The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has updated its Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including with new information specifically addressed to individuals in the European Economic Area. As described in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, this website utilizes cookies, including for the purpose of offering an optimal online experience and services tailored to your preferences.

Please read the entire Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. By closing this message, browsing this website, continuing the navigation, or otherwise continuing to use the APA's websites, you confirm that you understand and accept the terms of the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including the utilization of cookies.

×
EditorialsFull Access

Does Early Intervention Improve the Long-Term Course of Schizophrenia?

Jonas and colleagues (1) have contributed a valuable and provocative new perspective on the relationship between duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) and clinical course in schizophrenia. A long DUP consistently has been associated with poorer response to medication and with a range of unfavorable clinical outcomes (2). Despite uncertainty as to whether this association is causal, the link between treatment delay and poor outcomes has been an impetus for the development of early detection strategies. In support of a causal relationship, some evidence suggests that psychosis may have a deleterious effect on the brain and that early initiation of treatment improves outcomes by protecting against a putative “neurotoxic” effect of psychosis (35). However, it is also possible that individuals with a poor-prognosis form of the illness may have a longer DUP due to insidious onset, apathy, and lack of insight—in other words, illness features that are associated with poor outcome may also be associated with a delay in seeking or receiving treatment. These have been the two standard explanatory models prior to the present article by Jonas and colleagues.

Jonas and colleagues analyzed data from their landmark Suffolk County Mental Health Project, a longitudinal study that included 287 individuals with schizophrenia who were initially enrolled at the time of first hospitalization and assessed after 6 months, 2 years, 4 years, 10 years, and 20 years. Using a multilevel spline regression model, the authors found a steady decline in global functioning that started before the onset of psychosis and continued unabated for the 20 years of follow-up. Their analysis suggests that a long DUP was associated with poor outcomes not because treatment was less effective if started later but because individuals with a long DUP were further along in the course of their deteriorating illness. The timing of treatment initiation did not influence this downward trajectory. Based on this interpretation, the purported misattribution of clinical outcomes to DUP may be an example of “lead-time bias,” a confounding effect that is quite familiar to epidemiologists.

This alternative explanation provides a new framework for analyzing outcomes in early psychosis and identifies a potential problem with the interpretation of results of some previous studies. However, we should not embrace uncritically the conclusions that current treatments may neither protect the brain when given early nor alter the trajectory of illness, nor should we accept as inevitable the proposed model of a uniformly deteriorating course.

One issue that complicates all models of schizophrenia is the great heterogeneity in symptoms and clinical course. This heterogeneity is illustrated by the extreme scatter of data points in Figure 3 in the article by Jonas and colleagues, which indicates just how difficult it is to represent functional outcomes by a single trajectory in such a highly variable and complicated illness. Until we better understand the biological and environmental factors that moderate clinical course, we must exercise caution in making predictions about prognosis or decisions about optimal treatment approaches based on the analysis of heterogeneous populations.

Jonas and colleagues offer the novel insight that, when interpreting the potential effect of DUP on clinical course, it matters whether one aligns individual outcome trajectories according to the time of onset of psychosis as opposed to aligning outcomes according to the time of first treatment. Having aligned trajectories according to onset of psychosis, they found a steep downward slope in functional status starting 6 years prior to onset of psychosis, whereas a previous analysis of the same sample aligned outcomes by treatment onset and found that mean ratings of global functioning remained stable following initiation of treatment until the year 10 assessment (6). Moreover, the recent Recovery After an Initial Schizophrenia Episode (RAISE) Early Treatment Program study of coordinated specialty care in first-episode psychosis found not just stabilization but steady improvement in functioning over the 2-year follow-up period after initiating treatment (7). Other studies have found improved functioning 7 years after initiation of treatment (8) and a maximal remission rate after 7.5 years (9). It is hard to reconcile the steep downward trajectory reported by Jonas and colleagues with the previous observation that participants in the Suffolk County Mental Health Project remained stable for an extended period after initiating treatment and with observations that participants in other samples improved over an extended period.

A likely explanation for these disparate findings is related to the fact that participants in the Suffolk County Mental Health Project deteriorated in their level of functioning before treatment initiation and again, on average, starting 10 years after treatment initiation (7). Because the timing of this extended period of stability differed between patients due to differences in how long treatment was delayed, and because the trajectory was modeled based on linear assumptions, the early and late deterioration phases largely determined the common downward slope. Hence, the straight downward trajectory poorly reflects individual trajectories of most participants. We have run simulations and found that a data-generating mechanism in which variable DUP is negatively associated with a treatment response lasting an average of 10 years followed by deterioration produces a trajectory with a steep negative decline that does not capture the effect of treatment or of treatment delay, similar to the finding by Jonas and colleagues.

It is worth noting that another naturalistic longitudinal study that relied on retrospective chart review of 80 individuals with schizophrenia engaged in continuous outpatient treatment in Italy found that DUP was negatively associated with general functioning after a mean of 25 years, whereas duration of illness was not (10). This study illustrates how sample selection may also affect estimates of the relative associations of DUP and duration of illness with clinical course, but given the retrospective design and lack of standardized assessments, the results must also be interpreted with caution.

Although the single downward trajectory modeled by Jonas and colleagues may not reflect the typical pattern of patients with early psychosis during an extended period after starting treatment, it may accurately reflect outcomes during late stages of the illness during which the Suffolk County Mental Health Project sample experienced functional decline. This raises the questions of why functional status might deteriorate years after initiation of treatment and why DUP might not influence this late deterioration. There are several possible explanations for a delayed deterioration effect, including a failure of treatment, a delayed degenerative component of the illness, or a delayed toxic effect of medication. The Suffolk County Mental Health Project has been cited as an example of the inadequate treatment provided to people with psychotic illness in the United States; half of participants in the sample did not receive consistent pharmacologic care (11). If psychotic relapse occurs because of inadequate treatment or treatment nonadherence, psychotic relapse may exert a negative effect similar to the effect of DUP that occurs prior to initiation of treatment. In other words, untreated psychosis at any stage of illness may count as additional DUP in terms of impact on clinical course. Studies have linked cumulative duration of relapse to poor outcomes (12) and brain atrophy (13) and have shown that response to treatment diminishes after psychotic relapse (14), supporting the model in which treatment is viewed as protecting the brain against adverse effects of psychosis. Alternatively, a subgroup of poor-prognosis patients who minimally benefit from treatment or who experience late-stage deterioration regardless of treatment might obscure a longer-term benefit of early intervention for individuals whose symptoms respond to treatment. If medication is contributing to a delayed deterioration in some patients, this also requires study so that therapeutic approaches can be tailored for this possible subgroup (5, 8).

In conclusion, if a potential long-term benefit of early intervention is to be realized, attention must be focused on preserving the initial benefits of treatment over the lifespan. The current focus of research and allocation of clinical resources to the early stages of illness may have minimal impact on the dispiriting downward trajectory identified by Jonas and colleagues unless late-stage deterioration is also addressed and high-quality treatment is provided beyond the early years of illness. Because ethically we cannot randomly assign individuals to a long or short DUP, we do not have definitive evidence with which to answer questions about the clinical consequences of early intervention; conclusions based on any single study must be tempered. Although the potential relationships of DUP, early intervention, and longer-term outcomes remain unclear, Jonas and colleagues have called attention both to a potential bias in current analytic approaches to the study of DUP and to the importance of considering the long-term course of illness when evaluating interventions that we hope will change the trajectory of illness.

Department of Psychiatry (Goff), Department of Population Health, Division of Statistics (Li), and Department of Population Health, Division of Epidemiology (Thorpe), New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York University Langone Health, New York; Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, Orangeburg, N.Y. (Goff).
Send correspondence to Dr. Goff ().

Dr. Goff has received research funding from NIH and the Stanley Medical Foundation, and he has served on advisory boards for Avanir Pharmaceuticals, Intracellular Therapies, and Takeda. Dr. Kalin has reviewed this editorial and found no evidence of influence from these relationships. Mr. Li and Dr. Thorpe report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

References

1 Jonas KG, Fochtmann LJ, Perlman G, et al.: Lead-time bias confounds association between duration of untreated psychosis and illness course in schizophrenia. Am J Psychiatry 2020; 177:327–334LinkGoogle Scholar

2 Penttilä M, Jääskeläinen E, Hirvonen N, et al.: Duration of untreated psychosis as predictor of long-term outcome in schizophrenia: systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Psychiatry 2014; 205:88–94Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

3 Goff DC, Zeng B, Ardekani BA, et al.: Association of hippocampal atrophy with duration of untreated psychosis and molecular biomarkers during initial antipsychotic treatment of first-episode psychosis. JAMA Psychiatry 2018; 75:370–378Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

4 Maximo JO, Nelson EA, Armstrong WP, et al.: Duration of untreated psychosis correlates with brain connectivity and morphology in medication-naive patients with first-episode psychosis. Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging 2020; 5:231–238Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

5 Goff DC, Falkai P, Fleischhacker WW, et al.: The long-term effects of antipsychotic medication on clinical course in schizophrenia. Am J Psychiatry 2017; 174:840–849LinkGoogle Scholar

6 Kotov R, Fochtmann L, Li K, et al.: Declining clinical course of psychotic disorders over the two decades following first hospitalization: evidence from the Suffolk County Mental Health Project. Am J Psychiatry 2017; 174:1064–1074LinkGoogle Scholar

7 Kane JM, Robinson DG, Schooler NR, et al.: Comprehensive versus usual community care for first-episode psychosis: 2-year outcomes from the NIMH RAISE Early Treatment Program. Am J Psychiatry 2016; 173:362–372LinkGoogle Scholar

8 Wunderink L, Nieboer RM, Wiersma D, et al.: Recovery in remitted first-episode psychosis at 7 years of follow-up of an early dose reduction/discontinuation or maintenance treatment strategy: long-term follow-up of a 2-year randomized clinical trial. JAMA Psychiatry 2013; 70:913–920Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

9 Harrow M, Grossman LS, Jobe TH, et al.: Do patients with schizophrenia ever show periods of recovery? A 15-year multi-follow-up study. Schizophr Bull 2005; 31:723–734Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

10 Primavera D, Bandecchi C, Lepori T, et al.: Does duration of untreated psychosis predict very long term outcome of schizophrenic disorders? Results of a retrospective study. Ann Gen Psychiatry 2012; 11:21Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

11 Mojtabai R, Fochtmann L, Chang SW, et al.: Unmet need for mental health care in schizophrenia: an overview of literature and new data from a first-admission study. Schizophr Bull 2009; 35:679–695Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

12 Hui CLM, Honer WG, Lee EHM, et al.: Long-term effects of discontinuation from antipsychotic maintenance following first-episode schizophrenia and related disorders: a 10 year follow-up of a randomised, double-blind trial. Lancet Psychiatry 2018; 5:432–442Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

13 Andreasen NC, Liu D, Ziebell S, et al.: Relapse duration, treatment intensity, and brain tissue loss in schizophrenia: a prospective longitudinal MRI study. Am J Psychiatry 2013; 170:609–615LinkGoogle Scholar

14 Takeuchi H, Siu C, Remington G, et al.: Does relapse contribute to treatment resistance? Antipsychotic response in first- vs. second-episode schizophrenia. Neuropsychopharmacology 2019; 44:1036–1042Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar