Treated Incidence of Psychotic Disorders in the Multinational EU-GEI Study

Importance: Psychotic disorders contribute significantly to the global disease burden, yet the latest international incidence study of psychotic disorders was conducted in the 1980s. Objectives: To estimate the incidence of psychotic disorders using comparable methods across 17 catchment areas in 6 countries and to examine the variance between catchment areas by putative environmental risk factors. Design, Setting, and Participants: An international multisite incidence study (the European Network of National Schizophrenia Networks Studying Gene-Environment Interactions) was conducted from May... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Jongsma, Hannah E
Gayer-Anderson, Charlotte
Lasalvia, Antonio
Quattrone, Diego
Mulè, Alice
Szöke, Andrei
Selten, Jean-Paul
Turner, Caitlin
Arango, Celso
Tarricone, Ilaria
Berardi, Domenico
Tortelli, Andrea
Llorca, Pierre-Michel
de Haan, Lieuwe
Bobes, Julio
Bernardo, Miguel
Sanjuán, Julio
Santos, José Luis
Arrojo, Manuel
Del-Ben, Cristina Marta
Menezes, Paulo Rossi
Murray, Robin M
Rutten, Bart P
Jones, Peter B
van Os, Jim
Morgan, Craig
Kirkbride, James B
European Network of National Schizophrenia Networks Studying Gene-Environment Interactions Work Package 2 (EU-GEI WP2) Group
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2018
Verlag/Hrsg.: American Medical Association
Schlagwörter: Adult / Age Factors / Brazil / Catchment Area / Health / Cross-Cultural Comparison / England / Female / France / Gene-Environment Interaction / Humans / Incidence / Italy / Male / Minority Groups / Netherlands / Psychotic Disorders / Risk Factors / Sex Factors / Spain
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27213529
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/271830

Importance: Psychotic disorders contribute significantly to the global disease burden, yet the latest international incidence study of psychotic disorders was conducted in the 1980s. Objectives: To estimate the incidence of psychotic disorders using comparable methods across 17 catchment areas in 6 countries and to examine the variance between catchment areas by putative environmental risk factors. Design, Setting, and Participants: An international multisite incidence study (the European Network of National Schizophrenia Networks Studying Gene-Environment Interactions) was conducted from May 1, 2010, to April 1, 2015, among 2774 individuals from England (2 catchment areas), France (3 catchment areas), Italy (3 catchment areas), the Netherlands (2 catchment areas), Spain (6 catchment areas), and Brazil (1 catchment area) with a first episode of nonorganic psychotic disorders (International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision [ICD-10] codes F20-F33) confirmed by the Operational Criteria Checklist. Denominator populations were estimated using official national statistics. Exposures: Age, sex, and racial/ethnic minority status were treated as a priori confounders. Latitude, population density, percentage unemployment, owner-occupied housing, and single-person households were treated as catchment area-level exposures. Main Outcomes and Measures: Incidence of nonorganic psychotic disorders (ICD-10 codes F20-F33), nonaffective psychoses (ICD-10 codes F20-F29), and affective psychoses (ICD-10 codes F30-F33) confirmed by the Operational Criteria Checklist. Results: A total of 2774 patients (1196 women and 1578 men; median age, 30.5 years [interquartile range, 23.0-41.0 years]) with incident cases of psychotic disorders were identified during 12.9 million person-years at risk (crude incidence, 21.4 per 100 000 person-years; 95% CI, 19.4-23.4 per 100 000 person-years). A total of 2183 patients (78.7%) had nonaffective psychotic disorders. After direct standardization for age, ...