AI Article Synopsis

  • Functional remission in schizophrenia, aimed at improving daily functioning, varies significantly in success rates, with around 15% to 51% of patients achieving it.
  • A study followed 303 French schizophrenia patients on long-acting injectable treatment for a year, finding 45.1% reached functional remission while 55.1% achieved clinical remission; clinical remission greatly increased the chances of functional remission.
  • Key factors influencing functional remission included the duration of the psychotic condition, family support, education level, employment status, initial functioning levels, and insight into their condition, underscoring the need for effective symptom management to enhance recovery.

Article Abstract

Background: Functional remission has become a major therapeutic objective in schizophrenia, but the probability of such positive outcome has a large variability, ranging from 15% to 51%. Additionally, how clinical remission constitutes a prerequisite for functional remission also remains unclear.

Methods: A prospective observational study was conducted in French schizophrenic patients who initiated treatment with a long-acting injectable (LAI) after an acute episode. Functional and clinical remissions were assessed using the FROGS and the Andreasen criteria, and the role of clinical remission and predictive factors of functional remission was evaluated.

Results: Three hundred three patients with schizophrenia (DSM-IV criteria) were followed for 12 months. At 12 months, 45.1% of the patients reached functional remission while 55.1% obtained clinical remission. Clinical remission facilitated functional remission (OR = 14.74), especially in patients with psychosis for less than 5 years (OR = 23.73). Other predictive factors concerned the family environment, education level, employment status, baseline functioning levels and level of insight.

Conclusions: About half of patients treated with LAI reached functional remission after one year of follow-up. Reduced clinical symptoms and reaching clinical remission largely favored functional remission. These results stress the importance of continuous and appropriate symptomatic treatment to reach functional remission and maximize recovery chances.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2019.112560DOI Listing

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