Department of Psychiatry and Neuropsychology, South Limburg Mental Health Research and Teaching Network, Maastricht University, The Netherlands
Clinical Psychology and Epidemiology Unit, Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Munich, Germany
Clinical Psychology and Epidemiology Unit, Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Munich, and Institute of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Technical University, Dresden, Germany
Department of Psychiatry and Neuropsychology, South Limburg Mental Health Research and Teaching Network, Maastricht University, The Netherlands and Division of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK
Correspondence: Professor Jim van Os, Department of Psychiatry and Neuropsychology, Maastricht University, PO Box 616 (DRT 10), 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands. Tel: +31 43 3875443; fax: +31 43 3875444; e-mail: j.vanos{at}sp.unimaas.nl
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Aims To examine associations between self-reported psychological trauma and psychotic symptoms as a function of prior evidence of vulnerability to psychosis (psychosis proneness).
Method At baseline, 2524 adolescents aged 1424 years provided self-reports on psychological trauma and psychosis proneness, and at follow-up (on average 42 months later) participants were interviewed for presence of psychotic symptoms.
Results Self-reported trauma was associated with psychotic symptoms,
in particular at more severe levels (adjusted OR 1.89, 95% CI1.163.08)
and following trauma associated with intense fear, helplessness or horror. The
risk difference between those with and without self-reported trauma at
baseline was 7% in the group with baseline psychosis proneness, but only 1.8%
in those without (adjusted test for difference between these two effect sizes:
2=4.6, P=0.032).
Conclusions Exposure to psychological trauma may increase the risk of psychotic symptoms in people vulnerable to psychosis.
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The sample was drawn in 1994 from the government registries in Munich of registrants expected to be 1424 years old at the time 0 interview in 1995. Details about the representativeness of the whole EDSP sample and its socio-demographic characteristics have been presented by Lieb et al (2000) and Wittchen et al (1998). A total of 3021 interviews were completed at time 0 (response rate 71%). The first follow-up study was conducted only in the subsample of respondents aged 1417 years at time 0, whereas the second follow-up study was again conducted for all respondents. The results reported here are based on the data collected at time 0 and time 2. Of the 3021 respondents interviewed in the time 0 study, 2548 completed an interview at the second follow-up, which occurred an average of 42 months after time 0 (response rate 84%).
Participants were assessed with the computer-assisted version of the Munich Composite International Diagnostic Interview (DIAX/MCIDI; Wittchen & Pfister, 1997), an updated version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview version 1.2 (World Health Organization, 1990). Diagnostic findings, according to the explicit diagnostic criteria of DSMIV (American Psychiatric Association, 1994), were obtained using the DIAX/MCIDI diagnostic algorithms. The CIDI is designed for use by trained interviewers who are not clinicians and has high interrater reliability (Cottler et al, 1991; Wittchen et al, 1991) and high testretest reliability (Wittchen, 1994; Reed et al, 1998). The assessment of psychosis with CIDI interviews by lay interviewers is not considered reliable (Anthony et al, 1985). Therefore, in the EDSP, trained psychologists who were allowed to probe with follow-up clinical questions conducted the interviews. Most interviews took place in the homes of the respondents. At time 0 the lifetime version of the MCIDI was used. At each of the follow-up assessments the MCIDI interval version was applied, which refers to the period of assessment from the previous interview until the present. Data on the MCIDI psychosis (G) section about psychotic symptoms were collected only at the time 2 assessment, at which point life-time ratings of psychotic symptoms were made, yielding lifetime cumulative incidence data up to the respective age of respondents at time 2 (range 1728 years). At time 0, participants additionally completed the self-report Symptom Check List90Revised (SCL90R; Derogatis, 1983) to screen for a broad range of psychological problems and symptoms of psychopathology. Reliability and validity of the SCL90R have been established previously (Derogatis & Cleary, 1977; Bonicatto et al, 1997).
Psychotic symptoms and psychosis proneness
In the adolescents and young adults, the ratings from the 15 MCIDI
core psychosis items on delusions (11 items) and hallucinations (4 items) were
used to assess the presence of psychotic symptoms (items G35,
G714, G17, G18, G20, G21). These concern classic psychotic experiences
involving, for example, persecution, thought interference and auditory
hallucinations. Participants were first asked to read a list of all the
psychotic experiences and were then interviewed about it by the psychologist
(list and phrasing available from the author upon request). All psychosis
items could be rated in two ways: 0 (no) and 1 (yes). The survey was not
powered for the study of rare psychotic disorders, but instead focused on the
presence of positive psychotic symptoms. The psychosis outcome was defined as
broad, medium or narrow (at least
one, at least two or at least three positive ratings on any of the 15
MCIDI core psychosis items respectively), in order to be able to assess
associations between trauma and the psychosis outcome defined at different
levels of severity, an approach similar to that used in previous analyses in
this sample (Spauwen et al,
2004a,b).
The method is described in more detail by Lieb et al
(2000).
The time 0 SCL90R sub-scales psychoticism and paranoia were used to measure psychosis proneness at baseline. These scales include self-reports on thought interference, hallucinations and suspiciousness (items 7, 8, 16, 18, 35, 43, 62, 68, 76, 77, 8385, 87, 88, 90), and can be regarded, if not as clear-cut psychotic symptoms, as an expression of psychosis proneness with familial transmission, as demonstrated by a recent general population family study (Hanssen et al, 2005b). The psychoticism and paranoia scales were combined into one psychosis proneness scale by adding their scores and dividing the sum by two. For the purposes of the analyses, SCL psychosis proneness was a priori defined dichotomously as the group of individuals with the highest 25% of scores as described previously (Henquet et al, 2005).
Self-reported trauma
Type of event
Self-reported lifetime exposure to trauma was measured in the entire sample
at time 0 using a module from the CIDI that started with trauma screening
questions, in which respondents could indicate a positive response on a
visually presented list of nine groups of specified traumatic events such as
experienced physical threat, experienced serious
accident or being sexually abused as a child (see
Table 1). The category
any traumatic event indicated exposure to any one of the nine
traumas. The visual presentation of the list allowed respondents and
interviewers to avoid speaking about sometimes embarrassing and stigmatising
trauma by simply indicating the number of the event. Affirmative responses to
any of the events were labelled self-reported trauma.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1 Associations between time 0 self-reported trauma and time 2 psychosis outcomes |
DSMIV A2 criterion
In the case of a positive rating for an event, questions were asked about
the experience to determine whether the DSMIV A2 criterion for a
traumatic event had been met. This criterion assesses presence of intense
fear, helplessness or horror (Stein et
al, 2002).
Age at exposure
In order to examine whether associations were age-dependent, in particular
with regard to exposure in early and middle childhood, exposure to trauma was
divided into two groups: one with exposure before age 13 years and one after
age 12 years.
Analyses
Self-reported trauma and psychosis outcome
All standard errors and test statistics were estimated using the software
package Stata version 8. Logistic regression analysis was used to examine the
association between lifetime cumulative incidence of positive psychotic
symptoms (defined as at least one, two or three psychotic experiences) in the
adolescents and young adults and self-reported trauma. Associations were
expressed as odds ratios with their 95% confidence intervals. Similarly to the
approach used in previous work (van Os et al,
2002,
2003;
van Os, 2004), interaction was
calculated under an additive rather than a multiplicative model because only
additive interaction can be interpreted biologically in a meaningful way,
yielding information on the extent to which two causes depend on each other or
co-participate in disease causation
(Darroch, 1997).
Guided by previous research, we adjusted for the following confounders chosen a priori: gender, socio-economic status (a combination of social status and financial status), urbanicity, cannabis use (defined previously by Henquet et al, 2005) and time 0 DSMIV diagnosis of any substance misuse or dependence, major depression, anxiety disorder, bipolar disorder and hypomanic episode. In order to examine whether any association between trauma and psychotic symptoms at time 2 was independent of expression of psychosis at time 0, analyses were also adjusted for time 0 SCL psychosis proneness. In order to test whether associations between trauma and psychosis differed in magnitude as a function of definition of psychosis outcome (broad and narrow as defined above), effect sizes of a four-level psychosis variable no psychotic symptom, one psychotic symptom (n=258), two psychotic symptoms (n=98), three or more psychotic symptoms (n=85) entered as three dummy variables were compared in an equation with trauma as the dependent variable.
Trauma and psychosis proneness
In order to assess whether trauma (T) and pre-existing SCL
psychosis proneness (P) interacted synergistically, the risk for
psychosis was calculated for each of the four exposure cells that make up the
combination of the two exposures:
R(T0/P0),
R(T1/P0),
R(T0/P1) and
R(T1/P1). The null hypothesis
of no additive interaction:
R(T1/P1)R(T1/P0)R(T0/P1)+R(T0/P0)=0
(Darroch, 1997) was assessed by
the Wald test. Risk difference regression in Stata was used to calculate
adjusted associations between trauma and psychosis under an additive risk
model.
As some adolescents might have reported CIDI psychotic symptoms at time 2 that already existed at time 0, a sensitivity analysis was conducted excluding adolescents who had reported that onset of time 2 CIDI psychotic symptoms had occurred more than a year before, thus ensuring prediction of only incident psychotic symptoms.
Specificity
To investigate whether any association with trauma was specific for
psychosis, the analyses were repeated using the DSMIV diagnoses of
major depression and bipolar disorder as the dependent variables. For the
purpose of these analyses, time 2 diagnoses of major depression and bipolar
disorder were used, including only the new cases that had arisen between time
0 and time 2 and excluding those with a relapse of an illness already
diagnosed at time 0. These analyses were adjusted as described above, with the
exception that baseline major depression, bipolar disorder and hypomanic
episode were not adjusted for and instead the broad measure of time 0
psychotic symptoms was.
Risk set
The analyses for self-reported trauma in relation to the psychosis outcome
were conducted in the group of individuals who had both complete data on the
psychosis outcome at time 2 and self-reported trauma at time 0, yielding a
risk set of 2524.
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Unadjusted logistic regression indicated that time 0 self-reported trauma was associated with time 2 psychotic symptoms (OR=1.40, 95% CI 1.091.78). The strength of the association increased in the model of the time 2 narrow psychosis outcome of having at least two (OR=1.88, 95% CI 1.352.62) or at least three (OR=2.60, 95% CI 1.664.09) psychotic symptoms (Table 1). For the broader measures of psychotic symptoms, the magnitude of the associations decreased and became statistically non-significant after adjustment for gender, socio-economic status, urbanicity, cannabis use, time 0 SCL psychosis proneness and time 0 DSMIV mental disorders (Table 1). However, the adjusted OR for the association between exposure to any trauma and the outcome of at least three psychotic symptoms was 1.89 (95% CI 1.163.08). Excluding the 25% of adolescents with time 2 CIDI psychotic symptoms with onset more than a year previously did not change this latter result (OR=1.84, 95% CI 1.063.22).
Associations with specific traumatic events and diagnostic specificity
Dissecting the broad trauma variable into its nine separate categories
revealed that generally all time 0 trauma categories showed positive
associations with the time 2 psychosis outcome, in particular the narrowest
psychosis outcome of three or more psychotic symptoms. Exceptions were the
categories serious accident and other trauma,
which did not show clear associations
(Table 1). The cumulative
incidences of major depression and bipolar disorder in the risk set between
time 0 and time 2 were 6.9% (n=174) and 0.8% (n=19)
respectively. There was no significant association between self-reported
trauma and the occurrence of bipolar disorder (unadjusted OR=0.77, 95% CI
0.222.68; adjusted OR=0.40, 95% CI 0.101.57), and the results
were similar for major depression (unadjusted OR=1.39, 95% CI 0.972.00;
adjusted OR=1.16, 95% CI 0.791.71).
Age at exposure and A2 criterion
There was no large or significant difference in associations between trauma
and the narrowest psychosis outcome of three or more psychotic symptoms
according to age at exposure. In the group with exposure before age 13 years
the adjusted OR was 2.19 (95% CI 1.004.81, P=0.050), whereas
in those with exposure after age 12 years it was 1.79 (95% CI 1.043.07,
P=0.035; test for difference between these two effect sizes
2=0.22, P=0.64). Association between the narrowest
psychosis outcome of three or more psychotic symptoms and trauma that met the
A2 criterion (n=389 out of 491) were generally higher than those with
trauma that did not meet the A2 criterion (n=102 out of 491),
although this difference was not statistically significant. Thus, the adjusted
OR for trauma without the A2 criterion was 1.24 (95% CI 0.433.62,
P=0.69) and the adjusted OR for trauma meeting the A2 criterion was
2.05 (95% CI 1.233.42, P=0.006; test for difference between
these two effect sizes
2=0.79, P=0.38).
Comparison by psychosis severity
In the analyses with trauma meeting the A2 criterion as the dependent
variable and the three dummy variables representing psychosis defined at
different levels of severity, the adjusted odds ratios, compared with the
reference category of no psychotic symptom, were: one psychotic symptom
OR=0.86 (95% CI 0.592.26); two psychotic symptoms OR=0.77 (95% CI
0.431.39); three psychotic symptoms OR=2.01 (95% CI 1.223.31).
This latter effect size was significantly greater than both the first
(
2=7.77, P=0.0053) and the second
(
2=6.34, P=0.012).
Doseresponse
The association between trauma and psychosis increased in a
doseresponse fashion with the number of traumatic events. Thus, the
adjusted odds ratio for one event (n=398) was 1.78 (95% CI
1.053.03, P=0.033) and for two events (n=93) it was
2.30 (95% CI 1.025.18, P=0.045). Similarly, somewhat more
pronounced results were apparent for trauma meeting the A2 criterion: the
adjusted OR for one event (n=319) was 1.76 (95% CI 1.003.09,
P=0.033) and for two events (n=70) it was 3.12 (95% CI
1.377.10, P=0.007).
Synergism between trauma and psychosis proneness
The rate of time 2 CIDI psychotic symptoms according to the most narrow
definition (three or more symptoms) in those with SCL psychosis proneness (the
25% with the highest time 0 SCL psychosis proneness scores) was 6.2%
v. 2.5% in those without. Similarly, the rate of time 2 CIDI
psychotic symptoms in adolescents who reported trauma was 6.5% v.
2.6% in those who did not. The rates of time 2 CIDI three or more psychotic
symptoms in the four exposure states are depicted in
Table 2. The rate for the
combined exposure category was 11.2%, whereas for SCL psychosis proneness
alone it was 4.0% and for those exposed to neither it was 2.2%. This suggests
a strong departure from independence, as the expected rate in the case of
independence would have been 4.2+4.02.2=6.0%
(Darroch, 1997). In other
words, the effect size of trauma for psychosis in those without psychosis
proneness was, on the additive scale, 4.02.2=1.8%, whereas for those
with psychosis proneness it was 11.24.2=7%. The difference between
these two effect sizes, adjusted for gender, socio-economic status,
urbanicity, cannabis use and time 0 DSMIV mental disorders, was
statistically significant (
2=4.6, P=0.032;
Table 2). Excluding the 25% of
adolescents with time 2 CIDI psychotic symptoms with onset more than a year
previously did not change this latter result (
2=4.1,
P=0.043). Similarly, excluding individuals with trauma not meeting
the A2 criterion revealed similar results (
2=4.2,
P=0.040).
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 2 Rates of narrowly defined psychotic symptoms (three or more symptoms) according to the four exposure states formed by trauma (exposed v. non-exposed) and psychosis proneness (high v. low) |
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Linking trauma and psychosis
The great majority of studies linking trauma to mental health investigated
people who were already mentally ill and selected into treatment settings at
the time of retrospective assessment of trauma, with the inherent risk of
bias. Whereas true prospective studies are all but impossible, given the
necessity to intervene when exposure to trauma is apparent, a semi-prospective
approach in non-selected, non-ill populations constitutes a less biased
approach. In a recent population-based study, exposure to psychological trauma
assessed at baseline predicted development of incident positive psychotic
symptoms 3 years later, in particular for the more narrow clinical definitions
of psychosis (Janssen et al,
2004). The latter study, however, included individuals aged
1865 years, giving rise to the risk of uncontrolled age and cohort
effects which can only be avoided by studying the association between trauma
and psychosis in a homogeneously aged sample as proximal as possible to the
exposure. In practice, this would mean inclusion of individuals after puberty,
when there is a dramatic rise in the incidence of psychotic experiences and
the impact of childhood trauma can first be assessed.
Interpretation of psychosis proneness
The time 0 measure of psychosis proneness was an SCL90R
self-report of psychotic symptoms, whereas the time 2 outcome was based on the
MCIDI clinical interview administered by trained psychologists using
probing questions. In the group with psychosis proneness at time 0, any
association with trauma can thus be interpreted as either an effect of
persistence of psychosis from time 0 to time 2 (if one considers the
SCL90R to be identical to the MCIDI psychosis section) or
as an effect of transition from expression of psychosis proneness at time 0 to
expression of overt symptoms at time 2. The fact that associations were
strongest for the more severe psychosis outcome suggests the latter. However,
the conservative interpretation that fits both the above scenarios is that
exposure to psychological trauma worsens the prognosis of expression of
psychosis, whether it be in terms of greater likelihood of persistence or
greater likelihood of transition to a more severe psychotic state.
The doseresponse relationship demonstrated in this paper suggests causality. Exposure to trauma in childhood and adolescence thus may modify the trajectory and outcome of psychosis proneness. As psychosis proneness has a continuous distribution in the population (Hanssen et al, 2005b), many of those exposed could have their risk of later psychosis altered. Bak and colleagues provided a possible explanation, invoking a metacognitive mechanism for the synergistic relationship between trauma and psychosis proneness. These authors reported that in individuals with a tendency to experience anomalous experiences, prior exposure to trauma in childhood and adolescence was associated with less subjective control over these experiences and greater level of psychological distress (Bak et al, 2005).
Personenvironment interaction v. personenvironment correlation
The above interpretation that previous expression of psychosis proneness
may make an individual more sensitive to any risk-increasing effect of
psychological trauma (personenvironment interaction) assumes that
psychosis proneness does not increase the risk of psychological trauma
(personenvironment correlation)
(van Os & Sham, 2003).
Having a psychosis proneness may make individuals more likely to report
experience of trauma regardless of their actual experience. In order to test
this assumption, we examined whether time 0 psychosis proneness predicted
incident reports of trauma at time 2 (defined in the same way as at time 0).
This was done by excluding all those who had reported trauma at time 0 and
identifying new reports of trauma at time 2. Thus, at time 2 there were 204
individuals who at time 0 had not admitted to any trauma and who reported
having experienced a trauma between time 0 and time 2. Analysis revealed that
there was no large or significant association between baseline psychosis
proneness and incident trauma at time 2 (OR=1.16, 95% CI 0.901.48).
Another form of personenvironment correlation would be that the level of psychosis proneness in the general population is also, at least in part, the result of trauma itself. As both non-genetic and genetic sources contribute to individual differences in psychosis proneness (Kendler & Hewitt, 1992; Linney et al, 2003), trauma may well be a contributing factor. In fact, the analyses may capture part of the continuous pathway of influences from risk to formal diagnosis, in which the apparent interaction between psychosis proneness and trauma represents in part the early expression of the aetiological influence of trauma itself in those who are most vulnerable to its effects. The fact that there was a weak association between trauma at time 0 and SCL psychosis proneness in an adjusted risk difference regression model with the latter as the dependent variable (risk difference 6%, P=0.007) does suggest that part of the interaction between trauma at time 0 and SCL psychosis proneness may represent a continuous direct influence of trauma itself.
Possible mechanism of risk
One mechanism by which trauma may increase the risk of psychosis is by
creating a biological vulnerability. Read et al
(2001) have suggested that
adverse life events might mould neurodevelopmental abnormalities that underlie
the sensitivity to stressors, if they occur early enough or are sufficiently
severe. Thus, abnormal neurodevelopmental processes might originate from
traumatic events in childhood. Specifically, when exposure to stressors
persists and heightened stress-induced glucocorticoid release is chronic,
permanent changes in the hypothalamicpituitaryadrenal (HPA) axis
may ensue. Childhood traumatic events could thus cause permanent dysregulation
of the HPA axis, which in turn might underlie the dopaminergic abnormalities
that are generally thought to be involved in psychosis
(Read et al,
2001).
Another biological mechanism underlying the association between trauma and psychosis may lie in direct effects on dopamine function. It has been shown that maternal deprivation in neonatal rats produces enduring changes in dopamine function associated with increases in presynaptic dopaminergic function in the nucleus accumbens (Hall et al, 1999). A similar model of dopamine sensitisation might result from traumatic exposures in humans. Furthermore, it has been suggested that the experience of trauma might create a psychological vulnerability to the development of psychotic symptoms (Bentall et al, 2001; Garety et al, 2001). Exposure to early trauma may increase the risk of dysfunctional responses to early anomalous experiences, resulting in psychotic symptom formation. It is of interest that associations with trauma meeting the A2 criterion were numerically greater than for traumatic events not meeting the A2 criterion. This suggests that the strong emotions associated with trauma have a role in increasing the risk of later psychotic symptoms. Recent psychological models have provided evidence for such a direct role of emotions in the development of psychotic experiences (Freeman & Garety, 2003).
Childhood sexual trauma
In a cross-sectional population survey, a history of sexual trauma
displayed the largest relative risk for psychosis among a range of experiences
of victimisation (Bebbington et
al, 2004). Also, a history of psychological trauma has been
associated with an increased incidence of positive psychotic symptoms in
people with a high pre-existing risk of psychosis. For example, in people with
bipolar disorder, who have a high risk of experiencing such symptoms, exposure
to childhood sexual trauma increased the likelihood of experiencing psychotic
symptoms (Hammersley et al,
2003). In a truly prospective record linkage study, no significant
association between registered severe childhood sexual trauma, mostly with
penetrative abuse, and registered schizophrenia was found
(Spataro et al,
2004), although the excess risk was 30% for males and 50% for
females. One explanation for the discrepancy is that the use of registered
sexual abuse also necessarily indicates that interventions would have been
initiated, mitigating the risk of psychotic disorder. Thus, Read &
Hammersley (2005) suggested
that because the cases were drawn from police and court records many of the
children would have been removed from the abusive situation and received early
support.
Our sample included a much wider and much more prevalent range of sexually threatening experiences, which particularly if no confiding is possible might have an adverse effect on emotional development. We used a much broader outcome of psychotic symptoms, which could be more sensitive than narrowly defined schizophrenia in a psychiatric treatment setting.
Symptoms and disorder
Psychotic symptoms cannot be equated with psychotic disorder. Symptoms are
more prevalent than DSMIV defined psychotic disorders, but nevertheless
show a degree of continuity with more severe states such as schizophrenia
(Poulton et al, 2000;
Johns & van Os, 2001). The
milder forms of expression of psychosis show patterns of associations with
demographic, environmental and genetic risk factors similar to those seen in
clinical psychotic disorders, including the apparent association with early
trauma, providing further support for the notion of continuity
(Johns & van Os, 2001).
Although the majority of individuals experiencing these lesser psychotic
symptoms are not in need of care, longitudinal studies suggest that they might
nevertheless be at increased risk of developing a clinical disorder
(Poulton et al, 2000;
Hanssen et al,
2005a,b).
Our results indicate that exposure to trauma is particularly relevant in
relation to more severe psychotic states, suggesting that the findings have
clinical implications as well.
Methodological issues
First, it must be acknowledged that the time 0 lifetime self-reported
trauma prevalence rates produced by this study could be underestimates, for
example because respondents, for a variety of reasons, might have chosen not
to admit to traumatic experience early in life. Consequently, the positive
relationships between trauma and psychosis found in our study could be
underestimates of the strength of those relationships, since a significant
number of traumatised respondents could actually be in the non-traumatised
group in the analyses. Second, the measurement of reported psychological
trauma was not very refined, as the respondents could not report qualitative
aspects of the trauma. On the other hand, the use of a direct semi-structured
interview is one of the strengths of our study, because the relationship
between trauma and mental disorders is frequently underestimated by
researchers reliance on records rather than direct questioning. In
addition, the evaluation of the distinction between occurrence and emotional
impact added to the validity of the analyses. A related issue is the fact that
trauma was assessed retrospectively, even though the analyses relating trauma
to the psychosis outcome were prospective. The possibility cannot be
completely excluded that the presence of psychosis might lead to an alteration
in the recall of trauma. However, because we controlled for the presence of
time 0 psychosis vulnerability, the results are unlikely to be attributable to
an inverse relationship. In addition, any such influence of time 0 psychosis
proneness could not explain the pattern of synergism between trauma and time 0
psychosis proneness.
Use of the SCL90R as a measure of baseline proneness is a third possible limitation, as assessment of the SCL covers only the preceding 2 weeks. This might have led to false negatives in the baseline assessment of psychosis proneness. However, any possible bias in the direction of false negatives would have only decreased risk differences between groups, suggesting even larger associations with baseline proneness than we observed. A fourth limitation of this work concerns the use of the CIDI to assess psychotic symptoms at time 2 (Anthony et al, 1985). However, the use of face-to-face interviewing by psychologists can be expected to yield much better results than a self-report questionnaire; furthermore, the psychologists were allowed to probe with follow-up clinical questions, so that the respondents answers cannot be taken to represent self-report, as would be the case with lay interviewer assessments.
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LIMITATIONS
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The authors thank Axel Perkonigg, PhD, for his valuable comments and suggestions.
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