Psychiatric Symptoms, Cognition, and Symptom Severity in Children.

IF 22.5 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Adam Pines, Leonardo Tozzi, Claire Bertrand, Arielle S Keller, Xue Zhang, Susan Whitfield-Gabrieli, Trevor Hastie, Bart Larsen, John Leikauf, Leanne M Williams
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Importance: Mental illnesses are a leading cause of disability globally, and functional disability is often in part caused by cognitive impairments across psychiatric disorders. However, studies have consistently reported seemingly opposite findings regarding the association between cognition and psychiatric symptoms.

Objective: To determine if the association between general cognition and mental health symptoms diverges at different symptom severities in children.

Design, setting, and participants: A total of 5175 children with complete data at 2 time points assessed 2 years apart (aged 9 to 11 years at the first assessment) from the ongoing Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) study were evaluated for a general cognition factor and mental health symptoms from September 2016 to August 2020 at 21 sites across the US. Polynomial and generalized additive models afforded derivation of continuous associations between cognition and psychiatric symptoms across different ranges of symptom severity. Data were analyzed from December 2022 to April 2024.

Main outcomes and measures: Aggregate cognitive test scores (general cognition) were primarily evaluated in relation to total and subscale-specific symptoms reported from the Child Behavioral Checklist.

Results: The sample included 5175 children (2713 male [52.4%] and 2462 female [47.6%]; mean [SD] age, 10.9 [1.18] years). Previously reported mixed findings regarding the association between general cognition and symptoms may consist of several underlying, opposed associations that depend on the class and severity of symptoms. Linear models recovered differing associations between general cognition and mental health symptoms, depending on the range of symptom severities queried. Nonlinear models confirm that internalizing symptoms were significantly positively associated with cognition at low symptom burdens higher cognition = more symptoms) and significantly negatively associated with cognition at high symptom burdens.

Conclusions and relevance: The association between mental health symptoms and general cognition in this study was nonlinear. Internalizing symptoms were both positively and negatively associated with general cognition at a significant level, depending on the range of symptom severities queried in the analysis sample. These results appear to reconcile mixed findings in prior studies, which implicitly assume that symptom severity tracks linearly with cognitive ability across the entire spectrum of mental health. As the association between cognition and symptoms may be opposite in low vs high symptom severity samples, these results reveal the necessity of clinical enrichment in studies of cognitive impairment.

儿童的精神症状、认知能力和症状严重程度。
重要性精神疾病是导致全球残疾的主要原因之一,而功能性残疾的部分原因往往是各种精神疾病的认知障碍。然而,关于认知与精神症状之间的关联,研究报告却始终得出看似相反的结论:目的:确定在不同症状严重程度的儿童中,一般认知与精神健康症状之间的关联是否存在差异:从 2016 年 9 月到 2020 年 8 月,美国 21 个研究机构对正在进行的青少年大脑和认知发展(ABCD)研究中的 5175 名儿童进行了一般认知因子和精神健康症状评估,这些儿童在两个时间点的评估数据完整,且相隔两年(首次评估时年龄为 9 到 11 岁)。多项式模型和广义加法模型可推导出不同症状严重程度的认知与精神症状之间的连续关系。数据分析时间为2022年12月至2024年4月:主要评估认知测试总分(一般认知)与儿童行为检查表报告的总症状和特定症状之间的关系:样本包括 5175 名儿童(2713 名男性 [52.4%] 和 2462 名女性 [47.6%];平均 [SD] 年龄为 10.9 [1.18] 岁)。之前报道的关于一般认知与症状之间关系的混合研究结果可能由几种潜在的、相互对立的关系组成,这些关系取决于症状的类别和严重程度。线性模型发现,一般认知与心理健康症状之间存在不同的关联,这取决于所询问的症状严重程度的范围。非线性模型证实,在症状负担较低时,内化症状与认知能力呈显著正相关,而在症状负担较高时,内化症状与认知能力呈显著负相关:本研究中心理健康症状与一般认知之间的关系是非线性的。内化症状与一般认知之间既有显著的正相关,也有显著的负相关,具体取决于分析样本中被询问的症状严重程度范围。这些结果似乎调和了之前研究中参差不齐的发现,之前的研究隐含地假定症状严重程度与整个心理健康范围内的认知能力呈线性关系。由于在症状严重程度低与症状严重程度高的样本中,认知能力与症状之间的关联可能是相反的,这些结果揭示了在认知障碍研究中临床丰富化的必要性。
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来源期刊
JAMA Psychiatry
JAMA Psychiatry PSYCHIATRY-
CiteScore
30.60
自引率
1.90%
发文量
233
期刊介绍: JAMA Psychiatry is a global, peer-reviewed journal catering to clinicians, scholars, and research scientists in psychiatry, mental health, behavioral science, and related fields. The Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry originated in 1919, splitting into two journals in 1959: Archives of Neurology and Archives of General Psychiatry. In 2013, these evolved into JAMA Neurology and JAMA Psychiatry, respectively. JAMA Psychiatry is affiliated with the JAMA Network, a group of peer-reviewed medical and specialty publications.
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