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Dive into the research topics where Leticia García-Álvarez is active.

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Featured researches published by Leticia García-Álvarez.


European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 2015

Psychometric evaluation of the negative syndrome of schizophrenia

María Paz García-Portilla; Leticia García-Álvarez; Pilar A. Saiz; Susana Al-Halabí; María Teresa Bobes-Bascarán; María Teresa Bascarán; José Muñiz; Julio Bobes

In this paper, we reviewed the available instruments for assessing the negative syndrome of schizophrenia, describing their strengths and weaknesses. Current instruments were classified into two categories according to their content validity and assessment approach as first- or second-generation instruments. The BPRS, SANS, the SENS and the PANSS belong to the first generation, while the BNSS, the CAINS and the MAP-SR belong to the second generation. The NSA can be considered a transitional instrument between the two. First-generation instruments have more content validity problems than second-generation instruments do, as they do not accurately reflect the currently accepted negative syndrome (they do not include all negative symptoms and signs or they include symptoms from other dimensions). They also have more problems relative to the use of behavioural referents instead of internal experiences of deficits when assessing symptoms, which may lead to measuring functioning instead of negative symptoms. Further research needs to be done in this area in order to ensure the evaluation of primary negative symptoms and internal experiences involved in negative symptoms rather than external behaviours.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2014

Spanish adaptation and validation of the Brief Negative Symptoms Scale

Anna Mané; Clemente Garcia-Rizo; María Paz García-Portilla; Daniel Bergé; Gisela Sugranyes; Leticia García-Álvarez; Miquel Bernardo; Julio Bobes; Emilio Fernandez-Egea

Negative symptoms prevalent in schizophrenia are associated with poor outcome. Developing new instruments to identify new treatments was highlighted at the NIMH-MATRICS Consensus Development Conference on Negative Symptoms. The new Brief Negative Symptoms scale (BNSS) demonstrated strong psychometric properties, but there is a need for validating it in non-English languages. A multi-center study was conducted to validate the Spanish version of the BNSS (BNSS-Sp) in 20 schizophrenia patients, following the original BNSS validation methodology. We found strong inter-rater, test-retest and internal consistency properties (for the total BNSS-Sp, intraclass correlation coefficient=0.97, Pearsons correlation coefficient r=0.95 (p<0.001), Cronbachs alpha=0.98).


European Psychiatry | 2015

Predictive factors of functional capacity and real-world functioning in patients with schizophrenia

Isabel Menendez-Miranda; M.P. García-Portilla; Leticia García-Álvarez; Manuel Arrojo; P. Sanchez; F. Sarramea; Jesus J. Gomar; M.T. Bobes-Bascaran; Pilar Sierra; Pilar A. Saiz; J. Bobes

PURPOSE This study was performed to identify the predictive factors of functional capacity assessed by the Spanish University of California Performance Skills Assessment (Sp-UPSA) and real-world functioning assessed by the Spanish Personal and Social Performance scale (PSP) in outpatients with schizophrenia. METHODS Naturalistic, 6-month follow-up, multicentre, validation study. Here, we report data on 139 patients with schizophrenia at their baseline visit. ASSESSMENT Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), Clinical Global Impression-Severity (CGI-S), Sp-UPSA and PSP. STATISTICS Pearsons correlation coefficient (r) was used to determine the relationships between variables, and multivariable stepwise linear regression analyses to identify predictive variables of Sp-UPSA and PSP total scores. RESULTS Functional capacity: scores on the PSP and PANSS-GP entered first and second at P<0.0001 and accounted for 21% of variance (R(2)=0.208, model df=2, F=15.724, P<0.0001). Real-world functioning: scores on the CGI-S (B=-5.406), PANSS-N (B=-0.657) and Sp-UPSA (B=0.230) entered first, second and third, and accounted for 51% of variance (model df=3, F=37.741, P<0.0001). CONCLUSION In patients with schizophrenia, functional capacity and real-world functioning are two related but different constructs. Each one predicts the other along with other factors; general psychopathology for functional capacity, and severity of the illness and negative symptoms for real-world functioning. These findings have important clinical implications: (1) both types of functioning should be assessed in patients with schizophrenia and (2) strategies for improving them should be different.


Schizophrenia Research | 2015

The negative syndrome of schizophrenia: Three -underlying components are better than two

María Paz García-Portilla; Leticia García-Álvarez; Anna Mané; Clemente Garcia-Rizo; Gisela Sugranyes; Daniel Bergé; Miguel Bernardo; Emilio Fernandez-Egea; Julio Bobes

AIMS To analyse the underlying structure of the negative syndrome of schizophrenia as it is represented in the Brief Negative Symptom Scale. METHODS Cross-sectional, multicentre study, employing data from 190 evaluations. STATISTICS Exploratory factor analysis using the principal component analysis method. RESULTS The three-component solution explained 77.4% of the total variance. Pearson correlation coefficients between components were: 1-2=-0.494, 1-3=-0.117, and 2-3=0.179. CONCLUSION Our solution favours a three-component structure of the negative syndrome, consisting of: external world (anhedonia and asociality), inner world (avolition and blunted affect), and alogia, with the latter only marginally related to the two former components.


Adicciones | 2017

Uso y abuso de sustancias psicotrópicas e internet, psicopatología e ideación suicida en adolescentes

Matilde Bousoño Serrano; Susana Al-Halabí; Patricia Burón; Marlen Garrido; Eva M. Díaz-Mesa; Gonzalo Galván; Leticia García-Álvarez; Vladimir Carli; Christina W. Hoven; Marco Sarchiapone; Danuta Wasserman; Manuel Bousoño; María Paz García-Portilla; Celso Iglesias; Pilar A. Saiz; Julio Bobes

Substance and Internet use or abuse, psychopathology and suicidal ideation appear to be related. The aim of this study is to investigate the association between use of psychotropic substances, inadequate Internet use, suicidal ideation and other psychopathological symptoms within the adolescent population. The present study was carried out as part of the Saving and Empowering Young Lives in Europe (SEYLE) project, funded by the European Union. The sample is composed of 1026 adolescents aged between 14 and 16 years from 12 state schools in Asturias (530 men and 496 women). This study adds to the possibility of knowing whether the SEYLE data is confirmed in a relatively isolated and recession hit province of Spain. In the present study the following consumption rates were obtained: a) alcohol 11.89% in males and 7.86% in females; b) tobacco: 4.15% and 5.44 % in males and females respectively; c) other drugs: 6.98% in males and 4.44% in females; d) maladaptive or pathological Internet use: 14.53% and 20.77% in males and females respectively. The variables that predict suicide ideation in the logistic regression model were: previous suicide attempts, depression, maladaptive or pathological Internet use, peer problems and alcohol consumption.


Revista de Psiquiatría y Salud Mental | 2016

Biomarcadores sanguíneos diferenciales de las dimensiones psicopatológicas de la esquizofrenia

Leticia García-Álvarez; María Paz García-Portilla; Leticia González-Blanco; Pilar Alejandra Saiz Martínez; Lorena de la Fuente-Tomás; Isabel Menendez-Miranda; Celso Iglesias; Julio Bobes

Symptomatology of schizophrenia is heterogeneous, there is not any pathognomonic symptom. Moreover, the diagnosis is difficult, since it is based on subjective information, instead of markers. The purpose of this study is to provide a review of the current status of blood-based biomarkers of psychopathological dimensions of schizophrenia. Inflammatory, hormonal or metabolic dysfunctions have been identified in patients with schizophrenia and it has attempted to establish biomarkers responsible for these dysfunctions. The identification of these biomarkers could contribute to the diagnosis and treatment of schizophrenia.


European Psychiatry | 2018

Regulation of inflammatory pathways in schizophrenia: A comparative study with bipolar disorder and healthy controls

Leticia García-Álvarez; Javier R. Caso; M.P. García-Portilla; L. de la Fuente-Tomás; Leticia González-Blanco; P.A. Sáiz Martinez; Juan C. Leza; J. Bobes

BACKGROUND Immune-inflammatory processes have been implicated in schizophrenia (SCH), but their specificity is not clear. MAIN AIM To identify potential differential intra-/intercellular biochemical pathways controlling immune-inflammatory response and their oxidative-nitrosative impact on SCH patients, compared with bipolar disorder (BD) patients and healthy controls (HC). METHODS Cross-sectional, naturalistic study of a cohort of SCH patients (n=123) and their controls [BD (n=102) and HC (n=80)]. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS ANCOVA (or Quade test) controlling for age and gender when comparing the three groups, and controlling for age, gender, length of illness, cigarettes per day, and body mass index (BMI) when comparing SCH and BD. RESULTS Pro-inflammatory biomarkers: Expression of COX-1 was statistically higher in SCH and BD than HC (P<0.0001; P<0.0001); NFκB and PGE2 were statistically higher in SCH compared with BD (P=0.001; P<0.0001) and HC (P=0.003; P<0.0001); NLRP3 was higher in BD than HC (P=0.005); and CPR showed a gradient among the three groups. Anti-inflammatory biomarkers: BD patients had lower PPARγ and higher 15d-PGJ2 levels than SCH (P=0.005; P=0.008) and HC (P=0.001; P=0.001). Differences between SCH and BD: previous markers of SCH (NFκB and PGE2) and BD (PPARγ and 15d-PGJ2) remained statistically significant and, interestingly, iNOS and COX-2 (pro-inflammatory biomarkers) levels were statistically higher in SCH than BD (P=0.019; P=0.040). CONCLUSIONS This study suggests a specific immune-inflammatory biomarker pattern for established SCH (NFκB, PGE2, iNOS, and COX-2) that differentiates it from BD and HC. In future, their pharmacological modulation may constitute a promising therapeutic target.


Schizophrenia Research | 2016

It is feasible and effective to help patients with severe mental disorders to quit smoking: An ecological pragmatic clinical trial with transdermal nicotine patches and varenicline

María Paz García-Portilla; Leticia García-Álvarez; Fernando Sarramea; Gonzalo Galván; Eva M. Díaz-Mesa; Teresa Bobes-Bascarán; Susana Al-Halabí; Edorta Elizagarate; Celso Iglesias; Pilar Alejandra Saiz Martínez; Julio Bobes

Despite the proven association between smoking and high rates of medical morbidity and reduced life expectancy in people with severe mental disorders (SMD), their smoking rates do not decline as they do in the general population. We carried out a non-randomized, open-label, prospective, 9-month follow-up multicentre trial to investigate the clinical efficacy, safety and tolerability of a 12-week smoking cessation programme for patients with SMD in the community under real-world clinical conditions. Eighty-two adult outpatients with schizophrenic/bipolar disorder smoking ≥15 cigarettes/day were assigned by shared decision between doctors and patients to transdermal nicotine patches (TNP) [36(46.2%)] or varenicline [39(50%)]. Short-term efficacy: The 12-week 7-day smoking cessation (self-reported cigarettes/day=0 and breath carbon monoxide levels≤9ppm) prevalence was 49.3%, without statistically significant differences between medications (TNP 50.0% vs varenicline 48.6%, chi-square=0.015, p=1.000). Long-term efficacy: At weeks 24 and 36, 41.3 and 37.3% of patients were abstinent, with no statistically significant differences between treatments. Safety and Tolerability: no patients made suicide attempts/required hospitalization. There was no worsening on the psychometric scales. Patients significantly increased weight [TNP 1.1(2.8) vs varenicline 2.5(3.3), p=0.063], without significant changes in vital signs/laboratory results, except significant decreases in alkaline phosphatase and low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels in the varenicline group. Patients under varenicline more frequently presented nausea/vomiting (p<0.0005), patients under TNP experienced skin reactions more frequently (p=0.002). Three patients under varenicline had elevated liver enzymes. In conclusion, we have demonstrated that in real-world clinical settings it is feasible and safe to help patients with stabilized severe mental disorders to quit smoking.


Revista de Psiquiatría y Salud Mental | 2014

Protocolo de estudio de un programa para la prevención de la recurrencia del comportamiento suicida basado en el manejo de casos (PSyMAC)

Pilar A. Saiz; Julia Rodríguez-Revuelta; Leticia González-Blanco; Patricia Burón; Susana Al-Halabí; Marlen Garrido; Leticia García-Álvarez; Paz García-Portilla; Julio Bobes

INTRODUCTION Prevention of suicidal behaviour is a public health priority in the European Union. A previous suicide attempt is the best risk predictor for future attempts, as well as completed suicides. The primary aim of this article is to describe a controlled study protocol designed for prevention of recurrent suicidal behaviour that proposes case management, and includes a psychoeducation program, as compared with the standard intervention (PSyMAC). METHODS Patients admitted from January 2011 to June 2013 to the emergency room of the Hospital Universitario Central de Asturias were evaluated using a protocol including sociodemographic, psychiatric, and psychosocial assessment. Patients were randomly assigned to either a group receiving continuous case management including participation in a psychoeducation program (experimental group), or a control group receiving standard care. The primary objective is to examine whether or not the period of time until recurrent suicidal behaviour in the experimental group is significantly different from that of the control group. CONCLUSION PSyMAC proposes low cost and easily adaptable interventions to the usual clinical setting that can help to compensate the shortcoming of specific action protocols and suicidal behaviour prevention programs in our country. The evaluation of PSyMAC results will determine their real effectivity as a case-magament program to reduce suicidal risk.


Revista de Psiquiatría y Salud Mental | 2016

Validación de la versión en español de la Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (Escala Columbia para Evaluar el Riesgo de Suicidio)

Susana Al-Halabí; Pilar A. Saiz; Patricia Burón; Marlen Garrido; Antoni Benabarre; Esther Jiménez; Jorge A. Cervilla; María Isabel Navarrete; Eva M. Díaz-Mesa; Leticia García-Álvarez; José Muñiz; Kelly Posner; Maria A. Oquendo; María Paz García-Portilla; Julio Bobes

OBJECTIVE To examine the psychometric properties of a Spanish version of the C-SSRS (Sp-CSSRS). METHOD Data are from a naturalistic, cross-sectional, multicentre, validation study, including 467 psychiatric outpatients, 242 of whom had a history of suicide attempt. The study measures were: C-SSRS; the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS); the Beck Suicide Intent Scale; the Medical Damage Scale. RESULTS Construct validity: Pearson coefficient between the C-SSRS severity (C-Sev) and intensity (C-Int) of ideation subscale scores was 0.44 (P<.000) for the total sample. Likewise, Pearson coefficient between C-Sev score and HDRS item 3 was 0.56 (P<.000). For the sub-sample of patients with suicide attempt, significant Pearson correlations were found between the C-Sev and the Beck Suicide Intent Scale scores (r=0.22; P=.001). Discriminant validity: Significant differences were found in C-Sev and C-Int scores between patients with and without suicide attempt (P<.000). The C-Sev score discriminated between patients based on HDRS item 3 (P<.009). Sensitivity to change: Linear regression showed that a one-unit decrease in HDRS item 3 corresponded to a decrease of 5.08 units in the C-Sev score (P=.141). A one-unit change in HDRS item 3 corresponded to a change of 13.51 on the C-Int assessments (P=.007). Cronbachs alpha was 0.53 for C-Int. The principal component analysis identified 2 components that explain 55.66% of the total variance (C-Int). CONCLUSION The data support that the Sp-C-SSRS is a reliable and valid instrument for assessing suicidal ideation and behaviour in daily clinical practice and research settings.

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J. Bobes

University of Oviedo

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