Abstract

IntroductionCognitive insight was shown to be impaired in schizophrenia while its high level predicts improvement of psychotic symptoms. However, later studies demonstrated that in other mental disorders and healthy subjects cognitive insight might play ambiguous role being related to anxiety and lack of self-confidence.ObjectivesDevelopment of clinical criteria for high and ultra-high risk for psychosis allows to study the role of cognitive insight in these patients.AimsThe aim was to examine the role of cognitive insight in different clinical groups of youth with ultra-high risk for psychosis.MethodsSeventy-six male patients 16–25 years old with non-psychotic mental disorders (with preliminary diagnoses of mood disorders – 30, personality disorders – 25, schizotypal disorder – 21 patients) meeting criteria of ultra-high risk for psychosis and 55 healthy male controls filled Beck Cognitive Insight Scale, Symptom Checklist 90-R. The Scale of Prodromal Symptoms was used twice upon hospitalization and after 1-month period.ResultsModeration analysis reveals that in patients with preliminary diagnoses of mood disorders and schizotypal disorder cognitive insight is related to higher anxiety and obsessiveness and to poorer improvement on SOPS and positive symptoms. In patients with symptoms of personality disorders, it predicts better symptoms improvement.ConclusionsResults demonstrate importance of differentiation of the functions of cognitive insight in different patients with ultra-high risk for psychosis both in clinical psychological assessments and CBT.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

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