Author/Authors :
Maarten Bak، نويسنده , , Marjan Drukker، نويسنده , , Jim Van Os، نويسنده , , Philippe Delespaul، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background The comorbidity bias predicts
that if disease definition is based on observations of
patients in the hospital, spurious comorbidity of psychopathological
dimensions that increase the probability
of hospital admission will be included in the
disease concept, whereas comorbid dimensions that
are not associated with admission will be excluded.
The direction of any dimensional comorbidity bias in
psychotic illness was assessed in a longitudinal analysis
of the psychopathology of patients assessed both inside
and outside the hospital. Method Four hundred and
eighty patients with broadly defined psychotic disorders
were assessed between one and nine times (median
two times) over a 5-year period with, amongst
others, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale. Dimensional
comorbidities between positive symptoms, negative
symptoms, depression/anxiety, and manic excitement
were compared, in addition to their associations with
current and future admission status. Results Higher
levels of psychopathology in all symptom domains
were associated with both current and future hospital
admissions. Associations between the positive, negative,
and manic symptom domains were higher for
patients in the hospital than for patients outside the
hospital, in particular, between positive symptoms and
manic excitement (β=0.28, p<0.001). However, associations
between depression and other symptom domains
were higher in out-patients as compared to
in-patients (positive symptoms and depression, β=
−0.26; p<0.002). Conclusion The current analyses suggest
that, to the extent that disease concepts of psychosis
do not take into account effects of dimensional
comorbidity biases occasioned by differential psychopathology
according to treatment setting, “florid”
psychotic psychopathology may be overrepresented,
whereas depressive symptoms may be spuriously
excluded