Impaired error-related processing in patients with first-episode psychosis and subjects at clinical high risk for psychosis: An event-related potential study

Psychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2021 Apr 17. doi: 10.1111/pcn.13219. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Aim: Impaired event-related potential (ERP) indices reflecting performance-monitoring systems have been consistently reported in patients with schizophrenia. However, whether these impairments exist from the beginning of the early phase of psychosis, such as in first-episode psychosis (FEP) patients and individuals at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis, has not yet been clearly ascertained.

Methods: Thirty-seven FEP patients, 22 CHR subjects, and 22 healthy controls (HC) performed a visual go/no-go task so that three ERP components associated with performance monitoring-error-related negativity (ERN), correct response negativity (CRN), and error positivity (Pe) -could be assessed. Repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) with age and sex as covariates was used to compare ERN, CRN, and Pe across the groups.

Results: Repeated-measures ANOVA with age and sex as covariates revealed that compared with HC, FEP patients and CHR subjects showed significantly smaller ERN amplitudes at the Fz (F = 4.980, P = 0.009) and FCz (F = 3.453, P = 0.037) electrode sites. Neither CRN nor Pe amplitudes showed significant differences across the FEP, CHR, and HC groups.

Conclusion: These findings suggest that performance monitoring is already compromised during the early course of psychotic disorders, evident in FEP patients and CHR subjects, as reflected in the reduced ERN amplitude. Considering these findings, ERN could serve as a potential indicator of early-stage psychosis.

Keywords: clinical high risk; early psychosis; error-related negativity; first-episode psychosis; performance monitoring.