Claudia Dario
Sapienza University of Rome
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Featured researches published by Claudia Dario.
Early Intervention in Psychiatry | 2012
Marco Armando; Barnaby Nelson; Alison R. Yung; Riccardo Saba; Elena Monducci; Claudia Dario; Valentino Righetti; Maximilian Birchwood; Paolo Fiori Nastro; Paolo Girardi
Background: Different subtypes of psychotic experiences (PEs) have been identified in clinical and non‐clinical samples. Researchers have considered these PEs to either be variations of personality or expressions of vulnerability to psychotic disorder. This study aimed to determine which particular subtypes of PEs were more likely to be associated with poor mental health status and help‐seeking behaviour in a non‐clinical sample of young adults.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2013
Marco Armando; Ashleigh Lin; Paolo Girardi; Valentino Righetti; Claudia Dario; Riccardo Saba; Franco Decrescenzo; Luigi Mazzone; Stefano Vicari; M. Birchwood; Paolo Fiori Nastro
Abstract Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is associated with psychotic-like experiences (PLEs) and is a frequent diagnosis in the prodromal phases of psychosis. We investigated whether psychopathological factors could discriminate which subjects with SAD are more likely to develop PLEs. A sample of 128 young adults with SAD was split into two subsamples according to the presence of clinically relevant PLEs. Correlations between PLEs and other psychopathological markers were explored. The SAD with PLEs group showed higher level of anxiety, depression, and intolerance of uncertainty (IU) compared with the SAD without PLEs group. A limitation of this study is that the cross-sectional design precluded the analysis of causality. In our sample, the presence of PLEs is related to higher levels of depression, anxiety, and IU. The current findings are consistent with hypotheses suggesting that cognitive disturbances, together with social anxiety, may result in PLEs.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2017
Nella Lo Cascio; Patrizio Pasqualetti; Juliana Fortes Lindau; Nicoletta Girardi; Riccardo Saba; Martina Brandizzi; Elena Monducci; Alice Masillo; Giada Colafrancesco; Andrea Solfanelli; Franco De Crescenzo; Georgios D. Kotzalidis; Claudia Dario; Mauro Ferrara; Stefano Vicari; Paolo Girardi; Andrea M. Auther; Barbara A. Cornblatt; Christoph U. Correll; Paolo Fiori Nastro
Social and occupational impairments are present in the schizophrenia prodrome, and poor social functioning predicts transition to psychosis in Ultra-High Risk (UHR) individuals. We aimed to: 1) validate the Italian version of the Global Functioning: Social (GF: S) and Global Functioning: Role (GF: S) scales; 2) evaluate their association with UHR criteria. Participants were 12-21-years-old (age, mean=15.2, standard deviation=2.1, male/female ratio=117/120) nonpsychotic help-seekers, meeting (N=39) or not (N=198) UHR criteria. Inter-rater reliability was excellent for both scales, which also showed good to excellent concurrent validity, as measured by correlation with Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scores. Furthermore, GF:S and GF: R were able to discriminate between UHRs and non-UHRs, with UHRs having lower current scores. After adjusting for current GAF scores, only current GF:S scores independently differentiated UHR from non-UHR (OR=1.33, 95%CI: 1.02-1.75, p=0.033). Finally, UHR participants showed a steeper decrease from highest GF:S and GF: R scores in the past year to their respective current scores, but not from highest past year GAF scores to current scores. GF:S/GS: R scores were not affected by age or sex. GF:S/GF: R are useful functional level and outcome measures, having the advantage over the GAF to not confound functioning with symptom severity. Additionally, the GF:S may be helpful in identifying UHR individuals.
Schizophrenia Research | 2018
Andrea Raballo; Elena Monducci; Mauro Ferrara; Paolo Fiori Nastro; Claudia Dario
Trait-like anomalies of subjective experience (aka, Basic Self-disturbance or Self-disorder, SD) have been empirically identified as schizophrenia-specific markers of vulnerability in several clinical and genetic high-risk populations. However, such specificity is still to be tested in developmental years, where emerging psychopathology is less crystallized and diagnostic boundaries more blurred. Thus, the current study explores the distribution of SD in adolescent help-seekers (age range 14 to 18) and tests the specificity of SD with respect to the severity of their diagnostic staging (Early Onset schizophrenia-spectrum psychosis [EOP], ultra high-risk [UHR] and clinical help-seeking controls [CHSC]). For this purpose, 96 help-seeking adolescents consecutively referred to specialized Child and Adolescent Units for diagnostic evaluation, underwent a comprehensive psychopathological examination including the specific interview for SD (i.e. the Examination of Anomalous Self-Experience, EASE). One-way ANOVA was used to test the diagnostic distribution of SD (EASE score), whereas multinomial logistic regression was used to test the effect of SD on the diagnostic outcome. SD frequency (both in terms of EASE total score and domain sub-scores) was decreasing progressively from EOP to CHSC, with intermediate levels in UHR. The EASE total score increased the risk of belonging to the more severe diagnostic stages (i.e, UHR and EOP vs CHSC as reference class) and allowed the correct reclassification of the 75% of the sample. The results confirm the schizophrenia-spectrum specificity of SD in adolescence, highlighting their potential value for early differential diagnosis and risk stratification.
Archive | 2016
Martina Brandizzi; Nicoletta Girardi; Paolo Fiori Nastro; Mauro Ferrara; Giada Colafrancesco; N. Lo Cascio; Andrea Raballo; Barnaby Nelson; Alice Masillo; Elena Monducci; Riccardo Saba; Claudia Dario
Aims: The first aim was to determine the cost-effectiveness of CBTuhr to prevent first-episode psychosis in ultra-high risk (UHR) at 18 and 48 months. The second aim was to develop an optimized prediction model of a first-episode psychosis. Methods: 196 help-seeking UHR patients participated in the Early Detection Intervention (EDIE) study in the Netherlands. All individuals were treated with routine care (RC) for non-psychotic disorders. The experimental group received add-on CBTuhr to prevent psychosis. Results: The CBTuhr intervention was cost saving at 18 and 48 months follow-up. This was achieved by less hospital admissions and a reduction in other service costs. Societal costs were reduced because more treated patients were employed. Prognostic modelling identified 3 UHR risk classes with 4%, 13% and 70% risk for transition within 18 months. In the highest risk class, transition to psychosis emerged on average ≥ 8 months earlier than in the lowest risk class. Conclusions: Using prognostic modelling and proactive care can accomplish health gain at lower costs.
Rivista Di Psichiatria | 2012
Marco Armando; Riccardo Saba; Elena Monducci; Francesco Papaleo; Claudia Dario; Valentino Righetti; Martina Brandizzi; Paolo Fiori Nastro
Clinical Neuropsychiatry | 2010
Paolo Fiori Nastro; Elena Monducci; Elena Pappagallo; Francesca Fagioli; Riccardo Saba; Valentino Righetti; Claudia Dario; Juliana Fortes Lindau; Marco Armando; Paolo Girardi
Archive | 2016
Paolo Fiori Nastro; Marco Armando; Valentino Righetti; Riccardo Saba; Claudia Dario; Rossella Carnevali; Max Birchwood; Paolo Girardi
Schizophrenia Research | 2014
Marco Armando; Nella Lo Cascio; Elena Monducci; Maria Pontillo; Nicoletta Girardi; Claudia Battaglia; Martina Patanè; Giada Colafrancesco; Claudia Dario; Mauro Ferrara; Ignazio Ardizzone; Paolo Girardi; Stefano Vicari; Paolo Fiori Nastro
Archive | 2014
Nicoletta Girardi; Paolo Fiori Nastro; Marco Armando; Claudia Battaglia; Martina Patanè; Andrea Raballo; Claudia Dario; C Margarita; Riccardo Saba; Elena Monducci; Giada Colafrancesco; N. Lo Cascio