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Complex PTSD symptoms predict positive symptoms of psychosis in the flow of daily life

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
  • Peter Panayi
  • Emmanuelle Peters
  • Richard Bentall
  • Amy Hardy
  • Katherine Berry
  • Bill Sellwood
  • Robert Dudley
  • Eleanor Longden
  • Raphael Underwood
  • Craig Steel
  • Hassan Jafari
  • Richard Emsley
  • Liam Mason
  • Rebecca Elliot
  • Filippo Varese
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>30/09/2024
<mark>Journal</mark>Psychological Medicine
Issue number12
Volume54
Number of pages12
Pages (from-to)3489-3500
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Background
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been shown to predict psychotic symptomology. However, few studies have examined the relative contribution of PTSD compared to broader post-traumatic sequelae in maintaining psychosis. Complex PTSD (cPTSD), operationalized using ICD-11 criteria, includes core PTSD (intrusions, avoidance, hyperarousal) as well as additional “disturbances of self-organisation” (DSO; emotional dysregulation, interpersonal difficulties, negative self-concept) symptoms, more likely to be associated with complex trauma histories. It was hypothesized that DSOs would be associated with positive psychotic symptoms (paranoia, voices, and visions) in daily life, over and above core PTSD symptoms.

Methods
This study (N = 153) employed a baseline subsample of the Study of Trauma And Recovery (STAR), a clinical sample of participants with comorbid post-traumatic stress and psychosis symptoms. Core PTSD, DSO and psychosis symptoms were assessed up to 10 times per day at quasi-random intervals over six consecutive days using Experience Sampling Methodology.

Results
DSOs within the preceding 90 min predicted paranoia, voices, and visions at subsequent moments. These relationships persisted when controlling for core PTSD symptoms within this timeframe, which were themselves significant. The associations between DSOs and paranoia but not voices or visions, were significantly stronger than those between psychosis and core PTSD symptoms.

Conclusions
Consistent with an affective pathway to psychosis, the findings suggest that DSOs may be more important than core PTSD symptoms in maintaining psychotic experiences in daily life among people with comorbid psychosis and cPTSD, and indicate the potential importance of addressing broad post-traumatic sequelae in trauma-focused psychosis interventions.