Background
Schizophrenia is a complex clinical syndrome that has diverse presentations, comorbidities, and outcomes. Whilst efforts to understand the causes and ameliorate the effects of schizophrenia have made considerable scientific progress since Meynert, Wernicke, Kraepelin, and Bleuler, the exact etiology is not yet well understood. Despite the lifetime prevalence of schizophrenia being relatively low (0.7%) (Moreno-Küstner, Martin, & Pastor, Reference Moreno-Küstner, Martin and Pastor2018), there is considerable impact on people diagnosed with schizophrenia (PDS), schizophreniform, schizoaffective disorder, their family, and their community. For example, PDS live for 15 fewer years when compared to healthy controls (HC), primarily due to concomitant physical illnesses such as cardiovascular disease, and suicide (Hennekens, Hennekens, Hollar, & Casey, Reference Hennekens, Hennekens, Hollar and Casey2005; Laursen, Munk-Olsen, & Vestergaard, Reference Laursen, Munk-Olsen and Vestergaard2012; Saha, Chant, & McGrath, Reference Saha, Chant and McGrath2007). The heterogenous etiology, presentation, and prognosis of schizophrenia, schizophreniform, and schizoaffective disorders have led some authors to suggest these disorders may be better characterized as syndromes as opposed to distinct disease entities (Andreasen & Olsen, Reference Andreasen and Olsen1982; Carpenter, Reference Carpenter2007; Kendell, Reference Kendell1987).
The network theory of mental disorders conceptualizes psychopathology as a system-level network of interconnected symptoms and posits that symptoms may interact to cause or exacerbate, or are associated with, the expression of other symptoms (Borsboom, Reference Borsboom2017; Borsboom & Cramer, Reference Borsboom and Cramer2013). Traits or conditions are emergent properties of a network, depending on the characteristics or properties of a network for a given population (Fried et al., Reference Fried, van Borkulo, Cramer, Boschloo, Schoevers and Borsboom2017). Using statistical techniques to underpin the construction of symptom networks may reveal a cascading effect of connected symptoms. For example, auditory hallucinations can cause anxiety, which can cause asociality, which, in turn, results in alogia. The strength of the connections in time and with each other and the density of the connections may indicate a person who has a higher risk of, or has greater intensities of, psychopathology (Borsboom, Reference Borsboom2017). Furthermore, highly comorbid conditions such as schizophrenia and depression are accounted for as co-occurring due to mutual interactions between symptoms, as opposed to being distinct diseases or psychological disorders operating in parallel (Fried et al., Reference Fried, van Borkulo, Cramer, Boschloo, Schoevers and Borsboom2017). The network approach may be especially relevant for the study of the symptomatology within PDS as: (1) schizophrenia is a syndrome with heterogenous presentations and outcomes; (2) no unique symptom in schizophrenia is pathognomonic to the disorder; (3) schizophrenia has an increased prevalence of co-morbid conditions; and (4) there is diversity in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia (Isvoranu, Boyette, Guloksuz, & Borsboom, Reference Isvoranu, Boyette, Guloksuz, Borsboom, Tamminga, Ivleva, Reininghaus and Os2021; Weinberger & Harrison, Reference Weinberger and Harrison2011).
Symptom networks graphically and statistically model the relationships between nodes (e.g. items of an assessment, observed, or latent variables) via edges (relationships between nodes). There are numerous methods to implement a symptom network, for example, the edges can be directed (with arrows from parent nodes to daughter nodes), partially directed, or undirected. The direction in networks is not necessarily causal in nature but does identify associations, or conditional dependence relationships. For a reconstructed network to be fully specified, parameters need to be estimated for the obtained structure of the graph to be used for quantitative interpretations or predictions. Once a network has been specified, information on the properties of the network can be obtained.
Examining the nodes and edges of symptom networks in PDS and HCs enables identification of the strength of relationships between nodes, and the influence of these nodes within the networks (Chung, Reference Chung2019; Hevey, Reference Hevey2018). A node (i.e. a symptom) that is most central, is more likely to impact on other nodes in the network. Centrality statistics in symptom networks are drawn from social network analysis and identify the relative importance of nodes within a network (Bringmann et al., Reference Bringmann, Elmer, Epskamp, Krause, Schoch, Wichers and Snippe2019). The three commonly used centrality statistics are betweenness, closeness, degree, and strength. Betweenness is defined as how well a node acts as a connecting point by using the number of paths through that node to any other pair of nodes. Closeness is defined as how close a node is to all other nodes using the average partial correlation of the paths from that node. Strength is the sum of all partial correlations from or to that node. Degree is the number of edges from or to a node (Hevey, Reference Hevey2018). See the online Supplementary materials section for the mathematical formulae for these node metrics in the effect measures section. Hence, network metrics can be used as an effect measure to synthesize and integrate the literature to identify which nodes or edges may be most interconnected for a particular condition.
Adding nodes into the network itself is analogous to controlling for confounding variables when using empirical statistics (R. J. McNally, Reference McNally2016). Some arguments against the network approach to psychopathology posit that the networks themselves do not have predictive validity or the results are difficult to replicate (Forbes, Wright, Markon, & Krueger, Reference Forbes, Wright, Markon and Krueger2017). However, other authors later rejected this notion and found support for the replicability of networks (Borsboom et al., Reference Borsboom, Fried, Epskamp, Waldorp, van Borkulo, van der Maas and Cramer2017; Fried, van Borkulo, & Epskamp, Reference Fried, van Borkulo and Epskamp2021; Funkhouser et al., Reference Funkhouser, Correa, Gorka, Nelson, Phan and Shankman2020; Jones, Williams, & McNally, Reference Jones, Williams and McNally2021). Given no systematic review has been published solely on network studies of schizophrenia, a systematic review may therefore be useful to identify whether the networks produce consistent results when including or excluding key confounding variables or whether the network literature on schizophrenia is in alignment with the general understanding on schizophrenia. A synthesis can clarify whether cognitive and negative symptoms are more central than positive symptoms like hallucinations and delusions.
With the novelty of symptom networks, research on symptom networks in schizophrenia is growing rapidly, yet no systematic review specifically on symptom networks in schizophrenia has been undertaken to date. A systematic review is needed to: (1) synthesize networks identified to date; (2) identify the key methodological limitations of extant research and (3) identify the priorities for ongoing research and (4) identify any clinical implications from the results. Henceforth, the objective of this systematic review is to synthesize the literature and identify any congruences and discrepancies in the literature. This may identify if the outcomes of psychopathology networks of schizophrenia align with the current understanding of schizophrenia, if the networks are replicable, we may be able to identify key symptoms or nodes that are hypothetical core features of the illness.
Methods
Literature search
The present study aims to identify the current state of knowledge on networks in PDS.
Because of the novelty of the network theory of psychological disorders we aimed to capture all symptom network studies that met the inclusion criteria over the 21 years prior to the search.
We followed the systematic review guidelines documented by Perestelo-Pérez (Reference Perestelo-Pérez2013). Two differences between the guidelines and our implementation of the systematic review were: (1) We did not used the population, intervention, comparison, outcomes, and study (PICOS) question framing tool as we did not compare treatment and control groups, nor did we specify treatment effects; and (2) one author collected the data (KB). Additionally, to avoid bias or errors in the data collection process, each result reported was quality checked against the original publications by KB. This strategy was preferred due to the large amount of unused data collected. We also aligned with the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) reporting guidelines (Page et al., Reference Page, McKenzie, Bossuyt, Boutron, Hoffmann, Mulrow and Brennan2021), found in the online Supplementary Materials: Methods section.
We systematically searched and selected studies based on pre-determined inclusion and exclusion criteria. A research librarian specializing in systematic reviews supported developing and testing search terms and variations, and to identify suitable databases. The search covered the following databases: (1) Medline and (2) CINAHL through EBSCO Host, (3) Scopus, (4) PsycINFO through Ovid, and (5) Google Scholar (https://scholar.google.com/). The last search was undertaken on the 27th of June 2022 for Medline, CINAHL, Scopus, and PsycINFO, and the 08th of July 2022 for Google Scholar. Hand searching the reference lists of the articles in the full text review occurred on the 5th of August 2022. We updated the list from Medline, CINAHL, Scopus, and PsycINFO on the 08/05/2023 to ensure this systematic review is up to date with current research. The search strategy can be found in the online Supplementary Materials: Methods section.
Because of the novelty of the network theory of psychological disorders we aimed to capture all symptom network studies that met the inclusion criteria to date. Furthermore, we included only people that had a confirmed primary diagnosis of schizophrenia, schizophreniform, or schizoaffective disorder, and no other disorders (unless these conditions were comorbid or were presented in separate networks). Therefore, participants whom the network was reconstructed on needed at least one of these three diagnoses. Publications that only used the term psychosis, without reference to a diagnosis of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or schizophreniform, are not included in our study. The full systematic review methods with inclusion and exclusion criteria, search methods, information sources, data collection process including data extraction, management and data items, a list of variables collected, risk of bias assessment, effect measures used in the study, and the synthesis method are published in the online Supplementary materials.
Inclusion criteria
The inclusion criteria for study selection were as follows: (1) The network pertained to a treatment group with participants who had a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) IV, DSM-5, International Classification of Diseases (ICD) 10, or ICD-11 primary diagnosis of schizophrenia, schizophreniform, or schizoaffective disorder, (2) the nodes in the networks contained at least one symptom from criterion A in the DSM-5 for a diagnosis of schizophrenia (differences between criterion A in the DSM-IV and DSM-5 pertain only to the examples of negative symptoms), (3) the publication was a peer reviewed journal article, (4) the study was original research and not a review or discussion piece, (5) the study was written in English, (6) a graphical network model was applied, (7) the study had quantitatively derived networks, (8) the network was based on human participants, (9) the human participants were living at the time of the research or of the assessment, (10) the data was observed as opposed to simulated, and (11) the record was available in the search engine (12) given the dataset, variables included, and methodology of the study, this study was not a replication of previous research. Hence, we allowed studies that used the same dataset (several studies used a common dataset such as from the CATIE trial; Keefe et al., Reference Keefe, Mohs, Bilder, Harvey, Green, Meltzer and Sano2003) so long as the variable set or treatment and control groups differed.
Exclusion criteria
The exclusion criteria for study selection were as follows: (1) Research on a mental disorder other than schizophrenia, schizophreniform, or schizoaffective disorder, where this disorder was not used as a comparison group to schizophrenia, schizoaffective, or schizophreniform, (2) participants did not meet the DSM-IV, DSM-5, ICD-10, or ICD-11 diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia, schizophreniform, or schizoaffective disorder, (3) the nodes in the networks did not contain at least one symptom from criterion A in the DSM-5 for a diagnosis of schizophrenia, (4) the publication was not a peer reviewed journal article, (5) the study was not original research or was a discussion piece, (6) the study was not written in English, (7) a graphical network model was not applied, (8) the study did not have quantitatively derived networks, (9) the network was not based on human participants, (10) the human participants were not living at the time of the research or of the assessment, (11) the data was simulated as opposed to observed, (12) the record was not available in the search engine and (13) the dataset, variables included, and statistical methodology of the study was a replication of previous research.
Search methods for identification of studies
Information sources
Selection process
The search engines returned 2211 studies, 975 of which were duplicates. Conflicts were 5.3% (κ = 0.58) between KB and KA in the initial screen and were 10.0% (κ = 0.58) between MS and KB for screening the updated literature search. Consensus was reached on each publication through discussion. The full-text reviewers of the initial search KB and KA disagreed on 17 studies (25.8%, κ = 0.48) and the updated search MS and KB disagreed on three studies in the full text review (13%, κ = 0.74). A consensus was reached for each disagreement between KB and MS.
Results
Description of studies
Study selection
Database searches yielded 2211 studies to be screened, of these 975 were duplicates and removed. The remaining 1236 studies proceeded through abstract screening, from which 89 manuscripts were full text reviewed. The full text of two studies could not be retrieved. Search results for electronic searches and hand searching are found in a PRISMA flowchart (Page et al., Reference Page, McKenzie, Bossuyt, Boutron, Hoffmann, Mulrow and Brennan2021), see Fig. 1. Thirty-two studies were included in this research. Most exclusions were because the study was on other mental disorders (N = 36) or studies where nodes in the network were not a DSM-5 symptom of schizophrenia (N = 8).
Study characteristics
Table 1 shows an overview of the studies included in this systematic literature review. Overall, there was considerable heterogeneity across the assessments included in the studies, including assessments that examined positive and negative symptoms, language, functioning, cognition, biomarkers, social constructs such as resilience or perceived discrimination, and side effects from medication. A list of assessments administered can be found in the online Supplementary Materials in the List of Assessments Section. Most (N = 28) of the studies included networks of PDS participants only, whereas three studies compared PDS to HC, one study compared schizoaffective disorder to other disorders and HC, and one study compared schizoaffective disorder to other psychological disorders only. Of the 32 studies, 13 studies used the same dataset as in another study included in this systematic review.
Note. PDS, People diagnosed with schizophrenia; HC, Healthy controls; PNS, Predominately negative symptoms; TResis, treatment resistant; TRespon, Treatment responsive; ACE III, Addenbrookes cognitive examination version III; BARS, Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale; BLERT, Bell–Lysaker Emotional Recognition Task; BNSS, Brief negative symptom scale; BPRS, Brief psychiatric rating scale; CAINS, Clinical assessment interview for negative symptoms; CASH, Comprehensive assessment of symptoms and history; CDSS, Calgary depression rating scale for schizophrenia; CLANG, Clinical language disorder rating scale; EMA, Ecological momentary assessment; FEIT, Facial emotion identification test; FT, Faces test; HT, Hinting task; ISMI, Internalized stigma of mental illness; MAS, Metacognition assessment scale; MATRICS, Measurement and treatment research to improve cognition in schizophrenia; MSCEIT, Mayer−Salovey−caruso emotional intelligence Test; PANSS, Positive and negative syndrome scale; PDD, Perceived devaluation and discrimination scale; PS, Paranoia scale; PSP, Personal social performance scale; PST, Picture Sequencing Task; REMT, Reading the mind in the eyes test; RSA, Resilience scale for adults; SAT, Social Attributions Test; SANS, Scale for the assessment of negative symptoms; SAPS, Scale for the assessment of positive symptoms; SAS, Simpson−Angus Extrapyramidal Side Effects Scale; SES, Service engagement scale; SFS, Social functioning scale; SHRS, St Hans rating sale; SLOF, Specific level of functioning scale; SNS, Self−Evaluation of Negative Symptoms Scale; SOFAS, Social and occupational functioning assessment scale; TASIT, The awareness of social inference test; UPSA−B, UCSD Performance−Based Skills Assessment—Brief; CAPC, Chinese Antipsychotics Pharmacogenomics Consortium; CATIE, Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness; CCT Cariprazine Clinical Trials; CRS, Cariprazine−Risperidone Study; EuroSC, European Schizophrenia Cohort; GROUP, Genetic Risk and Outcome of Psychosis; INRP, Italian Network for Research on Psychoses; MRPC, Maryland Psychiatric Research Center; OPTiMiSE, Optimization of Treatment and Management of Schizophrenia in Europe; REAP−AP, Research on Asian Psychotropic Prescription Patterns for Antipsychotics; RCT, Randomized Control Trials; SCOPE, Social Cognition Psychometric Evaluation; SUNYB, State University of New York at Binghamton; Unnamed, Dataset or study was private and was not given a public name.
Risk of bias in studies
Table 2 Shows the results of applying an adapted McMasters critical review form to each retrieved source. Five studies did not review the literature on symptom networks of schizophrenia or other conditions in their study (Bak, Drukker, Hasmi, & Van Jim, Reference Bak, Drukker, Hasmi and Van Jim2016; Galderisi et al., Reference Galderisi, Rucci, Kirkpatrick, Mucci, Gibertoni, Rocca and Aguglia2018; Monteleone et al., Reference Monteleone, Cascino, Rossi, Rocca, Bertolino, Aguglia and Biondi2022; Yan et al., Reference Yan, Chen, Ju, Gao, Zhang, Li and Zhang2022). Most of the research designs were descriptive studies or one sample pre-test only designs (N = 19). Two studies did not document the network sample sizes or the sample sizes in the networks could not be derived from previous studies (Demyttenaere, Anthonis, Acsai, & Correll, Reference Demyttenaere, Anthonis, Acsai and Correll2022a; Hajdúk, Klein, Harvey, Penn, & Pinkham, Reference Hajdúk, Klein, Harvey, Penn and Pinkham2019). Two studies presented a network based on ecological momentary assessment and therefore the outcome measures were not assessed as reliable or valid (Badal, Parrish, Holden, Depp, & Granholm, Reference Badal, Parrish, Holden, Depp and Granholm2021; Bak et al., Reference Bak, Drukker, Hasmi and Van Jim2016). Most studies did not address the reliability (N = 19) or validity (N = 18) of the assessments they included. Results of Individual Studies.
Note. NA, Not addressed; N/A, Not applicable.
Fig. 2 provides the results of the centrality statistics of variables added as nodes in each network. For each network and centrality statistic, variable domains included were either the most central (dark blue), second most central (medium blue), or third most central (light blue). Cells in Fig. 2 were colored in gray if this domain was not assessed or included in the centrality statistics. Cells in white are domains in which the variables were included but were not most central. The method to allocate items and subscales to the domain's depression, cognition, functioning, positive symptoms, and negative symptoms can be found in the online Supplementary Materials: Methods section. Additionally, the text version of this figure can be found in the online Supplementary Materials: Table 5A section. In Fig. 2, variables that were excluded because they do not belong to these domains were occasionally more central in the network, however, these were removed because (a) they were less frequently included the networks across all the studies or (b) they assessed general psychopathology. Overall, there were 43 networks that reported on the centrality statistics in Fig. 2. Many of the datasets were the same across studies hence caution needs to be taken when interpreting similar findings across these studies. Furthermore, some publications included more than one network in their results.
In terms of the domain cognition, variables allocated to the cognition domain featured in the top three for seven of nine networks for betweenness, four of nine networks for closeness, three of four networks for strength, and seven of seven networks for degree. Functioning appeared in the top three most central variables in eight out of 11 in betweenness and closeness, five out of seven for strength, and in three out of six networks for degree. Considering only networks that compared cognition to functioning, cognition was more central in 13 of 24 networks, across all centrality statistics. However, these results might be skewed by Galderisi et al. (Reference Galderisi, Rucci, Mucci, Rossi, Rocca, Bertolino and Bozzatello2020) who conducted four networks on subsamples of their dataset. Furthermore, Galderisi et al. (Reference Galderisi, Rucci, Kirkpatrick, Mucci, Gibertoni, Rocca and Aguglia2018) and Galderisi et al. (Reference Galderisi, Rucci, Mucci, Rossi, Rocca, Bertolino and Bozzatello2020) used the same dataset for both their studies. When comparing cognition to positive symptoms, in every network that included both cognition and positive symptoms, cognition was more central in every network. Similarly for functioning, in six of nine networks functioning had higher betweenness. For closeness, functioning was more central than positive symptoms in seven of nine networks. For strength, in five of seven studies, functioning was more central than positive symptoms.
In studies that compared negative symptoms to positive symptoms, where negative symptoms or positive symptoms featured in the top three most central, variables in the domain negative symptoms were most central in one of eight studies for betweenness. Similarly for closeness, in one study of nine, variables in the negative symptoms domain were more central than positive symptoms. In five of 17 studies negative symptoms had higher strength than positive symptoms, and for degree, three of four networks had variables allocated to the negative symptom domain with higher degree. However, Demyttenaere et al. (Reference Demyttenaere, Anthonis, Acsai and Correll2022a) and Demyttenaere et al. (Reference Demyttenaere, Leenaerts, Acsai, Sebe, Laszlovszky, Barabássy and Correll2022b) used the same dataset, and Choi et al. (Reference Choi, Yoon, Park, Nakagami, Kubota, Inada and Chong2022) and Li et al. (Reference Li, Zhang, Tang, Park, Park, Yang and Kallivayalil2022) also used the same dataset. Furthermore, Demyttenaere et al. (Reference Demyttenaere, Leenaerts, Acsai, Sebe, Laszlovszky, Barabássy and Correll2022b), Esfahlani, Visser, Strauss, and Sayama (Reference Esfahlani, Visser, Strauss and Sayama2018), Hu et al. (Reference Hu, Lau, Ma, Hung, Chen, Cheng and Chan2022) included multiple networks on the same dataset.
Of all studies that included variables in the depression and positive symptom domains, where either depression or positive symptoms was the top three most central, depression variables had higher betweenness than positive symptoms in two of eight studies. For closeness, depression was more central in three of eight studies. For strength, depression was more central in four of nine studies and for degree, depression was more central than positive symptoms in one out of one study. In these studies, Bak et al. (Reference Bak, Drukker, Hasmi and Van Jim2016), Hu et al. (Reference Hu, Lau, Ma, Hung, Chen, Cheng and Chan2022), had included multiple networks on the same sample. Additionally, none of the studies that included items or subscales measuring positive and depression used the same dataset. Some assessments were not exclusively developed to measure depression but include items that aim to measure depression. As in the online Supplementary materials: Table 5B table, Dal Santo et al. (Reference Dal Santo, Fonseca-Pedrero, García-Portilla, González-Blanco, Sáiz, Galderisi and Bobes2022) and Demyttenaere et al. (Reference Demyttenaere, Anthonis, Acsai and Correll2022a) found that in their network the item from the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) on depression was more central than items representing positive symptoms. However, positive symptoms were more central that the item measuring depression in the studies on the PANSS by Demyttenaere et al. (Reference Demyttenaere, Leenaerts, Acsai, Sebe, Laszlovszky, Barabássy and Correll2022b) and Esfahlani et al. (Reference Esfahlani, Visser, Strauss and Sayama2018). This is true despite seven items in the PANSS measuring positive symptoms and one item measuring depression. Likewise, in terms of the BPRS, depressive mood was more central than positive symptoms in betweenness, closeness and strength in the study by Choi et al. (Reference Choi, Yoon, Park, Nakagami, Kubota, Inada and Chong2022), despite 3 items measuring positive symptoms and two items measuring depression.
Discussion
Congruences and discrepancies
This study aimed to identify congruences and discrepancies across studies on symptom networks of schizophrenia. We observed several notable congruences in the evidence across studies, despite considerable heterogeneity in the included studies’ designs and methodologies. The heterogeneity in methods is in part due to symptom networks being an emerging area of inquiry and no protocol or direction exists yet to unify the methods used in this area.
We found support for the theory that schizophrenia is a disorder of cognition, as across studies cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia were central in symptom networks of schizophrenia. We also found that functional capacity was a core feature of schizophrenia. Positive symptoms were central in only a few networks in the studies included in our systematic review. When adding variables assessing cognition as nodes in the network as well as the PANSS items, cognitive symptoms were more central than positive symptoms in every network. In many studies, positive symptoms were central but not when assessments of cognition were added to the network. This is analogous to adding a confounding variable in a regression (R. McNally, Mair, Mugno, and Riemann, Reference McNally, Mair, Mugno and Riemann2017). However, positive symptoms may not have been central in each study, as most samples include people who were medicated. Hence, the presence of medication may be a confound in these studies as this tends to reduce positive symptoms.
Our study also found that items or subscales that aim to measure depression featured in the three centrality statistics across centrality statistics in several of the studies included. Approximately 40% of PDS have comorbid depression (Upthegrove, Marwaha, & Birchwood, Reference Upthegrove, Marwaha and Birchwood2017), depending on the stage of the illness. Upthegrove et al. (Reference Upthegrove, Marwaha and Birchwood2017) identifies that depression is also associated with worse outcomes and is the most significant risk factor for completed suicide in PDS. Furthermore, anhedonia is a shared diagnostic symptom in both PDS and people diagnosed with depression in the DSM-5 (Lambert et al., Reference Lambert, Da Silva, Ceniti, Rizvi, Foussias and Kennedy2018). Network analysis is useful in this situation to model complex systems such as networks of conditions with high comorbidities, as it takes into consideration relationships between symptoms and diagnostic boundaries that are not accounted for in other models (Cramer, Waldorp, Van Der Maas, & Borsboom, Reference Cramer, Waldorp, Van Der Maas and Borsboom2010). Despite the role symptoms of depression have in the outcomes of schizophrenia, its symptom overlap, and its frequent comorbidity, only eight of the 32 studies selected used an instrument specific to depression. Given that some of the selected studies found items or subscales measuring depression were most central, more research is needed on depression in schizophrenia, in particular research is needed to compare PDS against PDS with a comorbid depressive disorder. Although it is unclear why the centrality of depression is heterogeneous across studies, in a systematic review by Hartley, Barrowclough, and Haddock (Reference Hartley, Barrowclough and Haddock2013), the authors found the severity of hallucinations and delusions, together with its associated distress and content, is associated with depressive symptoms. Potentially symptom severity is key in moderating the role of depression in people with comorbid schizophrenia and depression.
Previous research suggests that negative symptoms and cognitive functioning have more prognostic value and greater associations with global levels of functioning, and these symptoms are likely to persist longer than positive symptoms during the syndrome (Addington, Addington, & Maticka-Tyndale, Reference Addington, Addington and Maticka-Tyndale1991; Heinrichs, Reference Heinrichs2005; Kahn & Keefe, Reference Kahn and Keefe2013; Stahl & Buckley, Reference Stahl and Buckley2007). It is arguable that in line with the results from these studies, cognitive impairments need to be targeted alongside pharmaceutical intervention of positive symptoms, which may be beneficial to global levels of functioning. This also aligns with other researchers, who posit that schizophrenia is primarily a disorder of cognition (Heinrichs, Reference Heinrichs2005; Kahn & Keefe, Reference Kahn and Keefe2013). Recent meta analyses identify that cognitive remediation needs to be introduced widely in clinical practice for PDS (Cella, Preti, Edwards, Dow, & Wykes, Reference Cella, Preti, Edwards, Dow and Wykes2017; Vita et al., Reference Vita, Barlati, Ceraso, Nibbio, Ariu, Deste and Wykes2021). Although, currently it is unclear whether network variables identified as central should be targeted for intervention (Bringmann et al., Reference Bringmann, Elmer, Epskamp, Krause, Schoch, Wichers and Snippe2019), given uncertainty concerning their interpretation and stability, however, we are able to identify in this systematic review that cognition and functioning could be regarded as two of several core features of schizophrenia.
Bringmann et al. (Reference Bringmann, Elmer, Epskamp, Krause, Schoch, Wichers and Snippe2019) note the limitations of designing interventions on variables that are most central in a network as interventions rarely target a single variable for remediation and instead have a wider effect on an array of variables. Furthermore, the centrality statistics closeness and betweenness are considered to be unstable in cross sectional and temporal networks (Epskamp, Borsboom, & Fried, Reference Epskamp, Borsboom and Fried2018). Intervening on the most commonly reported symptoms may work better, although it would be preferable to select symptoms on the basis of centrality and frequency of endorsement (Rodebaugh et al., Reference Rodebaugh, Tonge, Piccirillo, Fried, Horenstein, Morrison and Fernandez2018).
The diversity of the studies also makes conclusive inferences difficult, particularly the heterogeneity in the assessments administered across the studies. Furthermore, some studies compared PDS to HC, or treatment resistant PDS with PDS who were treatment responsive, PDS with predominantly negative symptoms to acute patients, compared different pharmacological treatments for PDS, or compared PDS to other conditions, or had no comparison group at all. Some studies used directed networks while most were undirected. There was also considerable heterogeneity in the method used to generate the network, although partial correlation with a graphical least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (GLASSO) penalization was used the most. Lastly, the reporting of centrality statistics was heterogenous across studies, where some authors looked at closeness, betweenness and degree, and others did not include any centrality statistics. This heterogeneity is possibly due to symptom networks in PDS first being researched in 2016, given our exclusion criteria, and most studies to date could be considered exploratory in nature.
Overall, the studies were of reasonable quality but exhibited varying quality indicators in the MCRF. As symptom networks are relatively new, many publications in the systematic review did not adequately address the introduction of this novel method when applied to schizophrenia. More information on network methods is needed for audiences that are unfamiliar with such analysis. Additionally, documenting potential clinical implications of the study is crucial, given network analysis can directly inform practice. Identifying and reporting the reliability and validity of the measures used is also necessary as symptom networks assume that items or latent variables are observable phenomena (Wilshire, Ward, & Clack, Reference Wilshire, Ward and Clack2021), and nodes in the network are also assumed to be flat constructs (Wilshire et al., Reference Wilshire, Ward and Clack2021). Furthermore, most studies were secondary research, potentially limiting the quality due to their dependence on the original study.
It is essential that researchers begin to use consistent assessments to enable comparisons to be made between studies. We recommend the PANSS over other clinical assessments as it is reliable and valid and is the most widely used assessment of symptoms in network studies of schizophrenia. Cognition is a key prognostic indicator for schizophrenia so should be assessed in every network study. The Measurement and Treatment Research to Improve Cognition in Schizophrenia (MATRICS) is recommended for assessing cognition as it was developed with PDS. Because depression and schizophrenia are highly comorbid, the utility of symptom networks to account for comorbidities, and because depression in schizophrenia is the largest predictor of completed suicide, it would be useful for future network studies to include a validated assessment specific to depression for PDS (Cramer et al., Reference Cramer, Waldorp, Van Der Maas and Borsboom2010; Upthegrove et al., Reference Upthegrove, Marwaha and Birchwood2017). Furthermore, functioning is also a key assessment to administer as it was central in many of the studies that included functional assessments. Researchers may wish to include centrality statistics where appropriate for clinical interest as well as benchmarks for subsequent research.
Limitations
No quality appraisal instruments for network studies exist yet and therefore adaptation of the McMasters critical review form was implemented but not validated (Birkeland, Greene, & Spiller, Reference Birkeland, Greene and Spiller2020). Additionally, homogeneity of the findings may be increased from studies that used the same datasets for their networks. Some of the studies that motivated this systematic review (Boyette et al., Reference Boyette, Isvoranu, Schirmbeck, Velthorst, Simons and Barrantes-Vidal2020; Isvoranu et al., Reference Isvoranu, van Borkulo, Boyette, Wigman, Vinkers and Borsboom2016) were excluded some participants in their studies did not have a diagnosis of schizophreniform, schizoaffective disorder or schizophrenia, or a network was not reconstructed only on people who have at least one of these diagnoses. Many studies were excluded because other conditions such as brief psychotic disorder, delusional disorder, or substance induced psychotic disorder were included in the sample used to reconstruct the network. This study may have also excluded research that used the term psychosis to describe schizophrenia, with no mention of schizophrenia, schizophreniform, and schizoaffective disorder, and therefore a diagnosis of one of these conditions was never mentioned. This study excluded items that either did not fit into the domains in Fig. 2, or were focused on social, medical, or biological variables for Table 5B in the online Supplementary Materials section. In some instances these symptoms may have been the most central nodes in the network or otherwise changed the structure of the observed network and the derived centrality measures.
Conclusions
Given the intertwined nature of symptoms, comorbidities, and mediating factors of symptoms, the network approach offers a new perspective on characterizing schizophrenia. However, some aspects of the network theory of mental disorders have not yet been included in the networks due to the novel approach. Future research on symptom networks should use consistent assessments for better integration of findings. Including cognition, functioning, and depression, along with positive and negative symptoms in the network, is crucial to control for their impact.
Due to the central role of cognitive symptoms across studies, we recommend that cognitive remediation should be provided throughout the course of the illness, including when PDS are in remission from positive symptoms. This approach may significantly improve global levels of functioning, also a core feature of schizophrenia. Our research supports the theory that schizophrenia is a disorder of cognition (Heinrichs, Reference Heinrichs2005; Kahn & Keefe, Reference Kahn and Keefe2013) as nodes representing cognition when included, were more central than positive or negative symptoms. However, we cannot infer that the centrality of nodes is sufficient to infer treatment implications (Bringmann et al., Reference Bringmann, Elmer, Epskamp, Krause, Schoch, Wichers and Snippe2019). However, other meta analyses recommend cognitive remediation to improve functional outcomes for the person with schizophrenia, rather than restricting treatment to target positive symptoms only (Cella et al., Reference Cella, Preti, Edwards, Dow and Wykes2017; Vita et al., Reference Vita, Barlati, Ceraso, Nibbio, Ariu, Deste and Wykes2021).
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S003329172300363X.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Mr Andrew South, an Auckland University of Technology librarian, who was instrumental in the development of the search strategy early in the project.
Funding statement
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests
None.
Registration and protocol
This study was registered with PROSPERO on the 25th of August 2022, with the registration number CRD42022351243. The protocol can be accessed here: https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?ID=CRD42022351243. The aims of the study were slightly changed following the registration with PROSPERO.