The Behavioral Mapping of Psychomotor Slowing in Psychosis Demonstrates Heterogeneity among Patients Suggesting Distinct Pathobiology

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Abstract

Objectives: Psychomotor slowing (PS) occurs in up to half of schizophrenia patients and is linked to poorer outcomes. As standard treatment fails to improve PS, novel approaches are needed. Here, we applied the RDoC framework using 3 units of analysis, ie, behavior, self-report, and physiology to test, whether patients with PS are different from patients without PS and controls. Methods: Motor behavior was compared between 71 schizophrenia patients with PS, 25 without PS, and 42 healthy controls (HC) using 5 different measures: (1) for behavior, an expert rating scale: Motor score of the Salpêtrière Retardation Rating Scale, (2) for self-report, the International Physical Activity Questionnaire; and for physiology, (3) Actigraphy, which accounts for gross motor behavior, (4) Gait velocity, and (5) coin rotation task to assess manual dexterity. Results: The ANCOVAs comparing the 3 groups revealed differences between patients with PS and HC in expert ratings, self-report, and instrumental measures (all P ≤. 001). Patients with PS also scored higher in expert ratings and had lower instrumental activity levels compared to patients without PS (all P ≤. 045). Instrumental activity levels correlated with an expert rating of PS (rho =-0.51, P-fdr corrected

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Nadesalingam, N., Lefebvre, S., Alexaki, D., Baumann Gama, D., Wüthrich, F., Kyrou, A., … Walther, S. (2023). The Behavioral Mapping of Psychomotor Slowing in Psychosis Demonstrates Heterogeneity among Patients Suggesting Distinct Pathobiology. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 49(2), 507–517. https://doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbac170

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