Predictors of clinical insight in first-episode psychosis: Different patterns in men and women

•It is crucial to understand the bases of insight deficit in psychosis.•Gender differences in the manifestations and correlates of psychosis have been repeatedly observed.•Strong gender differences emerged in the clinical and metacognitive predictors of insight.•Gender specific cognitive remediation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2024-09, Vol.339, p.116036, Article 116036
Hauptverfasser: Pousa, Esther, Brébion, Gildas, López-Carrilero, Raquel, Ruiz, Ada I., Grasa, Eva, Barajas, Ana, Cobo, Jesus, Gutiérrez-Zotes, Alfonso, Lorente, Ester, Barrigón, María Luisa, Ruiz-Delgado, Isabel, González-Higueras, Fermín, Frigola-Capell, Eva, Ochoa, Susana
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container_issue
container_start_page 116036
container_title Psychiatry research
container_volume 339
creator Pousa, Esther
Brébion, Gildas
López-Carrilero, Raquel
Ruiz, Ada I.
Grasa, Eva
Barajas, Ana
Cobo, Jesus
Gutiérrez-Zotes, Alfonso
Lorente, Ester
Barrigón, María Luisa
Ruiz-Delgado, Isabel
González-Higueras, Fermín
Frigola-Capell, Eva
Ochoa, Susana
description •It is crucial to understand the bases of insight deficit in psychosis.•Gender differences in the manifestations and correlates of psychosis have been repeatedly observed.•Strong gender differences emerged in the clinical and metacognitive predictors of insight.•Gender specific cognitive remediation strategies should be developed. We aimed to explore gender-related differences in the associations of insight impairment with clinical symptoms, metacognition, and social cognition in psychosis. Regression analysis of several clinical insight dimensions was conducted on the data from 116 men and 56 women with first-episode psychosis. Various clinical symptoms and measures of metacognition and social cognition were entered as predictors. In both men and women, delusions emerged as a strong predictor of all insight dimensions, and verbal hallucinations as a strong predictor of symptom relabelling. In men, certain negative symptoms as well as self-certainty, lack of self-reflectiveness, impaired theory of mind, attributional biases, and a jumping-to-conclusions bias were additional predictors of poor insight, while good insight was associated with depression, anxiety, avolition, blunted affect, and impaired emotional recognition. In women, poor insight was associated with a self-serving/externalising bias, impaired emotional recognition, and attention disorders. Poor insight in first-episode psychosis is strongly linked to deficits in metacognition and social cognition, with marked differences between men and women with respect to the specific skills involved in the impairment. Meanwhile, good insight is linked to a variety of affective manifestations in men. These findings suggest new avenues for more targeted cognitive interventions to improve clinical insight in psychosis.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.psychres.2024.116036
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Clinical insight
Cognitive bias
Delusions
Female
Gender differences
Hallucinations - etiology
Hallucinations - psychology
Humans
Male
Metacognition
Metacognition - physiology
Psychosis
Psychotic Disorders - psychology
Sex Characteristics
Sex Factors
Social Cognition
Young Adult
title Predictors of clinical insight in first-episode psychosis: Different patterns in men and women
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