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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The Psychosis High-Risk State: A Comprehensive State-of-the-Art Review

TLDR
The relatively new field of HR research in psychosis has the potential to shed light on the development of major psychotic disorders and to alter their course and provides a rationale for service provision to those in need of help who could not previously access it.
Abstract
Context During the past 2 decades, a major transition in the clinical characterization of psychotic disorders has occurred. The construct of a clinical high-risk (HR) state for psychosis has evolved to capture the prepsychotic phase, describing people presenting with potentially prodromal symptoms. The importance of this HR state has been increasingly recognized to such an extent that a new syndrome is being considered as a diagnostic category in the DSM-5. Objective To reframe the HR state in a comprehensive state-of-the-art review on the progress that has been made while also recognizing the challenges that remain. Data Sources Available HR research of the past 20 years from PubMed, books, meetings, abstracts, and international conferences. Study Selection and Data Extraction Critical review of HR studies addressing historical development, inclusion criteria, epidemiologic research, transition criteria, outcomes, clinical and functional characteristics, neurocognition, neuroimaging, predictors of psychosis development, treatment trials, socioeconomic aspects, nosography, and future challenges in the field. Data Synthesis Relevant articles retrieved in the literature search were discussed by a large group of leading worldwide experts in the field. The core results are presented after consensus and are summarized in illustrative tables and figures. Conclusions The relatively new field of HR research in psychosis is exciting. It has the potential to shed light on the development of major psychotic disorders and to alter their course. It also provides a rationale for service provision to those in need of help who could not previously access it and the possibility of changing trajectories for those with vulnerability to psychotic illnesses.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Childhood Executive Functioning Predicts Young Adult Outcomes in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome.

TL;DR: Executive functioning could be a valuable target for treatment in children with 22q11DS for improving not only childhood functioning but also adult outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Narrative identity in the psychosis spectrum: A systematic review and developmental model.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the narrative identities of individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders are distinguished by disjointed structure, a focus on suffering, and detached narration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognition, psychosis risk and metabolic measures in two adolescent birth cohorts

TL;DR: FA ratios may be important in marking risk for cognitive deficits in adolescence and further research is needed to clarify whether these biomarkers could be causal and thereby possible targets for intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond Psychosis Risk: Early Clinical Phenotypes in Mental Disorder and the Subthreshold Pathway to Safe, Timely and Effective Care

TL;DR: The case for full inclusion of the ultra-high risk concept in the DSM-5 was probably undermined not so much by the poor reliability found in the flawed field trial, but by the fact that genuine fears of overtreatment and harm need to be balanced against the current reality of undertreatment, which is the norm.
Journal ArticleDOI

The neurobiology of transition to psychosis: clearing the cache

TL;DR: This commentary highlights the work of Dukart and colleagues, published in this issue of the Journal of Psychiatry and Neurosicence, who sought to identify MRI-based anatomic endophenotypes of psychosis in a well-characterized sample of patients with at-risk mental state and first-episode psychosis.
References
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BookDOI

Reducing risks for mental disorders: Frontiers for preventive intervention research.

TL;DR: This study provides a targeted definition of prevention and a conceptual framework that emphasizes risk reduction and presents a focused research agenda, with recommendations on how to develop effective intervention programs, create a cadre of prevention researchers, and improve coordination among federal agencies.
Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic review and meta-analysis of the psychosis continuum: evidence for a psychosis proneness-persistence-impairment model of psychotic disorder

TL;DR: There is evidence, however, that transitory developmental expression of psychosis (psychosis proneness) may become abnormally persistent and subsequently clinically relevant (impairment), depending on the degree of environmental risk the person is additionally exposed to.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping the onset of psychosis: the Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States

TL;DR: The CAARMS instrument provides a useful platform for monitoring sub threshold psychotic symptoms for worsening into full-threshold psychotic disorder and has good to excellent reliability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prodromal Assessment With the Structured Interview for Prodromal Syndromes and the Scale of Prodromal Symptoms: Predictive Validity, Interrater Reliability, and Training to Reliability

TL;DR: Data is presented suggesting that excellent interrater reliability can be established for diagnosis in a day-and-a-half-long training workshop and on the Structured Interview for Prodromal Syndromes and the Scale of ProDromal Symptoms.
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