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Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia LAPPIN, Honorary Clinical Lecturer, IOP Lead Psychiatrist, EarIy Intervention Pathway, KHP 10 October, 2013
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Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

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Page 1: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study

Dr Julia LAPPIN,

Honorary Clinical Lecturer, IOP

Lead Psychiatrist, EarIy Intervention Pathway, KHP

10 October, 2013

Page 2: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

outline

AESOP-10 Methods Descriptive Outcomes

Predictors of Symptomatic Outcomes Predictors of Functional Outcomes

Clinical Implications

Page 3: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Aetiology and Ethnicity in

Schizophrenia and Other Psychoses

(ÆSOP)

Incident Cases

(mean age 30.5 yrs)

(men 59.1%)

London 352

Nottingham 205

Bristol 57

Total

Incidence

614 (557)

~ 35 per 100,000

South-east London

Nottingham

Bristol

Page 4: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

objectives To investigate the long-term course and outcome of psychosis, with a focus on: clinical, neurodevelopmental and social predictors variations (if any) by ethnic group

Page 5: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

select review

13 studies of first episode, contact or admission cases followed for 8 or more years published since 1980 marked heterogeneity in course and outcome among studies

marked heterogeneity in method inclusion criteria (diagnostic group; entry point) length of follow up (range from 8 to 37 years) location definitions of course and outcome only 3 studies of unselected first episode cases of all psychoses

Page 6: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Methods: tracing and re-contact follow-up

c. 10 yrs

no

last known address,

GP

in contact with services yes

ONS

deaths, emigrations

Page 7: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

sample follow-up

c. 10 yrs

n, 557

8 excluded

died

n, 39

(7%)

abroad

n, 30

(5%)

traced

n, 434

(78%)

untraced

n, 46

(8%)

(90% of 480)

Page 8: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

sample follow-up

c. 10 yrs

n, 557

8 excluded

died

n, 39

(7%)

abroad

n, 30

(5%)

traced

n, 434

(78%)

untraced

n, 46

(8%)

older

black African

(90% of 480)

Information for 8+ years on 394

(82% of 480)

Page 9: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

data follow-up c. 10 yrs

Clinical

Social (function) Service use

WHO Life Chart (Amended)

multiple sources: case records, re-interview, informant

Page 10: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

consensus ratings

today’s meeting will be endless, with a half-hour break for lunch

Page 11: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Core Sample Characteristics

(n = 394)

n %

Nottingham 157 39.9

Men 220 55.8

Non-affective 284

72.1

mean

sd

Length of FU

10.7

1.2

Page 12: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Descriptive Outcomes: definitions

continuous, no remission

episodic, period(s) of remission

@ follow up: in remission vs not

@ follow up: recovered

2 years or more in remission

Page 13: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Descriptive Outcomes: definitions

continuous, no remission

episodic, period(s) of remission

*remission absence of symptoms at threshold level for 6 months

@ follow up: in remission vs not

@ follow up: recovered

2 years or more in remission

Page 14: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

time to first remission

0.0

00

.25

0.5

00

.75

1.0

0

0 200 400 600 800months

non-affective affective

median weeks to first remission 19.6 (5.6-425.4)

non-affective 30.6 (7.1-496.2) affective 7.7 (3.4-236.4)

Page 15: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

symptomatic course

23.3% 29.1%

44.0% 47.6%

20.5% 15.0%

all (352)

non-aff (284) 10.7

yrs

continuous, no remission* 6 months +

neither

episodic, no episode 6 months+

*remission absence of symptoms at threshold level

no further episodes

12.2% 8.3%

Page 16: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

other clinical markers

all non-affective

in episode at follow-up* 115 (34.5%) 100 (41.8%)

symptom recovery* 142 (46.1%) 90 (39.8%)

negative symptoms* 96 (27.7%) 83 (33.1%)

suicide attempt(s) 63 (19.1%) 47 (19.8%)

Page 17: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

social markers

all non-affective

employed at follow-up* 67 (22.3%) 35 (16.1%)

employed 75%+ of follow-up* 35 (11.8%) 17 (7.9%)

in relationship at follow-up* 96 (31.4%) 55 (25.0%)

in relationship most of follow-up 90 (28.8%) 52 (22.7%)

Page 18: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

1. High rate of mortality (7%)

2. 20% lost to follow up, with limited evidence of systematic bias

3. Marked heterogeneity of outcome, with:

Non-trivial minority with poor clinical outcomes (~ 30%) Majority with poor social outcomes (~ 70%) 4. Challenge: Explaining this heterogeneity

summary

Page 19: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Predictors of outcome

Symptomatic outcomes

Functional outcomes

Page 20: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Clinical

Service use

Socio-demographic

and function

Biological

Neurocognitive

what we know from the start

Page 21: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Diagnosis (SCAN): Schizophrenia

Depression

Mania

Brief psychosis

Other

Symptom dimensions (SCAN): Manic

Depression

Disorganised

Negative

Mode of onset (PPHS): Acute vs. Insidious

Mode of contact (PPHS): Community

Voluntary in-patient

Involuntary in-patient

clinical, service use

Page 22: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Age

Gender

Education level: University

Further

GCSEs

No qualifications

Social disadvantage index: Employment

Living alone

Being single

Accommodation

Having a close confidant

socio-demographic, function

Page 23: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Neurological signs (Neurological Evaluation Scale):

Primary signs

Sensory Integrative signs

Motor Coordination signs

Motor Sequencing signs

Total score

Minor Physical Anomalies (Lane scale)

Premorbid IQ (National Adult Reading Test)

biological, neurocognitive

Page 24: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Factors that predict

symptom remission (6 months)

symptom recovery (3 years; 10 years)

functional recovery (3 years; 10 years)

what predicts what ...

Page 25: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Adj. OR 95% CI p

Baseline Diagnosis

Manic (vs. Sz/a spectrum)

Depressive

Brief

Other

19.2

1.9

3.4

1.3

4.3-85.4

0.8-4.3

0.8-13.8

0.5-3.0

<0.01

0.11

0.08

0.49

Mode of Onset

Insidious (vs. Acute)

0.5

0.2-0.8

0.02

Social Disadvantage

Score 2+ (vs. 0/1)

0.4

0.1-1.0

0.05

Centre

Nottingham (vs. London)

1.8

0.9-3.3

0.08

Symptom Remission at 6 months

Page 26: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Adj. OR 95% CI p

Baseline Diagnosis

Manic (vs Sz/a spectrum)

Depressive

Brief

Other

2.9

1.3

4.3

0.5

1.2-6.7

0.5-3.4

1.3-14.0

0.1-1.5

0.01

0.58

0.01

0.20

Depressive Symptoms

Yes (vs No)

2.0

1.0-3.9

0.04

Social Disadvantage

Score 2+ (vs 0/1)

0.3

0.1-0.7

0.01

Sex

Female (vs Male)

1.5

0.8-2.8

0.19

Age (continuous) 1.1 1.0-1.1 0.07

Symptom Recovery at 3 years

Page 27: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Adj. OR 95% CI p

Baseline Diagnosis

Manic (vs Sz/a spectrum)

Depressive

Brief

Other

3.1

2.6

1.4

1.0

1.4-6.8

1.1-6.0

0.5-4.1

0.4-2.1

<0.01

0.02

0.48

0.99

Social Disadvantage

Score 2+ (vs 0/1)

0.55

0.2-1.1

0.08

Symptom Recovery at 10 years

Page 28: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Adj. OR 95% CI p

Baseline Diagnosis

Manic (vs Sz/a spectrum)

Depressive

Brief

Other

3.9

2.4

5.7

0.2

1.4-10.5

0.8-6.6

1.3-23.4

0.1-1.4

<0.01

0.09

0.02

0.11

Negative Symptoms

Yes (vs No)

0.4

0.2-0.9

0.03

Social Disadvantage

Score 2+ (vs 0/1)

0.7

0.3-1.6

0.48

Mode of Contact

Compulsory (vs Non-comp.)

0.3

0.1-0.7

<0.01

Education

No qualifications (vs University)

0.4

0.1-0.8

<0.01

Functional Recovery at 3 years

Page 29: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Adj. OR 95% CI p

Baseline Diagnosis

Manic (vs Sz/a spectrum)

Depressive

Brief

Other

4.4

2.7

1.7

1.0

1.7-11.3

0.9-7.3

0.4-6.3

0.3-3.4

<0.01

0.06

0.43

0.97

Mode of Onset

Insidious (vs Acute)

0.5

0.2-1.1

0.07

Social Disadvantage

Score 2+ (vs. 0/1)

0.3

0.1-0.6

<0.01

Age (continuous) 1.1 1.0-1.1 0.03

Functional Recovery at 10 years

Page 30: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Predictors of both symptomatic and functional outcome:

Diagnosis of mania

Less social disadvantage

Biological and neurocognitive variables do not predict

outcome

inferences about recovery

Page 31: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Recovery at 10 years

15% 29%

7% 49%

employed not employed

symptom

recovery

no

symptom

recovery

Page 32: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Remission of symptoms at 6 months is not enough!

- relapse follows for many

remission at 6m - 57%

recovery at 3yrs - 30%

But don’t give up!

- recovery continues to be achieved

10 year follow-up - 44%

By contrast, minimal change in functional recovery rates over time

3yrs - 23%

10 years - 22%

clinical implications (1)

Page 33: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

Recovery in schizophrenia less often achieved

Merit in formulating diagnosis at early stage as prognostic indicator

- earlier intensive intervention in those with these predictors, such

as

- adherence assistance

- medication switch if symptoms persist

- clozapine

- CBT/ family work

clinical implications (2)

Page 34: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

clinical implications (3)

High predictive value of social disadvantage index

Proposal: future interventions during EI should

target these malleable predictors of outcome

- employment enablement

- buddying/befriending

- maintenance of existing relationships

- housing

Page 35: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

acknowledgements

ÆSOP-10 Study Group

Tim Croudace Adanna Onyejiaka

Paola Dazzan Peter Jones

Arsime Demjaha Julia Lappin

Kim Donoghue Ben Lomas

Gillian Doody Craig Morgan

Paul Fearon Robin Murray

Margaret Heslin Ulrich Reninghaus

…and many others!

Page 36: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia
Page 37: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

all

(n 345)

non-affective

(n 284)

never

39 (11.3%) 28 (11.2%)

@ first contact only

61 (17.7%) 43 (17.1)

1+ during follow-up 244 (71.0%) 180 (71.7)

hospital admissions

median number of admissions 2 (iqr 1-4)

10+ admissions = 21 (6%)

median length of admission 48 days (iqr 27-89)

compulsory admission 260 (69%)

Page 38: Relapse and recovery following first episode psychosis ... · PDF fileRelapse and recovery following first episode psychosis: findings from the AESOP 10-year follow-up study Dr Julia

To investigate the long-term course and outcome of psychosis, wvt Identifying predictors of future outcome that have clinical utility Characteristics of predictors: - easily definable - easy to evaluate in a clinical setting by health professionals - reproducible - helpful in the single patient

objectives