Social Cognition, Language, and Social Behavior in 7-Year-Old Children at Familial High-Risk of Developing Schizophrenia or Bipolar Disorder: The Danish High Risk and Resilience Study VIA 7-A Population-Based Cohort Study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_292DAC777EF3
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Social Cognition, Language, and Social Behavior in 7-Year-Old Children at Familial High-Risk of Developing Schizophrenia or Bipolar Disorder: The Danish High Risk and Resilience Study VIA 7-A Population-Based Cohort Study.
Journal
Schizophrenia bulletin
Author(s)
Christiani C.J., Jepsen JRM, Thorup A., Hemager N., Ellersgaard D., Spang K.S., Burton B.K., Gregersen M., Søndergaard A., Greve A.N., Gantriis D.L., Poulsen G., Uddin M.J., Seidman L.J., Mors O., Plessen K.J., Nordentoft M.
ISSN
1745-1701 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0586-7614
Publication state
Published
Issued date
24/10/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
45
Number
6
Pages
1218-1230
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
To characterize social cognition, language, and social behavior as potentially shared vulnerability markers in children at familial high-risk of schizophrenia (FHR-SZ) and bipolar disorder (FHR-BP).
The Danish High-Risk and Resilience Study VIA7 is a multisite population-based cohort of 522 7-year-old children extracted from the Danish registries. The population-based controls were matched to the FHR-SZ children on age, sex, and municipality. The FHR-BP group followed same inclusion criteria. Data were collected blinded to familial high-risk status. Outcomes were social cognition, language, and social behavior.
The analysis included 202 FHR-SZ children (girls: 46%), 120 FHR-BP children (girls: 46.7%), and 200 controls (girls: 46.5%). FHR-SZ children displayed significant deficits in language (receptive: d = -0.27, P = .006; pragmatic: d = -0.51, P < .001), social responsiveness (d = -0.54, P < .001), and adaptive social functioning (d = -0.47, P < .001) compared to controls after Bonferroni correction. Compared to FHR-BP children, FHR-SZ children performed significantly poorer on adaptive social functioning (d = -0.29, P = .007) after Bonferroni correction. FHR-BP and FHR-SZ children showed no significant social cognitive impairments compared to controls after Bonferroni correction.
Language, social responsiveness, and adaptive social functioning deficits seem associated with FHR-SZ but not FHR-BP in this developmental phase. The pattern of results suggests adaptive social functioning impairments may not be shared between FHR-BP and FHR-SZ in this developmental phase and thus not reflective of the shared risk factors for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
Keywords
facial affect identification, language, neurodevelopment, offspring, social functioning, theory of mind
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
14/03/2019 9:54
Last modification date
20/09/2020 5:27
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