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REVIEW ARTICLES |
Health Sciences Research Institute, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK. Email: S.P.Singh{at}warwick.ac.uk
Declaration of interest S.S. has received honoraria and educational grants from several pharmaceutical companies.
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ABSTRACT |
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Aims To explore the evolution of the concept of DUP, synthesise the evidence for its predictive value, highlight the problems in measurement, and consider the potential pitfalls of using DUP as a measure of the effectiveness of early intervention services.
Method A survey of recent literature was conducted.
Results Several studies and two systematic reviews confirm that DUP has a robust but moderate effect on outcome in schizophrenia. Studies vary widely in how DUP is defined and measured, since identifying precise time points when psychosis emerges and remits is conceptually ambiguous and clinically difficult.
Conclusions Standardised measurement of DUP is a vital first step in allowing comparisons between studies. Duration of untreated psychosis is a relevant measure only of the early detection function of early intervention services.
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INTRODUCTION |
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By the mid 1980s, studies had begun to demonstrate the importance of the time period between the onset of psychosis and initiation of treatment in determining outcome in schizophrenia (Johnstone et al, 1986; Rabiner et al, 1986). The Northwick Park Study of first-episode schizophrenia found that the most important determinant of relapse was duration of illness prior to starting antipsychotics (Johnstone et al, 1986). `Length of manifest illness' came to be seen as an important contributor to the heterogeneity of outcome in schizophrenia (McGlashan, 1988). It was Wyatt's seminal review of antipsychotics and the natural course of schizophrenia that firmly established the importance of the length of untreated psychosis as a prognostic indicator (Wyatt, 1991). Wyatt also speculated that untreated psychosis might itself be biologically toxic. Length of untreated psychosis/manifest illness merged into the construct of DUP, and the importance of measuring it developed alongside the first-episode services and research programmes burgeoning across several continents.
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DOES DUP DETERMINE OUTCOME? |
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Besides the humane reasons for reducing DUP and ameliorating unnecessary suffering, there does appear to be a robust, if moderate, effect of long DUP on poor outcome in schizophrenia. In a systematic review of 26 first-episode studies, Marshall et al (2005) found that although a longer DUP was not associated with worse symptoms or poorer functioning at first presentation, at 6 and 12 months following treatment longer DUP was associated with more severe overall symptoms and with worse overall functioning. People with longer DUP were also less likely to experience remission at 6, 12 and 24 months. In a similar review of 43 publications, but using a different meta-analytical strategy, Perkins et al (2005) found that at first presentation longer DUP was associated with more severe negative but not positive symptoms or neurocognitive functioning, and with lower levels of symptomatic and functional recovery from the first episode. Shorter DUP was thus associated not only with greater `treatment responsiveness' but also with greater reduction in negative symptoms, an interesting finding given that negative symptoms are considered less responsive to antipsychotics than positive symptoms. A recent study has even attempted to enumerate the precise effect of DUP on outcome, reporting that each unit increase in DUP is associated with a 7.8-point increase in global functioning scores and a 1.9-point increase in positive symptom scores (Clarke et al, 2006).
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HOW LONG IS A LONG DUP? |
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So far, no demonstrable relationship has been confirmed between effect size of DUP on outcome and the cut-off point chosen to define long or short DUP. Different studies have identified different cut-offs. One study suggested that intensive treatment enhances outcome only if the DUP is less than 6 months (Carbone et al, 1999) whereas another reported that outcomes were significantly worse when DUP exceeded 3 months (Harris et al, 2005). Functional outcome appears to decline substantially even after very short treatment delays (>7 days), with more gradual deterioration in functioning up to a very long DUP (>1 year; Harrigan et al, 2003). There does not appear to be a cut-off point associated with medium- to long-term impairment, with some domains of outcome more sensitive to treatment delay than others.
Marshall et al (2005) have suggested that the cut-off must be very close to onset of psychosis to demonstrate a dichotomous effect. However, the application of a very short cut-off leads to confounding between DUP, outcome and diagnosis (such as acute and transient psychotic disorders). McGlashan (2006) has postulated `a window of deterioration' in the late prodromal phase when neurcognitive decline in particular occurs. Findings that brain abnormalities pre-date frank expression of psychosis make a strong case for intervention in the prodrome of psychosis (Zipursky et al, 1998; Pantelis et al, 2003). However, we are no clearer as to the `critical period' of DUP, exceeding which inevitably predicts poor outcome.
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IS DUP CONFOUNDED? |
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There is evidence that, even after adjusting for the effects of such confounders, DUP is a significant predictor of outcome. Acute onset, although associated with a shorter duration of initial episode, is not an independent predictor of outcome in psychosis when gender and premorbid functioning are controlled (Singh et al, 2004). Loebel et al (1992) reported that whereas good premorbid functioning is related to higher levels of remission but not a shorter time to remission, shorter DUP correlates with both, suggesting that DUP is a stronger prognostic indicator, perhaps being independent of premorbid functioning. Several other studies that have controlled for premorbid functioning or mode of onset have consistently found that DUP is an independent predictor of outcome (Verdoux et al, 2001; Harrigan et al, 2003; Addington et al, 2004; Melle et al, 2004). Marshall et al (2005) concluded that, although DUP and outcome may be confounded by some third variable, at least in their meta-analysis, premorbid adjustment was not that third variable.
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CAN DUP BE RELIABLY MEASURED? |
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When does DUP begin?
Onset of psychosis is a nebulous phenomenon that evades close scrutiny.
Establishing onset has become increasingly important for early identification
and intervention in psychosis. Yet there is no consensus definition of onset
of psychosis and the literature yields few standardised replicable methods for
measuring onset (Singh et al,
2005a). Researchers have often reverted to a single
global measure of onset based upon clinical judgement. It is not always made
clear whether onset refers to the onset of illness or the onset of psychosis.
Where emergence of psychotic symptoms is considered the unequivocal onset of
psychosis, there are still problems of patient v. observer rating of
onset and recall bias in retrospective assessments. Clinically it is difficult
to identify a precise time when a certain behaviour or symptom makes the
transition from a non-psychotic to a psychotic domain, with considerable
arbitrariness introduced in both identifying and dating the phenomenon. There
is often a phenomenological, temporal and experiential continuity between
pre-psychotic and psychotic symptoms
(Moller, 2001). Definitions of
onset thus vary from the interval between first sign of illness and the
appearance of florid psychotic symptoms
(Vaillant, 1964) to the
interval between appearance of psychotic symptoms to the initiation of
treatment (Day et al,
1987).
Yung and colleagues set up the Personal Assessment and Crisis Evaluation (PACE) clinic in Melbourne, Australia, in the 1990s to prospectively monitor and provide care for young people considered `at risk' of impending psychosis. In a series of papers, they have described and refined the concept of `at-risk states' (Yung & McGorry, 1996; Yung et al, 1998; Phillips et al, 2000). The at-risk states include a combination of familial risk (positive family history of psychosis), recent-onset drop in functioning, attenuated or sub-threshold symptoms and brief limited intermittent psychotic symptoms (BLIPS). Attenuated symptoms differ from frank psychotic symptoms in their intensity, frequency and/or duration. Brief limited intermittent psychotic symptoms are frank psychotic symptoms (delusions, hallucinations or thought disorder) which are unequivocally present but last for less than 1 week, resolving spontaneously. Between 30 and 40% of people presenting with such at-risk states make a transition to psychosis, usually within 6 months. A structured instrument is now available, the Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States (CAARMS; Yung et al, 2005), which identifies a group at ultra-high risk of making a transition to psychosis. The use of such measures in the general population is problematic since the positive predictive value becomes extremely low in that setting (Warner, 2002). In addition the positive prediction of psychosis appears to be falling in the new prodromal services that are being established (Riecher-Roessler, 2006). This may partly be because such services detect at-risk individuals even earlier (longer duration of prodrome), when emergence of psychosis is more distant in the future and symptoms are even more non-specific.
The PACE clinic is a well-developed and established service that can provide care for large enough numbers of people to allow prospective studies in an at-risk group. However, in most early intervention programmes patients enter the study/treatment after the development of psychosis and DUP can only be measured retrospectively. Several conceptual and methodological problems hinder the measurement of DUP retrospectively. Should onset of psychosis be the onset of any BLIP or the onset of psychotic symptoms that last more than 1 week? Is it possible to make a retrospective judgement of when a sub-threshold symptom crosses the threshold? Can people precisely recall the severity and duration of symptoms that first appeared some months/years ago? What about individuals who report quasi-psychotic symptoms even in childhood, with no identifiable time point where schizotypal traits make a transition to a psychotic state (Poulton et al, 2000)?
When does DUP end?
The end of the period of untreated psychosis is conceptually simpler to
date, but `the start of treatment' is in reality a similarly complex
construct. Does `untreated psychosis' end when any treatment begins, when
antipsychotics are started, when antipsychotic treatment at an adequate dose
has been adhered to for an adequate period, or when psychosis itself remits?
Many studies do not make these distinctions clear in their measure of DUP and
scales often do not include a precise definition of treatment adequacy. In
routine practice, clinicians sometimes initiate antipsychotics in the
prodromal stages of psychosis (Singh
et al, 2005a). How should DUP be measured in
such cases? In psychosis with prominent mood symptoms at onset, should
treatment with antidepressants or mood stabilisers without antipsychotics be
considered treatment and hence the end of the period of untreated psychosis?
However, what about non-pharmacological treatments which may or may not have
an impact on the transition into psychosis
(Morrison et al,
2006)?
Structured DUP assessment scales
Some scales have been developed to retrospectively map the onset of
psychosis. Beiser et al
(1993) derived a checklist of
behaviours describing the evolution of first noticeable symptoms, emergence of
psychosis and initiation of treatment-seeking. The Interview for the
Retrospective Assessment of the Onset of Schizophrenia (IRAOS;
Hafner et al, 1992)
is a semi-structured interview to assess symptoms, psychological impairment
and socio-demographic characteristics in the time course of emerging
psychosis. The Nottingham Onset Schedule
(Singh et al,
2005a) is a short, guided interview and rating schedule
to measure onset in psychosis. Onset in the Nottingham Onset Schedule is
defined as the time between the first reported/observed change in mental
state/behaviour and the development of psychotic symptoms. Onset is
conceptualised as comprising: (a) a prodrome of two parts (a period of
`unease' followed by `non-diagnostic' symptoms); (b) appearance of psychotic
symptoms; and (c) a build-up of diagnostic symptoms leading to a definite
diagnosis. The Nottingham Onset Schedule provides a standardised and reliable
means of recording early changes in psychosis and identifying relatively
precise time points for measuring several durations in emerging psychosis. By
varying the starting point of onset, it also allows for several ways of
defining and measuring treatment delays, including duration of untreated
illness (from start of prodrome to treatment), duration of untreated emergent
psychosis (from first psychotic symptom to treatment) and duration of
untreated manifest psychosis (from appearance of fully developed psychotic
syndrome to treatment).
Table 1 shows a selected number of studies, chosen to demonstrate differences in how the start and end of the period of untreated psychosis are defined and its length ascertained. Given the problems of measuring DUP, it would be surprising if a degree of enforced `spurious precision' did not creep into its measurement. Marshall et al (2005) found that only 12 out of 26 studies included in their review reported a systematic method to assess DUP, with only 5 using a structured instrument (IRAOS in 4, the Royal Park Multidiagnostic Instrument for Psychosis in 1) (Marshall et al, 2005). Overall mean DUP in their meta-analysis was 124 weeks (or 103 weeks excluding an outlier with mean DUP of 796 weeks).
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IS DUP A VALID MEASURE OF EFFECTIVENESS OF EARLY INTERVENTION SERVICES? |
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How early is early intervention? It can mean improving outcomes in people with established psychosis by facilitating and consolidating recovery, detecting hidden morbidity in the community by identifying untreated cases of the disorder, or preventing the emergence of psychosis through pre-psychotic interventions. These are different aims, requiring different service models and strategies, and having differing weights of evidence supporting their use (Singh & Fisher, 2000).
The Lambeth Early Onset (LEO; Craig et al, 2004) and OPUS (Petersen et al, 2005) trials provide convincing evidence that specialised early intervention teams are more effective than standard care in improving clinical outcomes, satisfaction and treatment adherence. Two relatively recent studies provide some justification for prodromal interventions. A randomised controlled trial in a high-risk prodromal population found that a combination of risperidone and psychotherapy reduced the risk of transition to psychosis (McGorry et al, 2002). Pantelis et al (2003) found that specific brain changes accompany prodromal decline and pre-date the emergence of frank psychosis. If replicated, such studies will provide compelling justification for intervening in the prodromal phase and if all those in the prodromal phase can be identified and adequately treated, there might be no DUP left to measure.
For now at least, the task of reducing DUP at the community level falls on early detection services, which seek undetected cases of established psychosis rather than those at risk. Such programmes usually involve improving knowledge of psychosis within the community and facilitating access to specialist early intervention services. Conducting a randomised trial of early v. late detection is unethical. Hence quasi-experimental designs have been employed to evaluate whether early detection can reduce DUP and improve outcomes while the nature of treatment remains unchanged (Malla et al, 2005). The TIPS project in Norway and Denmark attempted this by comparing outcomes in people with first-episode psychosis who were recruited via an early detection team, with those accessing treatment in an area without early detection but with similar healthcare otherwise. Although the early detection programme did not appear to identify and recruit a large number of previously undetected patients, those entering through this route had shorter DUP (median 5 v. 16 weeks) and better clinical outcomes at 3 months (Melle et al, 2004; Friis et al, 2005; Johannessen et al, 2005). However a `before and after' comparison following the establishment of an early detection programme in London, Ontario, did not find any reduction in DUP in patients recruited following the early detection initiative (median DUP 24.3 v. 21.9 weeks; Malla et al, 2005). Surprisingly patients recruited after the introduction of the early detection programme were more severally ill and had a longer prodromal period.
So far, therefore, the evidence for the effectiveness of early detection programmes in reducing DUP appears limited. Malla et al (2005) have argued that increasing general practitioner knowledge of psychosis and increasing their relative `comfort' in prescribing novel antipsychotics leads to people with milder illness being treated at primary care level, and hence an underestimation of the effect of early detection on DUP. Neither the Scandinavian nor the Canadian study confirmed the presence of a large pool of people with undetected psychosis in the community. This further confirms that DUP is skewed by a small group of outliers with extremely long DUP. Median DUP in well-established community services appears to be relatively low: 52 days for schizophrenia in Nottingham, UK, in one study (Singh et al, 2005a). Although there may be a case for developing targeted early detection programmes for the small proportion of people with undetected psychosis in the community, the evidence for establishing early detection services is not overwhelming.
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CONCLUSIONS |
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