scispace - formally typeset
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.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The neural diathesis-stress model of schizophrenia revisited: An update on recent findings considering illness stage and neurobiological and methodological complexities.

TL;DR: An extended neural diathesis‐stress model of schizophrenia is proposed that addresses the broader neurobiological context of stress psychobiology in psychosis progression and implications of this model for best practice are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inflammation and the two-hit hypothesis of schizophrenia

TL;DR: This review analyzes the literature on inflammation and schizophrenia, with a particular focus on comorbidity, biomarkers, and environmental insults and identifies several mechanisms by which inflammation could influence the development of schizophrenia via the two-hit hypothesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dopaminergic basis of salience dysregulation in psychosis

TL;DR: Different strands of evidence are drawn together in support of an emerging understanding of how dopamine dysregulation may lead to aberrant salience and psychotic symptoms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oscillations and neuronal dynamics in schizophrenia: the search for basic symptoms and translational opportunities.

TL;DR: The role of rhythmic activity in neural dynamics and in the coordination of distributed neuronal activity into organized neural states is discussed and the distinction between fundamental symptoms, which are reflected in cognitive deficits, and psychotic, accessory symptoms is discussed, the latter likely constituting a compensatory response for aberrant neuronal dynamics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early intervention in psychosis: obvious, effective, overdue.

TL;DR: The origins and rapid development of early intervention in psychosis are described from a personal and Australian perspective and this uniquely evidence-informed, evidence-building and cost-effective reform provides a blueprint and launch pad to radically change the wider landscape of mental health care and dissolve many of the barriers that have constrained progress for so long.
References
More filters
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.
Related Papers (5)