Person: Sánchez Torres, Ana María
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Sánchez Torres
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Ana María
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Ciencias de la Salud
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Publication Open Access Long-term diagnostic stability, predictors of diagnostic change, and time until diagnostic change of first-episode psychosis: a 21-year follow-up study(Cambridge University Press, 2023-11-21) Peralta, David; Janda-Galán, Lucía; García de Jalón, Elena; Moreno-Izco, Lucía; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Cuesta, Manuel J.; Peralta Martín, Víctor; SEGPEPs Group; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakBackground Although diagnostic instability in first-episode psychosis (FEP) is of major concern, little is known about its determinants. This very long-term follow-up study aimed to examine the diagnostic stability of FEP diagnoses, the baseline predictors of diagnostic change and the timing of diagnostic change. Methods This was a longitudinal and naturalistic study of 243 subjects with FEP who were assessed at baseline and reassessed after a mean follow-up of 21 years. The diagnostic stability of DSM-5 psychotic disorders was examined using prospective and retrospective consistencies, logistic regression was used to establish the predictors of diagnostic change, and survival analysis was used to compare time to diagnostic change across diagnostic categories. Results The overall diagnostic stability was 47.7%. Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder were the most stable diagnoses, with other categories having low stability. Predictors of diagnostic change to schizophrenia included a family history of schizophrenia, obstetric complications, developmental delay, poor premorbid functioning in several domains, long duration of untreated continuous psychosis, spontaneous dyskinesia, lack of psychosocial stressors, longer duration of index admission, and poor early treatment response. Most of these variables also predicted diagnostic change to bipolar disorder but in the opposite direction and with lesser effect sizes. There were no significant differences between specific diagnoses regarding time to diagnostic change. At 10-year follow-up, around 80% of the diagnoses had changed. Conclusions FEP diagnoses other than schizophrenia or bipolar disorder should be considered as provisional. Considering baseline predictors of diagnostic change may help to enhance diagnostic accuracy and guide therapeutic interventions.Publication Open Access Long-term outcomes of first-admission psychosis: a naturalistic 21-year follow-up study of symptomatic, functional and personal recovery and their baseline predictors(Oxford University Press, 2022) Peralta Martín, Víctor; García de Jalón, Elena; Moreno-Izco, Lucía; Peralta, David; Janda-Galán, Lucía; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Cuesta, Manuel J.; SEGPEPs Group; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakThis study was aimed at characterizing long-term outcomes of first-admission psychosis and examining their baseline predictors. Participants were assessed at baseline for 38 candidate predictors and re-assessed after a median follow-up of 21 years for symptomatic, functional, and personal recovery. Associations between the predictors and the outcomes were examined using univariate and multivariate Cox regression models. At baseline, 623 subjects were assessed for eligibility, 510 met the inclusion/exclusion criteria and 243 were successfully followed-up (57.3% of the survivors). At follow-up, the percentages of subjects achieving symptomatic, functional, and personal recovery were 51.9%, 52.7%, and 51.9%, respectively; 74.2% met at least one recovery criterion and 32.5% met all three recovery criteria. Univariate analysis showed that outcomes were predicted by a broad range of variables, including sociodemographics, familial risk, early risk factors, premorbid functioning, triggering factors, illness-onset features, neurological abnormalities, deficit symptoms and early response to treatment. Many of the univariate predictors became nonsignificant when entered into a hierarchical multivariate model, indicating a substantial degree of interdependence. Each single outcome component was independently predicted by parental socioeconomic status, family history of schizophrenia spectrum disorders, early developmental delay, childhood adversity, and mild drug use. Spontaneous dyskinesia/parkinsonism, neurological soft signs and completion of high school remained specific predictors of symptomatic, functional, and personal outcomes, respectively. Predictors explained between 27.5% and 34.3% of the variance in the outcomes. In conclusion, our results indicate a strong potential for background and first-episode characteristics in predicting long-term outcomes of psychotic disorders, which may inform future intervention research.Publication Open Access 20-Year trajectories of six psychopathological dimensions in patients with first-episode psychosis: could they be predicted?(Elsevier, 2024) Cuesta, Manuel J.; Gil Berrozpe, Gustavo José; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Moreno-Izco, Lucía; García de Jalón, Elena; Peralta Martín, Víctor; SEGPEPs Group; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakPatients with first-episode psychoses (FEP) exhibit heterogeneity in clinical manifestations and outcomes. This study investigated the long-term trajectories of six key psychopathological dimensions (reality-distortion, negative, disorganization, catatonia, mania and depression) in patients diagnosed with FEP. A total of 243 patients were followed up for 20 years and the trajectories of the dimensions were analysed using growth mixture modelling. These dimensions showed varied course patterns, ranging from two to five trajectories. Additionally, the study examined the predictive value of different factors in differentiating between the long-term trajectories. The exposome risk score showed that familial load, distal and intermediate risk factors, acute psychosocial stressors and acute onset were significant predictors for differentiating between long-term psychopathological trajectories. In contrast, polygenic risk score, duration of untreated psychosis and duration of untreated illness demonstrated little or no predictive value. The findings highlight the importance of conducting a multidimensional assessment not only at FEP but also during follow-up to customize the effectiveness of interventions. Furthermore, the results emphasize the relevance of assessing premorbid predictors from the onset of illness. This may enable the identification of FEP patients at high-risk of poor long-term outcomes who would benefit from targeted prevention programs on specific psychopathological dimensions.Publication Open Access Effect of polygenic risk score, family load of schizophrenia and exposome risk score, and their interactions, on the long-term outcome of first-episode psychosis(Cambridge University Press, 2023) Cuesta, Manuel J.; Papiol, S.; Ibáñez Beroiz, Berta; García de Jalón, Elena; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Gil Berrozpe, Gustavo José; Moreno-Izco, Lucía; Zarzuela, Amalia; Fañanás, Lourdes; Peralta Martín, Víctor; SEGPEPs Group; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakBackground. Consistent evidence supports the involvement of genetic and environmental factors, and their interactions, in the etiology of psychosis. First-episode psychosis (FEP) comprises a group of disorders that show great clinical and long-term outcome heterogeneity, and the extent to which genetic, familial and environmental factors account for predicting the long-term outcome in FEP patients remains scarcely known. Methods. The SEGPEPs is an inception cohort study of 243 first-admission patients with FEP who were followed-up for a mean of 20.9 years. FEP patients were thoroughly evaluated by standardized instruments, with 164 patients providing DNA. Aggregate scores estimated in large populations for polygenic risk score (PRS-Sz), exposome risk score (ERS-Sz) and familial load score for schizophrenia (FLS-Sz) were ascertained. Long-term functioning was assessed by means of the Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale (SOFAS). The relative excess risk due to interaction (RERI) was used as a standard method to estimate the effect of interaction of risk factors. Results. Our results showed that a high FLS-Sz gave greater explanatory capacity for longterm outcome, followed by the ERS-Sz and then the PRS-Sz. The PRS-Sz did not discriminate significantly between recovered and non-recovered FEP patients in the long term. No significant interaction between the PRS-Sz, ERS-Sz or FLS-Sz regarding the long-term functioning of FEP patients was found. Conclusions. Our results support an additive model of familial antecedents of schizophrenia, environmental risk factors and polygenic risk factors as contributors to a poor long-term functional outcome for FEP patients.Publication Open Access Premorbid adjustment and clinical correlates of cognitive impairment in first-episode psychosis: the PEPsCog study(Elsevier, 2015) Cuesta, Manuel J.; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Cabrera, Bibiana; Bioque, Miquel; Merchán-Naranjo, Jessica; Corripio, Iluminada; González Pinto, Ana; Lobo, Antonio; Bombín, Igor; Serna, Elena de la; Sanjuán, Julio; Parellada, Mara; Sáiz-Ruiz, Jerónimo; Bernardo, Miguel; PEPs Group; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakBackground: The extent to which socio-demographic, clinical, and premorbid adjustment variables contribute to cognitive deficits in first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorders remains to be ascertained. Aims: To examine the pattern and magnitude of cognitive impairment in first-episode psychosis patients, the profile of impairment across psychosis subtypes and the associations with premorbid adjustment. Methods: 226 first-episode psychosis patients and 225 healthy controls were assessed in the PEPsCog study, as part of the PEPs study. Results: Patients showed slight to moderate cognitive impairment, verbal memory being the domain most impaired compared to controls. Broad affective spectrum patients had better premorbid IQ and outperformed the schizophrenia and other psychosis groups in executive function, and had better global cognitive function than the schizophrenia group. Adolescent premorbid adjustment together with age, gender, parental socio-economic status, and mean daily antipsychotic doses were the factors that best explained patients' cognitive performance. General and adolescent premorbid adjustment, age and parental socio-economic status were the best predictors of cognitive performance in controls. Conclusions: Poorer premorbid adjustment together with socio-demographic factors and higher daily antipsychotic doses were related to a generalized cognitive impairment and to a lower premorbid intellectual reserve, suggesting that neurodevelopmental impairment was present before illness onset.Publication Open Access Long-term trajectories of clinical staging in first-episode psychosis and their associated cognitive outcome: a 21-year follow-up study(Elsevier, 2024-02-27) Cuesta, Manuel J.; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Moreno-Izco, Lucía; García de Jalón, Elena; Gil Berrozpe, Gustavo José; Peralta Martín, Víctor; SEGPEPs Group; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakCognitive deficits are already present before psychosis onset but are a key feature of first-episode psychosis (FEP). The objective of this study was to investigate the cognitive outcomes of a cohort of FEP patients who were diagnosed using the clinical staging approach and were followed for up to 21 years. We analyzed data from 173 participants with first-admission psychosis who were followed-up for a mean of 20.9 years. The clinical staging assessment was adapted from the clinical staging framework developed by McGorry et al.1 Cognitive assessment was performed using the MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MMCB) at the end of follow-up. FEP patients who were longitudinally diagnosed in the lowest clinical stages (stages 2A and 2B) showed better performance in attention, processing speed, and MCCB overall composite score than those in the highest clinical stages (stages 4A and 4B). There was a significant linear trend association between worsening of all MCCB cognitive functions and MCCB overall composite score and progression in clinical staging. Furthermore, the interval between two and five years of follow-up appears to be associated with deficits in processing speed as a cognitive marker. Our results support the validation of the clinical staging model over a long-term course of FEP based on neuropsychological performance. A decline in some cognitive functions, such as processing speed, may facilitate the transition of patients to an advanced stage during the critical period of first-episode psychosis.Publication Open Access Controversies surrounding the diagnosis of schizophrenia and other psychoses(Taylor and Francis, 2009) Cuesta, Manuel J.; Basterra, Virginia; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Peralta Martín, Víctor; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakThe diagnosis of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders in current psychiatric classifications identifies individuals who are severely ill but who have few clinical characteristics in common. The usual picture of psychotic patients is a mixture of mood and psychotic symptoms. Fortunately, clinicians do not base their therapeutic strategies exclusively on diagnosis, but also on symptom predominance. Thus, clinicians’ treatments have been dimensional in nature for years, although, until recently, their psychiatric classifications had been mainly categorical. The main principle in psychosis classification has been the Kraepelinian dichotomy, despite its lack of enduring empirical validation. Without doubt, current psychiatric classifications have made great strides in reliability and clinical utility, although these advantages have not been enough to compensate for their shortcomings concerning validity. It has recently been suggested that the Kraepelinian dichotomy may be hindering progress in neurobiological research within psychosis. Mounting evidence is now fuelling a paradigm shift in the ongoing process of review of psychiatric classifications toward the introduction of complementary dimensional indicators of psychiatric categorical diagnoses. This new approach will allow us to understand psychosis as prototypical extremes of a severity continuum. The gradients of this continuum may begin with subtle expressions in the general population, continue with milder forms in relatives of psychotic patients and subclinical cases and finally reach the prototypical forms of psychosis at the other extreme. Future complementary dimensional indicators will require sound instruments capable of reflecting a multidimensional assessment of psychopathological symptoms, polydiagnostic interviews and the assessment of a wide range of nonsymptomatic domains. These new methods of assessment merging created by the shift toward a dimensional paradigm will be applied in the forthcoming new diagnostic criteria and may allow for a phenome-wide scanning for psychosis.Publication Open Access Executive functioning in schizophrenia spectrum disorder patients and their unaffected siblings: a ten-year follow-up study(Elsevier, 2013) Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Basterra, Virginia; Moreno-Izco, Lucía; Rosa, Araceli; Fañanás, Lourdes; Zarzuela, Amalia; Peralta Martín, Víctor; Cuesta, Manuel J.; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakExecutive dysfunction represents a core deficit that is associated with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs). However, the longitudinal course of executive deficits in SSDs is still controversial. The aim of this study was to examine the executive performance of 34 SSD patients in relation to 34 of their unaffected siblings over a period of 10 years. Both groups completed psychopathological and executive assessments. Thirteen healthy controls were assessed using the same instruments. At baseline, the SSD patients differed significantly from siblings and controls in their performance on the Trail Making Test-B (TMT-B) and the number of categories in which they succeeded in the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST). They also differed significantly from the controls in the total number of errors in the WCST. The siblings did not differ in executive functioning from the controls over the follow-up. Longitudinally, the patients demonstrated significant improvement only for the TMT-B. However, only 14.71% of the patients showed reliable and clinically significant improvements for the TMT-B, and 8.82% made more errors on the WCST at the follow-up evaluation. Less than 3% of the patients showed either improved or worse results on the remaining measures of the WCST. A stabilisation pattern for the WCST was observed in the three groups. The patients performed worse than their siblings and controls on both executive tests. Some patients exhibited significant improvements in the TMT-B over time, but this improvement was reliable and clinically significant for less than 15% of the sample. Thus, we conclude that the patients exhibited stable impairments over time in the executive functions assessed.Publication Open Access From genetics to psychosocial functioning: unraveling the mediating roles of cognitive reserve, cognition, and negative symptoms in first-episode psychosis(Wiley, 2024-12-25) Forte, María Florencia; Clougher, Derek; Segura, Àlex G.; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; Vieta, Eduard; Garriga, Marina; Lobo, Antonio; González Pinto, Ana; Díaz-Caneja, Covadonga M.; Roldán, Alexandra; Martínez-Aran, Anabel ; Serna, Elena de la; Mané, Anna; Mas, Sergi; Torrent, Carla; Allot, Kelly; Bernardo, Miguel; Amoretti, Silvia; PEPs Group; Iris Rodríguez, Corina; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakBackground: Studies have shown associations between polygenic risk scores for educational attainment (PRSEA), cognitive reserve (CR), cognition, negative symptoms (NS), and psychosocial functioning in first-episode psychosis (FEP). However, theirspecific interactions remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate the mediating roles of CR, cognition, and NS in the relationship between PRSEA and psychosocial functioning one year after a FEP. Additionally, we sought to explore the impact of two NSsubtypes on this relationship: diminished Expression (EXP-NS) and Motivation and Pleasure (MAP-NS). Methods: A total of 138 FEP participants, predominantly male (70%), with a mean age of 24.77 years (SD = 5.29), underwent genetic, clinical, and cognitive assessments two months after study enrollment. Functioning evaluation followed at one-year follow-up. To investigate the mediating role of CR, cognition, and NS in the relationship between PRSEA and functioning, a serial mediation model was employed. Two further mediation models were tested to explore the differential impact of EXP-NS and MAP-NS. Mediation analysis was performed using the PROCESS macro version 4.1 within SPSS version 26. Results: The serial mediation model revealed a causal chain for PRSEA > CR > cognition > NS > Functioning (β = −3.08, 95%CI[−5.73, −0.43], p = 0.023). When differentiating by type of NS, only EXP-NS were significantly associated in the casual chain (β = −0.17, 95% CI [−0.39, −0.01], p < 0.05). Conclusions: CR, cognition and NS -specifically EXP-NS- mediate the association between PRSEA and psychosocial functioning at one-year follow-up in FEP patients. These results highlight the potential for personalized interventions based on genetic predisposition.Publication Open Access Utility of the MoCA for cognitive impairment screening in long-term psychosis patients(Elsevier, 2020) Gil Berrozpe, Gustavo José; Sánchez Torres, Ana María; García de Jalón, Elena; Moreno-Izco, Lucía; Fañanás, Lourdes; Peralta Martín, Víctor; Cuesta, Manuel J.; SEGPEPs Group; Ciencias de la Salud; Osasun ZientziakCognitive impairment is a key feature in patients with psychotic disorders. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) is a brief tool that has been shown to be effective in identifying mild cognitive impairment and early dementia. This study explores the usefulness of this instrument to detect cognitive impairment in long-term psychotic disorders. One hundred-forty stabilized patients were re-evaluated more than 15 years after a First Episode of Psychosis (FEP). Patients were psychopathologically assessed, and the MoCA test and MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB) were administered. Two cut-off scores for cognitive impairment using the MCCB were applied (T score <40 and < 30). Concurrent validation was found between the total scores of the MoCA and MCCB. We also found significant associations between 5 out of 7 MoCA subtests (visuospatial-executive, attention, language, abstraction and delayed recall) and MCCB subtests but not for the naming and orientation MoCA subtests. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis suggested a <25 cut-off for cognitive impairment instead of the original <26. Our results suggest that the MoCA test is a useful screening instrument for assessing cognitive impairment in psychotic patients and has some advantages over other available instruments, such as its ease-of-use and short administration time.