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Department/Unit:Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

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Psychotic-like experiences and adverse life events in young people. Does gender matter?

Adjorlolo, Samuel; Awortwe, Victoria; Anum, Adote; Huang, Keng-Yen; Mamah, Daniel
BACKGROUND:Psychotic-like experiences (PLEs) and adverse life events (ALEs) are highly prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa where gendered practices are also common. There is, however, a paucity of data on how the relationship between PLEs and life adversities is influenced by gender. The current study addressed this gap. METHOD/METHODS:Data were collected from 1886 school-based young people (1174 females) in Ghana, West Africa using a cross-sectional survey methodology and analyzed using Chi-square, independent t-test, Pearson correlation, and multivariate regression. RESULTS:The results showed that victimization experiences, school stress and having a family member with mental illness were significantly associated with PLEs in both males and females. In contrast, substance misuse and experiences of head trauma correlated significantly with PLEs in females only. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Life adversities constitute major risk factors for PLEs among school-based young people in Ghana, who could benefit from gender neutral and gender-sensitive intervention programming to remediate the effects of life adversities on PLEs.
PMID: 37610125
ISSN: 1475-357x
CID: 5598652

Resource Document on Best Practices in Synchronous Videoconferencing-Based Telemental Health

Mishkind, Matt; Shore, Jay H; Barrett, Raymond; Caudill, Robert; Chiu, Alexander; Hilty, Don; Idigo, Olivia Boyce; Kaftarian, Edward; Khan, Shabana; Krupinski, Elizabeth A; Malik, Tania S; Thackaberry, Jessica; Torous, John; Yellowlees, Peter
PMID: 38054938
ISSN: 1556-3669
CID: 5595692

Race, Ethnicity, and the Medical "One-Liner": How Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Can Chart Its Own Antiracist Path Forward [Editorial]

Reliford, Aaron; Liu, Anni; Dhir, Sakshi; Schlechter, Alan
PMID: 37993762
ISSN: 1545-7230
CID: 5608602

Promoting emotional and behavioral interventions in ASD treatment: Evidence from EPIGRAM, A naturalistic, prospective and longitudinal study

Bettencourt, Carlotta; Garret-Gloanec, Nicole; Pellerin, Hugues; Péré, PereMorgane; Bertamini, Giulio; Squillante, Maria; Roos-Weil, Fabienne; Ferrand, Léa; Pernel, Anne-Sophie; Apter, Gisèle; Chetouani, Mohamed; Cortese, Samuele; Cohen, David
BACKGROUND:Prognostic factors from naturalistic treatment studies of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) remain largely unknown. We aimed to identify baseline and treatment-related prognostic predictors at 1-year follow-up after Integrative Care Practices (ICPs). METHODS:Eighty-nine preschool children with severe ASD were given ICP combining nine therapeutic workshops based on children's needs. Participants were assessed at baseline and during 12 months follow-up with the Psycho-educational Profile-3-R, Children Autism Rating Scale, Parental Global Impression, and the Autistic Behaviors Scale. We assessed prognostic predictors using multivariable regression models and explored treatment ingredients influencing outcome using Classification and Regression Trees (CART). RESULTS:Multivariable models showed that being a child from first generation immigrant parents predicted increased maladaptive behaviors, whereas play activities had an opposite effect; severity of ASD symptoms and impaired cognitive functions predicted worse autism severity at follow-up; and lower play activities predicted worse parent impression. Regarding treatment effects, more emotion/behavioral interventions predicted better outcomes, and more communication interventions predicted lower autism severity, whereas more education and cognitive interventions had an opposite effect. CART confirmed that more hours of intervention in the emotion/behavioral domain helped classifying cases with better outcomes. More parental support was associated with decreased maladaptive behaviors. Sensorimotor and education interventions also significantly contributed to classifying cases according to outcomes but defined subgroups with opposite prognosis. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Children who exhibited the best prognosis following ICPs had less autism severity, better cognition, and non-immigrant parents at baseline. Emotion/behavior interventions appeared key across all outcomes and should be promoted.
PMID: 38431998
ISSN: 1873-3379
CID: 5644302

Efficacy of the Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction for Depression Symptoms and Sleep-Wake Disruption in Older and Younger Adults: Secondary Age-Stratified Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial

Smagula, Stephen F; Gasperetti, Caitlin E; Buysse, Daniel J; Irwin, Michael R; Krafty, Robert T; Lim, Sarah E; Reynolds, Charles F; McCall, William V; Harvey, Allison G
OBJECTIVE:Perform a secondary analysis examining the efficacy of the Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C) for depression symptom responses, and explore changes in potential target mechanisms. DESIGN/METHODS:Secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial with convenience age subsamples (younger (20-49 year; n = 52) versus and older (50-71 years; n = 35)). SETTING/METHODS:Community mental health clinics. PARTICIPANTS/METHODS:Eighty-seven adults with serious mental illness. INTERVENTION/METHODS:TranS-C versus treatment as usual (TAU). MEASUREMENTS/METHODS:Outcomes were depression symptoms (Quick Inventory of Depression Symptoms), insomnia symptoms (Insomnia Severity Index), and objective sleep-wake rhythm measures (interdaily stability and relative amplitude). RESULTS: = 10.3, p = 0.001). There was a medium effect of TranS-C versus TAU on depression symptoms 6-months postintervention (Cohen's d = -0.40, 95% confidence interval (CI): -0.81, 0.01). In both age groups, there were large treatment effects on insomnia symptoms post-treatment (Cohen's d >0.90). In the older subsample, there were additionally medium treatment effects on post-treatment interdaily stability (Cohen's d = 0.60, 95% CI: -0.11, 1.61). Post-treatment reductions in insomnia symptoms correlated with depression symptom reduction 6-months later in the younger subsample (Spearman rho = 0.59, n = 20, p = 0.008). In older adults, postintervention increases in interdaily stability correlated with depression symptom reductions 6-months later (Spearman rho = -0.52, n = 15, p = 0.049). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Confirmatory trials are needed, given the low age-specific sample sizes here, to determine if TranS -C's produces durable depression responses by increasing sleep-wake rhythm stability in older adults and improving insomnia symptoms in younger adults. BRIEF ARTICLE SUMMARY/UNASSIGNED:The authors evaluated preliminary efficacy of a behavioral intervention that targets sleep/sleep-wake rhythms, the Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C), for depression symptoms in people with serious mental illness. TranS-C was associated with higher depression response rates than treatment as usual 6-months postintervention. The degree of depression symptom response 6-months later was related to the degree of treatment phase improvements in interdaily stability (in older adults) and reduction in insomnia severity (in younger adults). A pragmatic nonpharmacologic intervention, the Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction, has preliminary efficacy for improving sleep-wake factors and depression symptoms.
PMID: 38040569
ISSN: 1545-7214
CID: 5616812

Lumateperone for treatment of psychotic symptoms in Lewy body disease: A case report

Bied, Adam M; Njuguna, Susan W; Satodiya, Ritvij M
Individuals experiencing Lewy body disease (LBD) are particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of neuroleptics. This sensitivity has been employed by some authorities as a diagnostic component for this disorder. At present, we do not have any Food and Drug Administration-approved antipsychotic for the management of psychotic symptoms in this condition. We present the first case of an LBD patient, showing favorable response in psychotic symptoms with lumateperone, a novel atypical neuroleptic. Our report revealed improvements in cognition, psychosis, and sleep following the initiation of lumateperone without concurrent emergence of extrapyramidal side effects, autonomic instability, parkinsonian features, or cognitive decline, which are typically seen when treated with available antipsychotic medications. Clinicians may wish to consider potential usefulness of lumateperone when managing patients with this disabling condition. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
PMID: 37227883
ISSN: 1936-2293
CID: 5607572

The Impact of Maternal Interpersonal Violent Trauma and Related Psychopathology on Child Outcomes and Intergenerational Transmission

Graf, Shannen; Schechter, Daniel S
PURPOSE OF REVIEW/OBJECTIVE:This review aims to outline some consequences that maternal history of trauma with and without related psychopathology, such as posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS), can have on their children's development and functioning. It then addresses mechanisms through which intergenerational transmission of interpersonal violence (IPV) and related psychopathology may occur. RECENT FINDINGS/RESULTS:Findings include the effects of maternal IPV experience and related psychopathology on child social-emotional and biologically-based outcomes. This includes increased developmental disturbances and child psychopathology, as well as physiological factors. Secondly, the review focuses on psychobiological mechanisms by which maternal experience of IPV and related psychopathology likely trigger intergenerational effects. Maternal IPV and related psychopathology can have a negative impact on several areas of their child's life including development, interactive behavior, psychopathology, and physiology. This transmission may partially be due to fetal and perinatal processes, genetic and epigenetic effects, and interactions with their parents.
PMCID:10978628
PMID: 38427205
ISSN: 1535-1645
CID: 5644282

Youth Top Problems in an Acute Psychiatric Sample: Describing Consumer-Nominated Treatment Needs in an Adolescent Partial Hospital Setting

Chiu, Angela W; Desai, Payal; Skriner, Laura; Catarozoli, Corinne; Sullivan, Paul; Bennett, Shannon M
Given the wide range of diagnostic presentations treated in partial hospital programs, finding efficient ways to identify and measure progress on the chief concerns of consumers in these settings is important. The current study uses a self-administered version of the Top Problems Assessment to describe treatment targets identified by youth and their caregivers presenting for care at an adolescent partial hospital setting. Caregiver-youth agreement on these chief concerns upon admission and predictors of agreement were explored. About one-third (34.65%) of caregiver-youth pairs did not match on any target problems. Although anxiety and depression were the most commonly cited top problems in this sample, caregivers and youth exhibited disagreement on these domains. Treatment teams in acute care settings such as a partial hospital program can benefit from careful assessment surrounding the initial goals of treatment as youth and their caregivers may not agree on the referral problems upon entering a program.
PMID: 36074210
ISSN: 1573-3327
CID: 5337092

A state-of-the-art overview of candidate diagnostic biomarkers for Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

Parlatini, Valeria; Bellato, Alessio; Gabellone, Alessandra; Margari, Lucia; Marzulli, Lucia; Matera, Emilia; Petruzzelli, Maria Giuseppina; Solmi, Marco; Correll, Christoph U; Cortese, Samuele
INTRODUCTION/UNASSIGNED:Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most common neurodevelopmental conditions and is highly heterogeneous in terms of symptom profile, associated cognitive deficits, comorbidities, and outcomes. Heterogeneity may also affect the ability to recognize and diagnose this condition. The diagnosis of ADHD is primarily clinical but there are increasing research efforts aiming at identifying biomarkers that can aid the diagnosis. AREAS COVERED/UNASSIGNED:We first discuss the definition of biomarkers and the necessary research steps from discovery to implementation. We then provide a broad overview of research studies on candidate diagnostic biomarkers in ADHD encompassing genetic/epigenetic, biochemical, neuroimaging, neurophysiological and neuropsychological techniques. Finally, we critically appraise current limitations in the field and suggest possible ways forward. EXPERT OPINION/UNASSIGNED:Despite the large number of studies and variety of techniques used, no promising biomarkers have been identified so far. Clinical and biological heterogeneity as well as methodological limitations, including small sample size, lack of standardization, confounding factors, and poor replicability, have hampered progress in the field. Going forward, increased international collaborative efforts are warranted to support larger and more robustly designed studies, develop multimodal datasets to combine biomarkers and improve diagnostic accuracy, and ensure reproducibility and meaningful clinical translation.
PMID: 38506617
ISSN: 1744-8352
CID: 5640532

The "Woundosome" Concept and Its Impact on Procedural Outcomes in Patients With Chronic Limb-Threatening Ischemia [Editorial]

Patrone, Lorenzo; Pasqui, Edoardo; Conte, Michael S; Farber, Alik; Ferraresi, Roberto; Menard, Matthew; Mills, Joseph L; Rundback, John; Schneider, Peter; Ysa, August; Abhishek, Kumar; Adams, George L; Ahmad, Naseer; Ahmed, Irfan; Alexandrescu, Vlad A; Amor, Max; Alper, David; Andrassy, Martin; Attinger, Christopher; Baadh, Andy; Barakat, Hashem; Biasi, Lukla; Bisdas, Theodosios; Bhatti, Zagum; Blessing, Erwin; Bonaca, Marc P; Bonvini, Stefano; Bosiers, Michel; Bradbury, Andrew W; Beasley, Robert; Behrendt, Christian-Alexander; Brodmann, Marianne; Cabral, Gonzalo; Cancellieri, Roberto; Casini, Andrea; Chandra, Venita; Chisci, Emiliano; Chohan, Omar; Choke, Edward T C; Chong, Patrick F S; Clerici, Giacomo; Coscas, Raphael; Costantino, Mary; Dalla Paola, Luca; Dand, Sabeen; Davies, Robert S M; D'Oria, Mario; Diamantopoulos, Athanasios; Debus, Sebastian; Deloose, Koen; Del Giudice, Costantino; Donato, Gianmarco de; Rubertis, Brian De; Paul De Vries, Jean; Dias, Nuno V; Diaz-Sandoval, Larry; Dick, Florian; Donas, Konstantinos; Dua, Anahita; Fanelli, Fabrizio; Fazzini, Stefano; Foteh, Mazin; Gandini, Roberto; Gargiulo, Mauro; Garriboli, Luca; Genovese, Elizabeth A; Gifford, Edward; Goueffic, Yann; Goverde, Peter; Chand Gupta, Prem; Hinchliffe, Robert; Holden, Andrew; Houlind, Kim C; Howard, Dominic Pj; Huasen, Bella; Isernia, Giacomo; Katsanos, Konstantinos; Katzen, Barry; Kolh, Philippe; Koncar, Igor; Korosoglou, Grigorios; Krishnan, Prakash; Kroencke, Thomas; Krokidis, Miltiadis; Kumarasamy, Arun; Hayes, Paul; Iida, Osamu; Alejandre Lafont, Enrique; Langhoff, Ralf; Lecis, Alexandre; Lessne, Mark; Lichaa, Hady; Lichtenberg, Michael; Lobato, Marta; Lopes, Alice; Loreni, Giorgio; Lucatelli, Pierleone; Madassery, Sreekumar; Maene, Lieven; Manzi, Marco; Maresch, Martin; Santhosh Mathews, Jay; McCaslin, James; Micari, Antonio; Michelagnoli, Stefano; Migliara, Bruno; Morgan, Robert; Morelli, Luis; Morosetti, Daniele; Mouawad, Nicolas; Moxey, Paul; Müller-Hülsbeck, Stefan; Mustapha, Jihad; Nakama, Tatsuya; Nasr, Bahaa; N'dandu, Zola; Neville, Richard; Noory, Elias; Nordanstig, Joakim; Noronen, Katariina; Mariano Palena, Luis; Parlani, Gianbattista; Patel, Ashish S; Patel, Parag; Patel, Rafiuddin; Patel, Sanjay; Pena, Costantino; Perkov, Drazen; Portou, Mark; Pratesi, Giovanni; Rammos, Christos; Reekers, Jim; Riambau, Vicente; Roy, Trisha; Rosenfield, Kenneth; Antonella Ruffino, Maria; Saab, Fadi; Saratzis, Athanasios; Sbarzaglia, Paolo; Schmidt, Andrej; Secemsky, Eric; Siah, Michael; Sillesen, Henrik; Simonte, Gioele; Sirvent, Marc; Sommerset, Jill; Steiner, Sabine; Sakr, Ahmed; Scheinert, Dierk; Shishebor, Mehdi; Spiliopoulos, Stavros; Spinelli, Alessio; Stravoulakis, Konstantinos; Taneva, Gergana; Teso, Desarom; Tessarek, Joerg; Theivacumar, Selva; Thomas, Anish; Thomas, Shannon; Thulasidasan, Narayan; Torsello, Giovanni; Tripathi, Ramesh; Troisi, Nicola; Tummala, Srini; Tummala, Venkat; Twine, Christopher; Uberoi, Raman; Ucci, Alessandro; Valenti, Domenico; van den Berg, Jos; van den Heuvel, Daniel; Van Herzeele, Isabelle; Varcoe, Ramon; Vega de Ceniga, Melina; Veith, Frank J; Venermo, Maarit; Vijaynagar, Badri; Virdee, Sanjiv; Von Stempel, Conrad; Voûte, Michiel T; Khee Yeung, Kak; Zeller, Thomas; Zayed, Hany; Montero Baker, Miguel
PMID: 38523459
ISSN: 1545-1550
CID: 5645462