Clinical and metabolic associations of obesity and body mass index in antipsychotic-naïve first-episode schizophrenia patients and nonadherent chronic patients

IF 0.3 Q4 PSYCHIATRY
Sergej Nadalin, Vjekoslav Peitl, Dalibor Karlović, Petra Sučić, Lena Zatković, Alena Buretić-Tomljanović
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Abstract

Aim of the study We investigated the association between obesity and body mass index (BMI) with Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) psychopathology, age at disease onset, and parameters linked to the metabolic syndrome (fasting plasma lipid and glucose levels), among antipsychotic-naïve first-episode schizophrenia (AN-FES) patients and nonadherent chronic schizophrenia individuals. Subject or material and methods We recruited a total of 187 AN-FES patients or nonadherent chronic individuals for this study. Clinical and anthropometric data together with plasma lipid and glucose parameters were collected immediately after patients’ admission to the hospital. Patients were classified as obese with body mass index (BMI) ≥ 30, or as non-obese if overweight (BMI: 25 – 29.9) or of normal body weight (BMI: 18.5 – 24.9). Results After controlling for the possible confounders we found that only BMI significantly predicted clinical and metabolic variables. Among AN-FES patients, higher BMI values predicted lower levels of HDL cholesterol (HDL-c), and higher ratios for LDL cholesterol (LDL-c)/HDL-c and triglyceride/HDL-c, while among nonadherent individuals, higher BMI values predicted higher number of psychotic episodes, and lower PANSS general psychopathology scores. The contribution of BMI ranged from approximately 5.8% to 29.6%, with the lowest contribution observed for number of psychotic episodes, and the highest contribution for the LDL-c/HDL-c ratio. Discussion Our results indicate that AN-FES patients and nonadherent chronic patients differed in the effects of BMI. Conclusions Higher BMI contributes to an increased risk for dyslipidemia among AN-FES patients and to the higher number of psychotic episodes, and less severe clinical psychopathology among nonadherent chronic schizophrenia individuals.
antipsychotic-naïve首发精神分裂症患者和非依从性慢性患者肥胖和体重指数的临床和代谢关联
研究目的:在antipsychotic-naïve首发精神分裂症(AN-FES)患者和非黏着性慢性精神分裂症患者中,研究肥胖和体重指数(BMI)与阳性和阴性综合征量表(PANSS)精神病理学、发病年龄以及与代谢综合征相关的参数(空腹血脂和血糖水平)之间的关系。本研究共招募了187例AN-FES患者或非粘附性慢性个体。患者入院后立即收集临床和人体测量数据以及血脂和血糖参数。体重指数(BMI)≥30分为肥胖,体重超重(BMI: 25 - 29.9)或体重正常(BMI: 18.5 - 24.9)分为非肥胖。结果在控制了可能的混杂因素后,我们发现只有BMI能显著预测临床和代谢变量。在AN-FES患者中,较高的BMI值预示着较低的HDL-c水平,较高的LDL-c /HDL-c和甘油三酯/HDL-c比率,而在非粘附个体中,较高的BMI值预示着较高的精神病发作次数和较低的PANSS一般精神病理学评分。BMI的贡献范围约为5.8%至29.6%,精神病发作次数的贡献最低,LDL-c/HDL-c比值的贡献最高。我们的研究结果表明,AN-FES患者和非依从性慢性患者在BMI的影响上存在差异。结论:较高的BMI增加了an - fes患者血脂异常的风险,增加了精神病发作的次数,并且在非依从性慢性精神分裂症患者中较轻的临床精神病理。
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CiteScore
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