Author:
Maziade Michel,Gingras Nathalie,Rodrigue Caroune,Bouchard Stéphane,Cardinal Andrée,Gauthier Benoît,Tremblay Guy,Côté Serge,Fournier Christiane,Boutin Pierrette,Hamel Martin,Roy Marc-André,Martinez Maria,Mérette Chantal
Abstract
BackgroundLittle is known about the long-term outcome of schizophrenia that has its onset during childhood and early adolescence (early-onset schizophrenia, or EO-SZ). Whether or not EO-SZ is an aetiologically separate form of schizophrenia (SZ) is unresolved.MethodThe study was a 14.8-year follow-up, using methods such as systematic sampling, evaluation of possible non-respondent bias, consensus best-estimate diagnoses (DSM–III–R) made independently in childhood and adulthood, measures of positive and negative dimensions, of non-psychotic behaviour disturbances (NPBD) and of developmental problems before the appearance of SZ.ResultsThere was high stability of EO-SZ (n=40) diagnoses (mean onset at 14.0 years) until adulthood (mean age at follow-up 28.8 years) but a lower stability of positive and negative schizophrenic dimensions. There was a poor outcome of EO-SZ, a strong over-representation of males but few gender differences, and no effect of age of onset on clinical features and outcome.ConclusionsEO-SZ taken as a whole shows no qualitative differences to adult-onset SZ. However, a distinction through the onset of preschizophrenic developmental problems or NPBD might be a way to investigate heterogeneity within EO-SZ.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
61 articles.
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