclusions: A PNOS diagnosis is more common in first-episode than in multi-episode patients. The diagnosis captures a heterogeneous group of psychotic syndromes, with a severity of symptoms and functional loss that is intermediate between BD and SZ.
Highlights
10% of patients with psychotic disorders receive the diagnosis “Psychotic disorder not otherwise specified” (PNOS)
A higher proportion of participants with PNOS were diagnosed with a current substance use disorders (SUD) compared to participants both with bipolar spectrum disorders (BD) and with SZ
Our study demonstrates that there is a need for a diagnostic category such as PNOS in categorically based diagnostic systems to capture the different psychotic syndromes not meeting the criteria for the specific diagnoses of SZ or BD
Summary
10% of patients with psychotic disorders receive the diagnosis “Psychotic disorder not otherwise specified” (PNOS). Diagnostic instability, along with shorter duration of illness [3] in patients with PNOS, indicates that the diagnosis is used more frequently in the early stages of psychosis, before the full clinical picture of the disorder has developed. About one-third retain the diagnosis of PNOS several years after the onset of illness [2, 4]. This may imply, that in addition to these not fully developed features of classical psychotic disorders, PNOS may capture “fully developed” psychotic conditions that fail to meet the current diagnostic criteria for SZ or BD
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