Is there a discrete negative symptom syndrome in people who use methamphetamine?
Date
2019
Authors
Voce, Alexandra
Burns, Richard
Castle, David
Calabria, Bianca
McKetin, Rebecca
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Background: Positive psychotic symptoms have consistently been associated with methamphetamine use but the
presence of a negative symptom cluster remains unclear. We used exploratory factor analysis to examine
whether a discrete negative syndrome could be delineated among methamphetamine users, and to examine
the clinical correlates of this syndrome.
Method: Participants (N = 154) were people who used methamphetamine at least monthly and did not meet
DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for lifetime schizophrenia. Scores on the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale for the past
month were subject to exploratory factor analysis. Latent class analysis was applied to resultant factor scores
to determine whether negative and positive factors were experienced by the same participants. Past-month substance use measures were days of use for each drug type and methamphetamine dependence assessed using the
Severity of Dependence Scale.
Results: We articulated a three-factor model including ‘positive/activation symptoms’ (e.g. suspiciousness, hallucinations, conceptual disorganisation, tension), ‘affective symptoms’ (e.g. depression, anxiety) and ‘negative
symptoms’ (e.g. blunted affect, motor retardation). Positive-activation and affective symptoms (but not negative
symptoms) were positively correlated with past month days of methamphetamine use (r = 0.16; r = 0.25) and
severity of dependence (r = 0.24; r = 0.41). Negative symptoms were correlated with heroin (r = 0.24) and
benzodiazepine use (r = 0.21). Latent class analysis revealed a three-class model comprising a positivesymptom class (44%, high positive-activation, low negative symptoms), a negative-symptom class (31%, low
positive-activation, high negative symptoms), and a low-symptom class (38%, low on all factors).
Conclusions: A negative symptom syndrome exists among people who use methamphetamine, but this appears
related to polysubstance use rather than forming a part of the psychotic syndrome associated with methamphetamine use. Overlooking the role of polysubstance use on negative symptoms may conflate the profiles of
methamphetamine-associated psychosis and schizophrenia
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Keywords
Amphetamine, Methamphetamine-induced psychosis, Psychostimulants, Factor analysis, Negative psychotic symptoms
Citation
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Source
Comprehensive Psychiatry
Type
Journal article
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
CC BY-NC-ND license
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