Publications by authors named "Sanja Kilian"

Resilience refers to the ability to employ a collection of protective factors to return to or maintain positive mental health following an experience of disadvantage or adversity. Understanding why some children do well despite early adverse experiences is crucial because it can inform more effective policies and programs that help more children reach their full potential. This study aimed to explore and explain the development of resilience within an ecological-transactional framework.

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Objective: Both cognitive impairment and alterations in white matter tissue microstructure are well recognised in schizophrenia. We investigated whether differences in white matter microstructure underpin cognitive impairments in patients with first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorders when controlling for multiple confounding factors.

Methods: We employed a cross-sectional study design and compared fractional anisotropy (FA) between individuals diagnosed with first- episode schizophrenia spectrum disorders (FES) (n = 68) and matched healthy controls (n = 120).

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The high prevalence of trauma exposure and consequent post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is well documented in low- and middle-income countries, and most individuals with PTSD have limited access to treatment in these settings. Freely available internet-based interventions, such as PTSD Coach (web-based and mobile application), can help to address this gap and improve access to and efficiency of care. We conducted two pilot studies to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of PTSD Coach in a South African resource-constrained context.

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Background: Progressive brain structural MRI changes are described in schizophrenia and have been ascribed to both illness progression and antipsychotic treatment. We investigated treatment effects, in terms of total cumulative antipsychotic dose, efficacy and tolerability, on brain structural changes over the first 24 months of treatment in schizophrenia.

Methods: A prospective, 24-month, single-site cohort study in 99 minimally treated patients with first-episode schizophrenia, schizophreniform and schizoaffective disorder, and 98 matched healthy controls.

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Glucocorticoids and inflammatory markers can influence cognitive function. Hair cortisol concentrations (HCC) reflect longer-term hypothalamic pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis function and combined with immune markers can provide insights into how HPA-axis and immune pathways interact to influence cognition. We examined the association between HCC and high sensitivity c-reactive protein (hsCRP) levels, as well as the interaction between HCC and hsCRP, and cognitive function in a sample of 153 females, aged between 18 and 79 years, from a cross-sectional case-control study (SHARED ROOTS), conducted in Cape Town, South Africa from May 2014 until June 2017.

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Background: Childhood trauma may contribute to poorer premorbid social and academic adjustment which may be a risk factor for schizophrenia.

Aim: We explored the relationship between premorbid adjustment and childhood trauma, timing of childhood trauma's moderating role as well as the association of clinical and treatment-related confounders with premorbid adjustment.

Setting: We conducted a secondary analysis in 111 patients with first-episode schizophrenia (FES) disorders that formed part of two parent studies, EONKCS study ( =73) and the Shared Roots study ( =38).

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Cannabis use is associated with an unfavourable course of illness in schizophrenia, although several factors may confound this association. In this longitudinal study, we explored the influence of cannabis use on baseline symptom severity and treatment outcomes in 98 patients with first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorders treated with a long acting injectable antipsychotic over 24 months. Using mixed models for repeated measures, we compared visit-wise changes in psychopathology, social and occupational functioning and quality of life between recent/current cannabis users (n=45) and non-users (n=53).

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Background: Accurate perception of body weight is necessary for individuals with a high body mass index (BMI) to initiate strategies to improve their health status. Furthermore, identifying factors that influence accurate body weight perception can assist in designing appropriate educational and weight management programs. We therefore aimed to investigate whether levels of cognitive functioning and insight influence the ability to correctly judge body weight.

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Depressive symptoms are common in schizophrenia and have been associated with both favourable and unfavourable outcomes. We studied the longitudinal course of depressive symptoms and explored their temporal relationships with other manifestations of the illness and its treatment. This longitudinal cohort study included 126 antipsychotic naïve or only briefly treated patients with first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorders treated with a long-acting antipsychotic over 24 months.

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The exploration of resilience in schizophrenia is recent and poorly understood. Literature suggests that exploration of the construct will help with the understanding of not only risk but also protective factors in individuals living with psychosis. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis with the primary aim of synthesizing the evidence of an existing relationship between resilience and schizophrenia-spectrum disorders (SSD).

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In South Africa, clinicians working in public psychiatric hospitals are mainly fluent in English and Afrikaans, while the majority of patients are not proficient in these languages. Due to a lack of professional interpreting services, informal, ad hoc interpreters are commonly employed in public psychiatric hospitals. We collected data on language practices in public psychiatric care in South Africa, and provide a detailed account of what happens when bilingual health care workers and cleaners haphazardly take on the additional role of interpreter.

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Childhood trauma exposure has been associated with poorer treatment outcomes in schizophrenia. Most studies to date have been conducted in naturalistic settings in which the outcome may have been mediated by factors such as poor adherence and substance abuse. We compared the effects of high vs low childhood trauma exposure on the treatment response over 24 months in 78 patients with first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorders who received standardised treatment with a long acting injectable antipsychotic.

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: Language and communication lie at the heart of good quality mental health care and are a vital, yet complex, part of the diagnostic and treatment process. In South African mental health care, ad hoc interpreting arrangements are the status quo. However, these can cause both clinician and patient shame and distress.

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Studies assessing the treatment outcomes in first-episode schizophrenia have reported mixed results. While symptom improvement is frequently robust, when other domains are considered outcomes are generally poorer. We explored response trajectories, rates and predictors of recovery in the domains of core psychopathology, clinician-rated social and occupational functioning and patient-rated quality of life over 24 months of treatment in 98 patients with first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorders who were treated with a long-acting antipsychotic medication.

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The Schizophrenia International Research Society (SIRS) recently held its first North American congress, which took place in Orlando, Florida from 10-14 April 2019. The overall theme of this year's congress was United in Progress - with the aim of cultivating a collaborative effort towards advancing the field of schizophrenia research. Student travel awardees provided reports of the oral sessions and concurrent symposia that took place during the congress.

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Childhood trauma and schizophrenia are both associated with neuroanatomical abnormalities in the hippocampus, a stress-sensitive structure vulnerable to developmental insults. However, few studies have evaluated the effects of childhood trauma exposure on hippocampal morphometry in minimally treated first-episode schizophrenia patients. Here we aim to investigate the associations of childhood trauma with hippocampal subfield volumes in a cohort of antipsychotic-naive or minimally treated first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorder patients and matched controls.

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Background: While insight in schizophrenia improves with treatment, significant impairments often persist. The degree of persistence is not well characterised.

Aims: We assessed patient and clinician-rated changes in insight in acutely ill, minimally treated first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorder patients over 24 months of standardised treatment with a depot antipsychotic.

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Background: Thought disorder and visual-perceptual deficits have been well documented, but their relationships with clinical symptoms and cognitive function remain unclear. Cognitive-perceptual deficits may underscore clinical symptoms in schizophrenia patients.

Aim: This study aimed to explore how thought disorder and form perception are related with clinical symptoms and cognitive dysfunction in first-episode schizophrenia.

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Schizophrenia is associated with brain connection irregularities within and between brain regions. Childhood trauma increases the risk of schizophrenia suggesting that the relationships between childhood trauma and brain connectivity requires further investigation. Here, we examine the relationship between childhood trauma (as measured by the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire) and fractional anisotropy (FA) in 54 minimally treated first-episode schizophrenia (FES) patients and 51 community matched controls.

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The course of schizophrenia is characterized by multiple relapses, incomplete remission of symptoms, enduring cognitive deficits, and social and occupational functional impairments. Nonadherence to antipsychotic medication is a major determinant of this poor outcome. Long-acting injectable antipsychotics were developed specifically to address the nonadherence problem and are increasingly considered as an early treatment option, in an attempt to prevent accruing morbidity.

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Background: Neurological soft signs (NSS) are proposed to represent both state- and trait-related features of schizophrenia.

Method: We assessed the course of NSS with the Neurological Evaluation Scale (NES) over 12months of standardised treatment in 126 patients with first-episode schizophrenia, schizophreniform or schizoaffective disorder, and evaluated their state- and trait-related associations with psychopathology, functionality, cognition and antipsychotic treatment. We considered change scores from baseline to be state-related and endpoint scores to be trait-related.

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Aim: Misattribution of symptoms is a common feature of schizophrenia, and likely involves impairment of metacognitive function that may be mediated by the frontal cortex. We aimed to compare frontal cortical thickness in first-episode schizophrenia (FES) patients with matched controls, and investigate its relationship with the symptom attribution dimension of insight in FES patients.

Methods: We examined frontal cortical thickness in 92 minimally treated FES patients at baseline presentation and 93 healthy controls aged 16-45 years.

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Purpose Of Review: In this article, recent publications addressing the pros and cons of antipsychotic maintenance treatment are reviewed and some recommendations formulated.

Recent Findings: On one hand, relapse rates are extremely high when antipsychotic treatment is discontinued, even after a single episode of psychosis; there are no reliable predictors of relapse; and there are serious psychosocial and biological consequences of relapse. On the other hand, in addition to the well recognised side-effect burden of antipsychotics, a few recent publications suggest an association between greater exposure to antipsychotic treatment and poorer long-term outcome.

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