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On the proportion of patients who experience a prodrome prior to psychosis onset: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

David A BenrimohViktor DlugunovychAbigail C WrightPeter L PhalenMelissa C FunaroMaria FerraraAlbert R PowersScott W WoodsSinahin GuloksuzAlison Ruth YungVinod H SrihariJai L Shah
Published in: Molecular psychiatry (2024)
This is the first meta-analysis on the prevalence of a prodrome prior to the onset of first episode psychosis. The majority of patients (78.3%) were found to have experienced a prodrome prior to psychosis onset. However, findings are highly heterogenous across study and no definitive source of heterogeneity was found despite extensive subgroup analyses. As most studies were retrospective in nature, recall bias likely affects these results. While the large majority of patients with psychosis experience a prodrome in some form, it is unclear if the remainder of patients experience no prodrome, or if ascertainment methods employed in the studies were not sensitive to their experiences. Given widespread investment in indicated prevention of psychosis through prospective identification and intervention during the prodrome, a resolution of this question as well as a consensus definition of the prodrome is much needed in order to effectively direct and organize services, and may be accomplished through novel, densely sampled and phenotyped prospective cohort studies that aim for representative sampling across multiple settings.
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