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P-516 - Does the Severity of Depression and Psychosis Correlate During Major Depressive Episodes?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2020
Abstract
Psychotic depression (PD) is classified as a sybtype of severe depression in the current diagnostic manuals. Accordingly, it is a common conception that psychotic features in depression arise as a consequence of depressive severity.
To determine whether the severity of depression and psychosis correlate in accordance with the “severity-psychosis” hypothesis and to detect potential differences in clinical features of psychotic and non-psychotic depression (non-PD).
We aimed to answer the following questions:
Does the clinical profile differ between patients with PD and non-PD?
Is the severity of depression and psychosis correlated in patients with depression?
Quantitative analysis of Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS) scores from all patients admitted to a Danish general psychiatric hospital between 2000 and 2010 due to a severe depressive episode.
A total of 357 patients with severe depression, of which 125 (35%) were of the psychotic subtype, formed the study sample. Mean HoNOS scores at admission differed significantly between patients with non-PD and PD on the items hallucinations and delusions (non-PD = 0.33 vs. PD = 1.37, p < 0.001), aggression (non-PD = 0.20 vs. PD = 0.36, p = 0.044) and on the total score (non-PD = 10.55 vs. PD = 11.87, p = 0.024). the HoNOS scores on the two items “depression” and “hallucinations and delusions” were very weakly correlated (Spearman coefficient = 0.12).
The results suggest that the severity of depression is unlikely to be the key determinant for the development of psychosis and supports the hypothesis that the psychotic- and non-psychotic subtypes of depression are in fact distinct clinical syndromes.
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- Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2012
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