Longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms.
Psychotic experiences are prevalent in community samples and are highly correlated with depressive symptoms. This study aimed to investigate the longitudinal associations between psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms between adolescence and young adulthood.Prospective cohort study with a 6 y...
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doaj-82e739e1f39d4c05ae7c5d4dc1f4989c2020-11-25T01:18:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0198e10575810.1371/journal.pone.0105758Longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms.Sarah A SullivanNicola WilesDaphne KounaliGlyn LewisJon HeronMary CannonLiam MahedyPeter B JonesJan StochlStan ZammitPsychotic experiences are prevalent in community samples and are highly correlated with depressive symptoms. This study aimed to investigate the longitudinal associations between psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms between adolescence and young adulthood.Prospective cohort study with a 6 year follow-up in a community sample of 7632 adolescents and young adults. Depressive symptoms were assessed with the Short Moods and Feelings Questionnaire and psychotic experiences with a semi-structured clinical interview at 12 and 18 years. Longitudinal and cross-sectional associations were investigated with regression and structural equation models.Depressive symptoms and psychotic experiences were associated at each time-point (12 years r = 0.486 [95% CI 0.457, 0.515]; 18 years r = 0.286 [95% CI 0.233, 0.339]) and there were longitudinal within-phenotype associations (depressive symptoms r = 0.252 [95% CI 0.205, 0.299]; psychotic experiences r = 0.662 [95% CI 0.595, 0.729]). There was an across-phenotype association between psychotic experiences at 12 and depressive symptoms at 18 r = 0.139 [95% CI 0.086, 0.192; p<0.001], but no association between depressive symptoms at 12 and psychotic experiences at 18 r = -0.022 [95% CI -0.032, 0.077; p = 0.891].Longitudinal across-phenotype associations were substantially weaker than cross-sectional associations or within-phenotype longitudinal associations. Whilst psychotic experiences at 12 years were associated with a small increase in depression at 18 years, depression at 12 years was not associated with psychotic experiences at 18 years once across-phenotype cross-sectional and within-phenotype longitudinal associations were accounted for. This suggests that the biological mechanisms underlying depression at this age do not increase subsequent risk of psychotic experiences once they resolve.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4146535?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Sarah A Sullivan Nicola Wiles Daphne Kounali Glyn Lewis Jon Heron Mary Cannon Liam Mahedy Peter B Jones Jan Stochl Stan Zammit |
spellingShingle |
Sarah A Sullivan Nicola Wiles Daphne Kounali Glyn Lewis Jon Heron Mary Cannon Liam Mahedy Peter B Jones Jan Stochl Stan Zammit Longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Sarah A Sullivan Nicola Wiles Daphne Kounali Glyn Lewis Jon Heron Mary Cannon Liam Mahedy Peter B Jones Jan Stochl Stan Zammit |
author_sort |
Sarah A Sullivan |
title |
Longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms. |
title_short |
Longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms. |
title_full |
Longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms. |
title_fullStr |
Longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms. |
title_sort |
longitudinal associations between adolescent psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2014-01-01 |
description |
Psychotic experiences are prevalent in community samples and are highly correlated with depressive symptoms. This study aimed to investigate the longitudinal associations between psychotic experiences and depressive symptoms between adolescence and young adulthood.Prospective cohort study with a 6 year follow-up in a community sample of 7632 adolescents and young adults. Depressive symptoms were assessed with the Short Moods and Feelings Questionnaire and psychotic experiences with a semi-structured clinical interview at 12 and 18 years. Longitudinal and cross-sectional associations were investigated with regression and structural equation models.Depressive symptoms and psychotic experiences were associated at each time-point (12 years r = 0.486 [95% CI 0.457, 0.515]; 18 years r = 0.286 [95% CI 0.233, 0.339]) and there were longitudinal within-phenotype associations (depressive symptoms r = 0.252 [95% CI 0.205, 0.299]; psychotic experiences r = 0.662 [95% CI 0.595, 0.729]). There was an across-phenotype association between psychotic experiences at 12 and depressive symptoms at 18 r = 0.139 [95% CI 0.086, 0.192; p<0.001], but no association between depressive symptoms at 12 and psychotic experiences at 18 r = -0.022 [95% CI -0.032, 0.077; p = 0.891].Longitudinal across-phenotype associations were substantially weaker than cross-sectional associations or within-phenotype longitudinal associations. Whilst psychotic experiences at 12 years were associated with a small increase in depression at 18 years, depression at 12 years was not associated with psychotic experiences at 18 years once across-phenotype cross-sectional and within-phenotype longitudinal associations were accounted for. This suggests that the biological mechanisms underlying depression at this age do not increase subsequent risk of psychotic experiences once they resolve. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4146535?pdf=render |
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