Abstract

Schizophrenia is a severe mental disorder that is characterized not only by symptomatic severity but also by high levels of functional impairment. An evaluation of clinical outcome in treatment of schizophrenia should therefore target not only assessing symptom change but also alterations in functioning. This study aimed to investigate whether there is an agreement between functional- and symptom-based outcomes in a clinical sample of admissions with chronic forms of schizophrenia. A full 3-year cohort of consecutive inpatient admissions for schizophrenia (N = 205) was clinically rated with the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS) and the Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS) as measures of functioning at the time of admission and discharge. The sample was stratified twofold: first, according to the degree of PANSS symptom improvement during treatment with the sample being divided into three treatment response groups: non-response, low response, and high response. Second, achievement of remission was defined using the Remission in Schizophrenia Working Group criteria based on selected PANSS symptoms. Repeated measures analyses were used to compare the change of HoNOS scores over time across groups. More than a half of all admissions achieved a symptom reduction of at least 20% during treatment and around one quarter achieved remission at discharge. Similarly, HoNOS scores improved significantly between admission and discharge. Interaction analyses indicated higher functional improvements to be associated with increasing levels of treatment response. Functional improvement in individuals treated for schizophrenia was linked to a better clinical outcome, which implies a functional association. Thus, improvement of functioning represents an important therapeutic target in the treatment of schizophrenia.

Highlights

  • The Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS) [1, 2] have gained increasing attention as general measures for treatment outcome in psychiatric settings [3]

  • All patients who were diagnosed with a schizophrenic psychosis according to the WHO ICD-10 [21] (N = 216) diagnostic criteria were considered for the current study

  • Our study sample consists of N = 205 inpatient admissions for schizophrenic psychosis (39.0% females; mean age = 40.2 ± 12.2 years; range = 17–69)

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Summary

Introduction

The Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS) [1, 2] have gained increasing attention as general measures for treatment outcome in psychiatric settings [3]. The HoNOS were developed to provide brief, accurate, and relevant measures of overall mental health and social functioning for clinical practice [1]. Earlier findings from our study showed that schizophrenic psychotic disorders, compared to other common mental disorders, were related to poorer HoNOS baseline levels [11], as well as to only marginal change over time [12]. Despite an overrepresentation of chronic and schizophrenia patients in the development and validation studies of the HoNOS [13], evidence for the usefulness of the HoNOS as a measure for functional change in outcome monitoring of schizophrenic patients in relation to psychosis-specific measures is still rare. This study aimed to investigate whether there is an agreement between functional- and symptom-based outcomes in a clinical sample of admissions with chronic forms of schizophrenia

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