1 / 28

Joy Welham Sukanta Saha John McGrath

A Review of Risk Factors for Schizophrenia. Joy Welham Sukanta Saha John McGrath. Schizophrenia is a group of imperfectly understood brain disorders characterized by alterations in higher functions related to perception, cognition, communication, planning and motivation.

beck-huff
Download Presentation

Joy Welham Sukanta Saha John McGrath

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Review of Risk Factors for Schizophrenia Joy Welham Sukanta SahaJohn McGrath

  2. Schizophrenia is a group of imperfectly understood brain disorders characterized by alterations in higher functions related to perception, cognition, communication, planning and motivation. Signs and symptoms are hallucinations, delusions, thought disorder, and negative symptoms - eg blunted affect and reduced speech. These usually emerge in early adulthood. While many affected individuals recover, others have intermittent/persistent symptoms. Although advances in biological and psychosocial treatments are improving outcomes, schizophrenia is still a leading contributor to the global burden of disease. This keeps research focused on finding the causes of schizophrenia.

  3. Aims To examine risk indicators, proxy variables and risk factors in relation to the developmental hypothesis. These may operate: Prenatally Perinatally Post natally - early childhood - later childhood - adolescence/adulthood

  4. Outline • Defining risk factors • Risk indicators • Risk proxies • Putative risk factors • Caveats and conclusions

  5. What are risk factors?

  6. Developmental models of schizophrenia Schizophrenia as a neurodevelopmental disorder - results from early (pre- or perinatal) events - possibly modified by later events - manifests in late adolescent/early adulthood

  7. Risk indicators throughout development Early childhood Developmental delays Later childhood Neurological/cognitive anomalies Psycho-social deficits Brain anomalies Structural Functional Minor physical anomalies Dermatoglyphic anomalies

  8. Proxy variables • Season-of-birth • Place-of-birth • Migration

  9. Proxy variables (1) Perinatal Season-of-birth Estimated effect size 5-15% winter/spring excess eg • relative risk =1.11 • but population attributable fraction (PAF) about 10.5%

  10. Risk proxy (2) Perinatal Place-of-birth; Urban vs rural birth Estimated effect size = 1.5 – 4.2 Relative risk 2.4 but PAF about 30%

  11. Risk proxy (3) Migration Estimated effect size 4 - 14

  12. Putative risk factors

  13. Genetic Factors

  14. Other genetic Non-hereditary genetic risk factors • Paternal age/mutation (no estimated effect size available)

  15. Environmental exposures: prenatal (1) • Prenatal nutrition • Macro-nutrition; eg calories/kilojoules • Micro-nutrition; eg specific vitamins • Estimated effect size for prenatal famine = 2.0

  16. Environmental exposures: prenatal (2) Prenatal Infections • Influenza (estimated effect size =2.0) • Poliomyelitis (estimated effect size = 1.05) • Respiratory infection (estimated effect size = 2.1) • Rubella (estimated effect size = 5.2) • Toxoplasmosis (uncertain effect size)

  17. Environmental exposures: prenatal (3) Maternal stress • death of spouse (estimated effect size = 6.2) • flood (estimated effect size =1.8) • ‘unwanted’ child (estimated effect size = 2.4) • depression (estimated effect size = 1.8)

  18. Environmental exposures: adolescence/adulthood (1) • Adverse life events • Social isolation • Stress • Estimated effect size =1.5 - 6

  19. Environmental exposures: perinatal Pregnancy & Birth Complications eg • prematurity, high & low birth weight, high & low body mass index, diminished head circumference • fetal distress and hypoxia-related PBCs • pre-eclampsia, prolonged labour, multiparity • Rhesus incompatibility (estimated effect size =2.8) Estimated effect size≈ 2

  20. Environmental exposures: childhood Infections Estimated effect size =4.0 Brain injury No estimated effect size available

  21. Environmental exposures: adolescence/adulthood (1) • Adverse life events • social isolation • stress • other • Estimated effect size = 1.5 – 6.0

  22. Environmental exposures: adolescence/adulthood (2) • Drug use • Alcohol • Marihuana • Other • Estimated effect size =2.0

  23. Sex differences • Sex is an example of a fixed risk factor • Sex modifies the effects of other risk factors • Male–female differences in schizophrenia: • familial transmission. • age at onset • symptomatology • neurobiological factors • (eg brain abnormalities & cognitive function) • course of illness • treatment response • incidence

  24. Risk factors and Age-at-onset • Variable age-at-onset • – wide range from childhood to older ages • Different risk indicators/RFs may be involved • Earlier onset seems to be associated with • male sex • positive family history • greater history of developmental deviance

  25. Summary: RF & development

  26. Caveats • Many possible risk factors identified; some RFs have substantial if inconclusive evidence (eg genes, obstetric complications), other RFs have been studied less • Mostly ecological studies • Risk factors and indicators lack specificity • Determining caseness • More than one syndrome? • Cause versus effect can be difficult to establish

  27. Conclusions (1) Some/many risk factors may interact Risk factors may be modified by time, place or person Heterogeneity can lead to further hypotheses & studies

  28. Conclusions (2) • Improved fetal and infant growth may be a means to improve adult health. • Non-specific environmental risk factors may lead to universal prevention • Epidemiology has discovered interesting leads …..more studies needed • ….epidemiological • ….laboratory, and • ….clinical

More Related