31 results on '"Evelyn Bromet"'
Search Results
2. Mapping the transcriptomics landscape of post-traumatic stress disorder symptom dimensions in World Trade Center responders
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Pei-Fen Kuan, Xiaohua Yang, Xu Ren, Chang Che, Monika Waszczuk, Roman Kotov, Sean Clouston, Prashant K. Singh, Sean T. Glenn, Eduardo Cortes Gomez, Jianmin Wang, Evelyn Bromet, and Benjamin J. Luft
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Gene expression has provided promising insights into the pathophysiology of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD); however, specific regulatory transcriptomic mechanisms remain unknown. The present study addressed this limitation by performing transcriptome-wide RNA-Seq of whole-blood samples from 226 World Trade Center responders. The investigation focused on differential expression (DE) at the gene, isoform, and for the first time, alternative splicing (AS) levels associated with the symptoms of PTSD: total burden, re-experiencing, avoidance, numbing, and hyperarousal subdimensions. These symptoms were associated with 76, 1, 48, 15, and 49 DE genes, respectively (FDR
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- 2021
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3. PTSD is associated with accelerated transcriptional aging in World Trade Center responders
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Pei-Fen Kuan, Xu Ren, Sean Clouston, Xiaohua Yang, Katherine Jonas, Roman Kotov, Evelyn Bromet, and Benjamin J. Luft
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is associated with shortened lifespan and healthspan, which suggests accelerated aging. Emerging evidence suggests that methylation age may be accelerated in PTSD. It is important to examine whether transcriptional age is also accelerated because transcriptome is highly dynamic, associated with age-related outcomes, and may offer greater insight into the premature aging in PTSD. This study is the first reported investigation of the relationship between transcriptional age and PTSD. Using RNA-Seq data from our previous study on 324 World Trade Center responders (201 never had PTSD, 81 with current PTSD, and 42 with past PTSD), as well as a transcriptional age calculator (RNAAgeCalc) recently developed by our group, we found that responders with current PTSD, compared with responders without a PTSD diagnosis, showed accelerated transcriptional aging (p = 0.0077) after adjustment for chronological age and race. We compared our results to the epigenetic aging results computed from several epigenetic clock calculators on matching DNA methylation data. GrimAge methylation age acceleration was also associated with PTSD diagnosis (p = 0.0097), and the results remained significant after adjustment for the proportions of immune cell types. PhenoAge, Hannum, and Horvath methylation age acceleration were not reliably related to PTSD. Both epigenetic and transcriptional aging may provide biological insights into the mechanisms underpinning aging in PTSD.
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- 2021
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4. The Coronavirus Health and Impact Survey (CRISIS) reveals reproducible correlates of pandemic-related mood states across the Atlantic
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Aki Nikolaidis, Diana Paksarian, Lindsay Alexander, Jacob Derosa, Julia Dunn, Dylan M. Nielson, Irene Droney, Minji Kang, Ioanna Douka, Evelyn Bromet, Michael Milham, Argyris Stringaris, and Kathleen R. Merikangas
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic and its social and economic consequences have had adverse impacts on physical and mental health worldwide and exposed all segments of the population to protracted uncertainty and daily disruptions. The CoRonavIruS health and Impact Survey (CRISIS) was developed for use as an easy to implement and robust questionnaire covering key domains relevant to mental distress and resilience during the pandemic. Ongoing studies using CRISIS include international studies of COVID-related ill health conducted during different phases of the pandemic and follow-up studies of cohorts characterized before the COVID pandemic. In the current work, we demonstrate the feasibility, psychometric structure, and construct validity of this survey. We then show that pre-existing mood states, perceived COVID risk, and lifestyle changes are strongly associated with negative mood states during the pandemic in population samples of adults and in parents reporting on their children in the US and UK. These findings are highly reproducible and we find a high degree of consistency in the power of these factors to predict mental health during the pandemic.
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- 2021
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5. Epigenome-wide meta-analysis of PTSD across 10 military and civilian cohorts identifies methylation changes in AHRR
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Alicia K. Smith, Andrew Ratanatharathorn, Adam X. Maihofer, Robert K. Naviaux, Allison E. Aiello, Ananda B. Amstadter, Allison E. Ashley-Koch, Dewleen G. Baker, Jean C. Beckham, Marco P. Boks, Evelyn Bromet, Michelle Dennis, Sandro Galea, Melanie E. Garrett, Elbert Geuze, Guia Guffanti, Michael A. Hauser, Seyma Katrinli, Varun Kilaru, Ronald C. Kessler, Nathan A. Kimbrel, Karestan C. Koenen, Pei-Fen Kuan, Kefeng Li, Mark W. Logue, Adriana Lori, Benjamin J. Luft, Mark W. Miller, Jane C. Naviaux, Nicole R. Nugent, Xuejun Qin, Kerry J. Ressler, Victoria B. Risbrough, Bart P. F. Rutten, Murray B. Stein, Robert J. Ursano, Eric Vermetten, Christiaan H. Vinkers, Lin Wang, Nagy A. Youssef, INTRuST Clinical Consortium, VA Mid-Atlantic MIRECC Workgroup, PGC PTSD Epigenetics Workgroup, Monica Uddin, and Caroline M. Nievergelt
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Science - Abstract
PTSD has been associated with DNA methylation of specific loci in the genome, but studies have been limited by small sample sizes. Here, the authors perform a meta-analysis of DNA methylation data from 10 different cohorts and identify CpGs in AHRR that are associated with PTSD.
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- 2020
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6. Cognitive Impact of Exposure to Neurotoxicants and Psychological Trauma among the 9/11 Responders
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Roberto Lucchini, Benjamin Luft, Sean Clouston, Alison Pellecchia, Evelyn Bromet, Megan Horton, Cheuk Tang, Samuel Gandy, and Mary Sano
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2022
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7. Single‐cell transcriptomics analysis of mild cognitive impairment in World Trade Center disaster responders
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Pei‐Fen Kuan, Sean Clouston, Xiaohua Yang, Chang Che, Samuel Gandy, Roman Kotov, Evelyn Bromet, and Benjamin J. Luft
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CITE‐Seq ,mild cognitive impairment ,World Trade Center ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Recent research has found that World Trade Center (WTC) responders in their mid‐50s have an elevated prevalence of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) that is associated with neural degeneration and subcortical thinning. This article extends our understanding of the molecular complexity of MCI through gene expression profiling of blood. Methods The transcriptomics of 40 male WTC responders were profiled across two cohorts (discovery: nine MCI and nine controls; replication: 11 MCI and 11 controls) using CITE‐Seq at single‐cell resolution in blood. Results Comparing the transcriptomic signatures across seven major cell subpopulations, the largest differences were observed in monocytes in which 226 genes were differentially expressed. Pathway analysis on the genes unique to monocytes identified processes associated with cerebral immune response. Discussion Our findings suggested monocytes may constitute a key cell type to target in blood‐based biomarker studies for early detection of risk of MCI and development of new interventions.
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- 2021
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8. An updated global picture of cigarette smoking persistence among adults
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Jonathan P. Troost, David A. Barondess, Carla L. Storr, J. Elisabeth Wells, Ali Obaid Al-Hamzawi, Laura Helena Andrade, Evelyn Bromet, Ronny Bruffaerts, Silvia Florescu, Giovanni de Girolamo, Ron de Graaf, Oye Gureje, Josep Maria Haro, Chiyi Hu, Yueqin Huang, Aimee N. Karam, Ronald C. Kessler, Jean-Pierre Lepine, Herbert Matschinger, Maria Elena Medina-Mora, Siobhan O’Neill, Jose Posada-Villa, Rajesh Sagar, Tadashi Takeshima, Toma Tomov, David R. Williams, and James C. Anthony
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Tobacco ,Smoking persistence ,Meta-analysis ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Cross-national variance in smoking prevalence is relatively well documented. The aim of this study is to estimate levels of smoking persistence across 21 countries with a hypothesized inverse relationship between country income level and smoking persistence. Methods: Data from the World Health Organization World Mental Health Survey Initiative were used to estimate cross-national differences in smoking persistence—the proportion of adults who started to smoke and persisted in smoking by the date of the survey. Results: There is large variation in smoking persistence from 25% (Nigeria) to 85% (China), with a random-effects meta-analytic summary estimate of 55% with considerable cross-national variation. (Cochran’s heterogeneity Q statistic = 6845; p < 0.001). Meta-regressions indicated that observed differences are not attributable to differences in country’s income level, age distribution of smokers, or how recent the onset of smoking began within each country. Conclusion: While smoking should remain an important public health issue in any country where smokers are present, this report identifies several countries with higher levels of smoking persistence (namely, China and India).
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- 2019
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9. Disability mediates the impact of common conditions on perceived health.
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Jordi Alonso, Gemma Vilagut, Núria D Adroher, Somnath Chatterji, Yanling He, Laura Helena Andrade, Evelyn Bromet, Ronny Bruffaerts, John Fayyad, Silvia Florescu, Giovanni de Girolamo, Oye Gureje, Josep Maria Haro, Hristo Hinkov, Chiyi Hu, Noboru Iwata, Sing Lee, Daphna Levinson, Jean Pierre Lépine, Herbert Matschinger, Maria Elena Medina-Mora, Siobhan O'Neill, J Hans Ormel, Jose A Posada-Villa, Nezar Ismet Taib, Miguel Xavier, and Ronald C Kessler
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundWe examined the extent to which disability mediates the observed associations of common mental and physical conditions with perceived health.Methods and findingsWHO World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys carried out in 22 countries worldwide (n = 51,344 respondents, 72.0% response rate). We assessed nine common mental conditions with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI), and ten chronic physical with a checklist. A visual analog scale (VAS) score (0, worst to 100, best) measured perceived health in the previous 30 days. Disability was assessed using a modified WHO Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS), including: cognition, mobility, self-care, getting along, role functioning (life activities), family burden, stigma, and discrimination. Path analysis was used to estimate total effects of conditions on perceived health VAS and their separate direct and indirect (through the WHODAS dimensions) effects. Twelve-month prevalence was 14.4% for any mental and 51.4% for any physical condition. 31.7% of respondents reported difficulties in role functioning, 11.4% in mobility, 8.3% in stigma, 8.1% in family burden and 6.9% in cognition. Other difficulties were much less common. Mean VAS score was 81.0 (SD = 0.1). Decrements in VAS scores were highest for neurological conditions (9.8), depression (8.2) and bipolar disorder (8.1). Across conditions, 36.8% (IQR: 31.2-51.5%) of the total decrement in perceived health associated with the condition were mediated by WHODAS disabilities (significant for 17 of 19 conditions). Role functioning was the dominant mediator for both mental and physical conditions. Stigma and family burden were also important mediators for mental conditions, and mobility for physical conditions.ConclusionsMore than a third of the decrement in perceived health associated with common conditions is mediated by disability. Although the decrement is similar for physical and mental conditions, the pattern of mediation is different. Research is needed on the benefits for perceived health of targeted interventions aimed at particular disability dimensions.
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- 2013
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10. Correction: Disability Mediates the Impact of Common Conditions on Perceived Health.
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Jordi Alonso, Gemma Vilagut, Núria D. Adroher, Somnath Chatterji, Yanling He, Laura Helena Andrade, Evelyn Bromet, Ronny Bruffaerts, John Fayyad, Silvia Florescu, Giovanni de Girolamo, Oye Gureje, Josep Maria Haro, Hristo Hinkov, Chiyi Hu, Noboru Iwata, Sing Lee, Daphna Levinson, Jean Pierre Lépine, Herbert Matschinger, Maria Elena Medina-Mora, Siobhan O'Neill, J. Hormel, Jose A. Posada-Villa, Nezar Ismet Taib, Miguel Xavier, and Ronald C. Kessler
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Medicine ,Science - Published
- 2013
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11. Cross-national analysis of the associations between traumatic events and suicidal behavior: findings from the WHO World Mental Health Surveys.
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Dan J Stein, Wai Tat Chiu, Irving Hwang, Ronald C Kessler, Nancy Sampson, Jordi Alonso, Guilherme Borges, Evelyn Bromet, Ronny Bruffaerts, Giovanni de Girolamo, Silvia Florescu, Oye Gureje, Yanling He, Viviane Kovess-Masfety, Daphna Levinson, Herbert Matschinger, Zeina Mneimneh, Yosikazu Nakamura, Johan Ormel, Jose Posada-Villa, Rajesh Sagar, Kate M Scott, Toma Tomov, Maria Carmen Viana, David R Williams, and Matthew K Nock
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundCommunity and clinical data have suggested there is an association between trauma exposure and suicidal behavior (i.e., suicide ideation, plans and attempts). However, few studies have assessed which traumas are uniquely predictive of: the first onset of suicidal behavior, the progression from suicide ideation to plans and attempts, or the persistence of each form of suicidal behavior over time. Moreover, few data are available on such associations in developing countries. The current study addresses each of these issues.Methodology/principal findingsData on trauma exposure and subsequent first onset of suicidal behavior were collected via structured interviews conducted in the households of 102,245 (age 18+) respondents from 21 countries participating in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys. Bivariate and multivariate survival models tested the relationship between the type and number of traumatic events and subsequent suicidal behavior. A range of traumatic events are associated with suicidal behavior, with sexual and interpersonal violence consistently showing the strongest effects. There is a dose-response relationship between the number of traumatic events and suicide ideation/attempt; however, there is decay in the strength of the association with more events. Although a range of traumatic events are associated with the onset of suicide ideation, fewer events predict which people with suicide ideation progress to suicide plan and attempt, or the persistence of suicidal behavior over time. Associations generally are consistent across high-, middle-, and low-income countries.Conclusions/significanceThis study provides more detailed information than previously available on the relationship between traumatic events and suicidal behavior and indicates that this association is fairly consistent across developed and developing countries. These data reinforce the importance of psychological trauma as a major public health problem, and highlight the significance of screening for the presence and accumulation of traumatic exposures as a risk factor for suicide ideation and attempt.
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- 2010
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12. Cross-national analysis of the associations among mental disorders and suicidal behavior: findings from the WHO World Mental Health Surveys.
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Matthew K Nock, Irving Hwang, Nancy Sampson, Ronald C Kessler, Matthias Angermeyer, Annette Beautrais, Guilherme Borges, Evelyn Bromet, Ronny Bruffaerts, Giovanni de Girolamo, Ron de Graaf, Silvia Florescu, Oye Gureje, Josep Maria Haro, Chiyi Hu, Yueqin Huang, Elie G Karam, Norito Kawakami, Viviane Kovess, Daphna Levinson, Jose Posada-Villa, Rajesh Sagar, Toma Tomov, Maria Carmen Viana, and David R Williams
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Medicine - Abstract
Suicide is a leading cause of death worldwide. Mental disorders are among the strongest predictors of suicide; however, little is known about which disorders are uniquely predictive of suicidal behavior, the extent to which disorders predict suicide attempts beyond their association with suicidal thoughts, and whether these associations are similar across developed and developing countries. This study was designed to test each of these questions with a focus on nonfatal suicide attempts.Data on the lifetime presence and age-of-onset of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition (DSM-IV) mental disorders and nonfatal suicidal behaviors were collected via structured face-to-face interviews with 108,664 respondents from 21 countries participating in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys. The results show that each lifetime disorder examined significantly predicts the subsequent first onset of suicide attempt (odds ratios [ORs] = 2.9-8.9). After controlling for comorbidity, these associations decreased substantially (ORs = 1.5-5.6) but remained significant in most cases. Overall, mental disorders were equally predictive in developed and developing countries, with a key difference being that the strongest predictors of suicide attempts in developed countries were mood disorders, whereas in developing countries impulse-control, substance use, and post-traumatic stress disorders were most predictive. Disaggregation of the associations between mental disorders and nonfatal suicide attempts showed that these associations are largely due to disorders predicting the onset of suicidal thoughts rather than predicting progression from thoughts to attempts. In the few instances where mental disorders predicted the transition from suicidal thoughts to attempts, the significant disorders are characterized by anxiety and poor impulse-control. The limitations of this study include the use of retrospective self-reports of lifetime occurrence and age-of-onset of mental disorders and suicidal behaviors, as well as the narrow focus on mental disorders as predictors of nonfatal suicidal behaviors, each of which must be addressed in future studies.This study found that a wide range of mental disorders increased the odds of experiencing suicide ideation. However, after controlling for psychiatric comorbidity, only disorders characterized by anxiety and poor impulse-control predict which people with suicide ideation act on such thoughts. These findings provide a more fine-grained understanding of the associations between mental disorders and subsequent suicidal behavior than previously available and indicate that mental disorders predict suicidal behaviors similarly in both developed and developing countries. Future research is needed to delineate the mechanisms through which people come to think about suicide and subsequently progress from ideation to attempts.
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- 2009
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13. Suicide and other causes of death among Chernobyl cleanup workers from Estonia, 1986 − 2020 : an update
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Kaja Rahu, Mati Rahu, Hajo Zeeb, Anssi Auvinen, Evelyn Bromet, John D. Boice, Tampere University, and Health Sciences
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Epidemiology ,mortality ,Chernobyl ,cohort ,estonia ,suicide ,cleanup workers ,3142 Public health care science, environmental and occupational health - Abstract
Mortality was studied in a cohort of 4831 men from Estonia who participated in the environmental cleanup of the radioactively contaminated areas around Chernobyl in 1986–1991. Their mortality in 1986–2020 was compared with the mortality in the Estonian male population. A total of 1503 deaths were registered among the 4812 traced men. The all-cause standardized mortality ratio (SMR) was 1.04 (95% CI 0.99–1.09). All-cancer mortality was elevated (SMR 1.16, 95% CI 1.03–1.28). Radiation-related cancers were in excess (SMR 1.20, 95% CI 1.03–1.36); however, the excesses could be attributed to tobacco and alcohol consumption. For smoking-related cancers, the SMR was 1.20 (95% CI 1.06–1.35) and for alcohol-related cancers the SMR was 1.56 (95% CI 1.26–1.86). Adjusted relative risks (ARR) of all-cause mortality were increased among workers who stayed in the Chernobyl area ≥ 92 days (ARR 1.20, 95% CI 1.08–1.34), were of non-Estonian ethnicity (ARR 1.33, 95% CI 1.19–1.47) or had lower (basic or less) education (ARR 1.63, 95% CI 1.45–1.83). Suicide mortality was increased (SMR 1.31, 95% CI 1.05–1.56), most notably among men with lower education (ARR 2.24, 95% CI 1.42–3.53). Our findings provide additional evidence that unhealthy behaviors such as alcohol and smoking play an important role in shaping cancer mortality patterns among Estonian Chernobyl cleanup workers. The excess number of suicides suggests long-term psychiatric and substance use problems tied to Chernobyl-related stressors, i.e., the psychosocial impact was greater than any direct carcinogenic effect of low-dose radiation.
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- 2023
14. The Long-Term Course of Remission and Recovery in Psychotic Disorders
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Sara Tramazzo, Wenxuan Lian, Olesya Ajnakina, Gabrielle Carlson, Evelyn Bromet, Roman Kotov, and Katherine Jonas
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Background: Understanding prognosis is critical to anticipating future public health needs, and to providing clinical care to individuals with psychotic disorders. However, the long-term course of remission and recovery in psychotic disorders remains unclear. In this cohort of 628 individuals followed for 25 years since first admission for psychosis, we describe the most common trajectories of illness course among those with psychotic disorders. Methods: Participants are from the Suffolk County Mental Health Project, an epidemiological study of first-admission psychosis. Participants were recruited from all 12 inpatient facilities in Suffolk County, New York between 1989 and 1995. 628 participants met criteria for the baseline sample. Data for the present study reflects remission and recovery at the 6-month, 24-month, 48-month, 10-year, 20-year, and 25-year follow-ups. 321 individuals were assessed at the 25-year follow-up. Common patterns of remission and recovery were assessed in both the baseline sample of 628 individuals, as well as the subsample of those observed at the 25-year follow up.Results: Common patterns of remission and recovery were assessed. In the baseline sample and 25-year subsample, among those with schizophrenia, the most common trajectory was one of no remission and no recovery. Among those with other psychotic disorders, in both baseline sample and the 25-year subsample, the modal pattern was one of intermittent remission and recovery. Those with psychotic disorders other than schizophrenia were more likely to experience stable remission (10.9%) and stable recovery (23.6%), than those with schizophrenia, where these outcomes were rare (0% and 0.7%, respectively). Discussion: These patterns emphasize the importance of sustained, long-term case for individuals with schizophrenia spectrum disorder and other psychoses. Though people with other psychoses often have periods of remission and recovery, the model longitudinal pattern is one of multiple episodes. Engagement in a long-term health care plan may help individuals detect and respond to these changes. Sustained remission and recovery are rare among people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders, and efforts should be put towards ensuring continual access to care, especially as they enter old age.
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- 2022
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15. Functional changes in neural mechanisms underlying post-traumatic stress disorder in World Trade Center responders
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Azzurra Invernizzi, Elza Rechtman, Paul Curtin, Demetrios Papazaharias, Maryam Jalees, Alison Pellecchia, Evelyn Bromet, Roberto Lucchini, Benjamin Luft, Sean Clouston, Cheuk Tang, and Megan Horton
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General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2022
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16. The Role of Personality in the Mental and Physical Health of World Trade Center Responders: Self- versus Informant-Reports
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Joshua R. Oltmanns, Camilo Ruggero, Jiaju Miao, Monika A. Waszczuk, Yuanyuan Yang, Sean Clouston, Evelyn Bromet, Benjamin Luft, and Roman Kotov
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Article - Abstract
Personality is linked to important health outcomes, but most prior studies have relied on self-reports, making it possible that shared-method variance explains the associations. The present study examined self- versus informant-reports of personality and multi-method outcomes. World Trade Center (WTC) responders and informants, 283 pairs, completed five-factor model personality measures and multi-method assessments of stressful events, functioning, mental disorders, 9/11-related treatment costs, BMI, and daily activity across three years. Self-reports were uniquely related to stressful events and functioning. Both self-reports and informant-reports showed incremental validity over one another for mental disorder diagnoses and treatment costs. For objective outcomes daily activity and BMI, informant-reports showed incremental validity over self-reports, accounting for all self-report variance and more. The findings suggest that informant-reports of personality provide better validity for objective health outcomes, which has implications for understanding personality and its role in mental and physical health.
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- 2022
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17. Metabolomics analysis of post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms in World Trade Center responders
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Pei-Fen Kuan, Xiaohua Yang, Roman Kotov, Sean Clouston, Evelyn Bromet, and Benjamin J. Luft
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Proteomics ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health Status ,Emergency Responders ,Humans ,Metabolomics ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Metabolomics has yielded promising insights into the pathophysiology of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The current study expands understanding of the systems-level effects of metabolites by using global metabolomics and complex lipid profiling in plasma samples from 124 World Trade Center responders (56 PTSD, 68 control) on 1628 metabolites. Differential metabolomics analysis identified hexosylceramide HCER(26:1) associated with PTSD at FDR
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- 2021
18. World Trade Center neurotoxic exposures are associated with elevated plasma amyloid, total‐tau and neurofilament light in responders
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Erica D. Diminich, Sean A.P. Clouston, Irving Vega, Samuel Gandy, Evelyn Bromet, and Benjamin J. Luft
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Epidemiology ,Health Policy ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Published
- 2021
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19. Longitudinal characterization of mild cognitive impairment and dementia in World Trade Center responders at midlife
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Sean A.P. Clouston, Frank P Mann, Erica D Diminich, Minos Kritikos, Alison Pellecchia, Stephanie Mejia‐Santiago, Melissa Carr, Roman Kotov, Samuel Gandy, Mary Sano, Evelyn Bromet, and Benjamin J Luft
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Epidemiology ,Health Policy ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Published
- 2021
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20. P91. Behavioral Impairment and Increased Risk of Parietal-Dominant Alzheimer’s Disease Among World Trade Center Responders
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Allen Chen, Zahinoor Ismail, Frank Mann, Evelyn Bromet, Sean Clouston, and Benjamin Luft
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Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 2022
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21. Exome sequencing identifies rare coding variants in 10 genes which confer substantial risk for schizophrenia
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Francesco Lescai, Tarjinder Singh, Christopher P Morley, Evelyn Bromet, David Curtis, Nicholas James Bass, and Mark Daly
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Genetics ,Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming) ,mental disorders ,Odds ratio ,Biology ,Gene ,Exome sequencing ,Coding (social sciences) - Abstract
By meta-analyzing the whole-exomes of 24,248 cases and 97,322 controls, we implicate ultra-rare coding variants (URVs) in ten genes as conferring substantial risk for schizophrenia (odds ratios 3 - 50, P < 2.14 × 10-6), and 32 genes at a FDR < 5%. These genes have the greatest expression in central nervous system neurons and have diverse molecular functions that include the formation, structure, and function of the synapse. The associations of NMDA receptor subunit GRIN2A and AMPA receptor subunit GRIA3 provide support for the dysfunction of the glutamatergic system as a mechanistic hypothesis in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia. We find significant evidence for an overlap of rare variant risk between schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorders (ASD), and severe neurodevelopmental disorders (DD/ID), supporting a neurodevelopmental etiology for schizophrenia. We show that protein-truncating variants in GRIN2A, TRIO, and CACNA1G confer risk for schizophrenia whereas specific missense mutations in these genes confer risk for DD/ID. Nevertheless, few of the strongly associated schizophrenia genes appear to confer risk for DD/ID. We demonstrate that genes prioritized from common variant analyses of schizophrenia are enriched in rare variant risk, suggesting that common and rare genetic risk factors at least partially converge on the same underlying pathogenic biological processes. Even after excluding significantly associated genes, schizophrenia cases still carry a substantial excess of URVs, implying that more schizophrenia risk genes await discovery using this approach.
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- 2020
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22. Rapid versus Delayed Readmission in First-Admission Psychosis: Quality Indicators for Managed Care?
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Thomas Craig, Shmuel Fennig, Marsha Tanenberg-Karant, and Evelyn Bromet
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,General Medicine - Published
- 2000
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23. Psychiatric Epidemiology
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Mauricio Tohen, Evelyn Bromet, Jane M. Murphy, and Ming T. Tsuang
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Psychiatry and Mental health - Published
- 2000
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24. Comments on Takei et al.: Prenatal exposure to influenza epidemics and the risk of mental retardation
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T. J. Crow, N. Takei, R. R. Murray, P. C. Sham, E. O'Callaghan, Evelyn Bromet, Assen Jablensky, Noriyoshi Takei, Robin R. Murray, Pak C. Sham, and Eadbhard O'Callaghan
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Pregnancy ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Influenza epidemics ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Rubella ,Toxoplasmosis ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Immunology ,Intellectual disability ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Cytomegalovirus infections ,business ,Prenatal exposure ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 1995
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25. Incarceration rates of persons with first-admission psychosis
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Jonathan D. Prince, Ayse Akincigil, and Evelyn Bromet
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Adult ,Cohort Studies ,Hospitalization ,Interviews as Topic ,Male ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Risk Factors ,Prisons ,Virginia ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
This prospective study examined jail stay in a cohort of persons with schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders who experienced their first hospital admission and who were participating in the Suffolk County Mental Health Project. Demographic and clinical risk factors for jail placement were investigated over a four-year period after hospital discharge.The sample included 538 first-admission respondents diagnosed as meeting DSM-IV criteria for having schizophrenia, psychotic mood disorder, or other psychotic disorders. Initial interviews occurred in the hospital; face-to-face follow-ups occurred at the six-, 24-, and 48-month points, and telephone contact was maintained every three to six months. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to examine the demographic and clinical risk factors.Forty-seven respondents (9%) were incarcerated over the follow-up period. Among them, 20 were incarcerated multiple times. The prevalence, incidence, reasons for incarceration, and time served did not vary significantly by diagnosis. The most significant predictors of jail stay and time to incarceration during the follow-up were being male or black and having been incarcerated before admission. Predictive effects of other risk factors (for example, symptom severity or substance abuse) were smaller or statistically insignificant.The results suggest a need for mental health care professionals to routinely evaluate, document, and collaboratively address incarceration history, especially when working with black males, in an effort to avert future incarceration.
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- 2007
26. Psychiatric Epidemiology
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Ezra Susser, Sharon Schwartz, Alfredo Morabia, and Evelyn Bromet
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Searching for the causes of mental disorders is as exciting as it is complex. The relationship between pathophysiology and its overt manifestations is exceedingly intricate, and often the causes of a disorder are elusive at best. This book provides a resource for anyone trying to track these causes. Uniting theory and practice and rather than attempting to review the descriptive epidemiology of mental disorders, this book gives a dynamic exposition of the thinking and techniques used to establish it. The book starts out by tracing the brief history of psychiatric epidemiology, then describes the study of risk factors as causes of mental disorders. Subsequent sections discuss approaches to investigation of biologic, genetic, or social causes and the statistical analysis of study results. The book concludes by following some of the problems involved in the search for genetic causes of mental disorders, and more complex casual relationships.
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- 2006
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27. Six-month clinical status as a predictor of 24-month clinical outcome in first-admission patients with schizophrenia
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Thomas Craig, Shmuel Fennig, Marsha Tanenberg-Karant, and Evelyn Bromet
- Subjects
Adult ,Hospitals, Psychiatric ,Male ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Severity of Illness Index ,Hospitalization ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Patient Admission ,Disease Progression ,Schizophrenia ,Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine whether clinical status at 6-month follow-up is a predictor of 2-year clinical status in first-admission schizophrenic patients. If short-term status is indeed a strong predictor of subsequent functioning, the relationship would support earlier initiation of aggressive interventions. An epidemiologically based sample of 162 first-admission schizophrenic patients was examined at index hospitalization and at 6- and 24-month follow-up, using a variety of diagnostic and clinical assessment instruments. Respondents were divided into three groups based on their 6-month clinical status: delusions or hallucinations present at 6-month follow-up with or without negative symptoms (n = 63); moderate to high levels of negative symptoms (but not positive symptoms) present (n = 42); neither positive nor negative symptoms present (n = 57). Differences in 24-month clinical functioning were evaluated (GAF scores, BPRS factors, role functioning, number of rehospitalizations, and illness course). No significant differences were found among the three groups on demographic characteristics, substance abuse history, or extent of treatment during the follow-up. At 24-month follow-up, respondents with positive psychotic symptoms at 6-month follow-up had the worst, and those with no positive or negative symptoms the best functioning, with the negative-symptom group intermediate on most indices. Thus, among schizophrenic patients, poor 6-month clinical status identified a patient subgroup at high risk for continued poor clinical status at 24 months, suggesting the need for earlier intensive intervention in an attempt to prevent this progression.
- Published
- 1999
28. Diagnosis, treatment, and six-month outcome status in first-admission psychosis
- Author
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Thomas Craig, Evelyn Bromet, Lina Jandorf, Shmuel Fennig, Marsha Tanenberg-Karant, Ranganathan Ram, and Bruce Rosen
- Subjects
Adult ,Affective Disorders, Psychotic ,Male ,Bipolar Disorder ,Adolescent ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Patient Readmission ,Psychotherapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment Outcome ,Schizophrenia ,Humans ,Female ,Longitudinal Studies ,Social Behavior ,Antipsychotic Agents - Abstract
Six-month outcome status was examined in 202 first-admission inpatients with DSM-III-R schizophrenia spectrum (N = 96), psychotic bipolar disorder (N = 64), and psychotic depression (N = 42) drawn from 10 facilities in Suffolk County, New York. Schizophrenics fared significantly worse on all outcome variables rehospitalization, which ranged from 17.7 to 23.4%. Bipolars had good psychosocial outcomes regardless of clinical outcome, while the two outcome domains were uncorrelated among schizophrenics and psychotic depressed. Schizophreniform patients had significantly better outcome than those with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. Posthospital treatment was generally unrelated to outcome except that fewer rehospitalized schizophrenics received continuous treatment, and patients with psychotic depression with poorer psychosocial outcome received medication less frequently. These findings highlight the different treatment needs of these diagnostic groups, especially as regards the provision of more intensive rehabilitation for schizophrenic patients and the "poor-outcome" psychotic depressed.
- Published
- 1997
29. Parents with Psychosis
- Author
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Thomas, Craig, primary and Evelyn, Bromet J., additional
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Prevalence of Depression and Alcoholism
- Author
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Evelyn Bromet
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Relation of patient attributes to perceptions of the treatment environment
- Author
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Rudolf H. Moos and Evelyn Bromet
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology - Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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