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Dive into the research topics where Maria Conceição do Rosário is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Conceição do Rosário.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2008

Meta-Analysis of the Symptom Structure of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Michael H. Bloch; Angeli Landeros-Weisenberger; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Christopher Pittenger; James F. Leckman

OBJECTIVE OCD is a clinically heterogeneous condition. This heterogeneity has the potential to reduce power in genetic, neuroimaging, and clinical trials. Despite a mounting number of studies, there remains debate regarding the exact factor structure of OCD symptoms. The authors conducted a meta-analysis to determine the factor structure of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale Symptom Checklist. METHOD Studies were included if they involved subjects with OCD and included an exploratory factor analysis of the 13 Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale Symptom Checklist categories or the items therein. A varimax-rotation was conducted in SAS 9.1 using the PROC FACTOR CORR to extract factors from sample-size weighted co-occurrence matrices. Stratified meta-analysis was conducted to determine the factor structure of OCD in studies involving children and adults separately. RESULTS Twenty-one studies involving 5,124 participants were included. The four factors generated were 1) symmetry: symmetry obsessions and repeating, ordering, and counting compulsions; 2) forbidden thoughts: aggression, sexual, religious, and somatic obsessions and checking compulsions, 3) cleaning: cleaning and contamination, and 4) hoarding: hoarding obsessions and compulsions. Factor analysis of studies including adults yielded an identical factor structure compared to the overall meta-analysis. Factor analysis of child-only studies differed in that checking loaded highest on the symmetry factor and somatic obsessions, on the cleaning factor. CONCLUSIONS A four-factor structure explained a large proportion of the heterogeneity in the clinical symptoms of OCD. Further item-level factor analyses are needed to determine the appropriate placement of miscellaneous somatic and checking OCD symptoms.


Biological Psychiatry | 2007

Principal Components Analysis of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Symptoms in Children and Adolescents

S. Evelyn Stewart; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Timothy A. Brown; Alice S. Carter; James F. Leckman; Denis G. Sukhodolsky; Liliya Katsovitch; Robert A. King; Daniel A. Geller; David L. Pauls

BACKGROUND Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) has a broadly diverse clinical expression that may reflect etiologic heterogeneity. Several adult studies have identified consistent symptom dimensions of OCD. The purpose of this study was to conduct an exploratory principal components analysis of obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptoms in children and adolescents with OCD to identify improved phenotypes for future studies. METHODS This study examined lifetime occurrence of OC symptoms included in the 13 symptom categories of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) and the Childrens Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (CY-BOCS). Principal components analysis with promax rotation was performed on 231 children and adolescents with OCD and compared with results of similar adult studies. RESULTS A four-factor solution emerged explaining 59.8% of symptom variance characterized by 1) symmetry/ordering/repeating/checking; 2) contamination/cleaning/aggressive/somatic; 3) hoarding; and 4) sexual/religious symptoms. All factors included core symptoms that have been consistently observed in adult studies of OCD. CONCLUSIONS In children and adolescents, OCD is a multidimensional disorder. Symptom dimensions are predominantly congruent with those described in similar studies of adults with OCD, suggesting fairly consistent covariation of OCD symptoms through the developmental course. Future work is required to understand changes in specific symptom dimensions observed across the life span.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2008

Four-factor structure of obsessive-compulsive disorder symptoms in children, adolescents, and adults.

S. Evelyn Stewart; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Lee Baer; Alice S. Carter; Timothy A. Brown; Jeremiah M. Scharf; Cornelia Illmann; James F. Leckman; Denis G. Sukhodolsky; Lilya Katsovich; Steven A. Rasmussen; Wayne K. Goodman; Richard Delorme; Marion Leboyer; Nadia Chabane; Michael A. Jenike; Daniel A. Geller; David L. Pauls

OBJECTIVE To determine whether the four-factor category-based obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) symptom structure from a previous confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) may be appropriately used in child, adolescent, and adult groups. Symptom dimensions are increasingly used as quantitative traits in genetic, neuroimaging, and treatment studies of OCD across all ages. Identification of a category-based OCD symptom dimension structure that is validated for use across child, adolescent, and adult age groups is necessary to guide ongoing translational research. METHOD Four OCD samples comprising 356 individuals were divided into child, adolescent, and adult groups. The fit of the only CFA-defined four-factor model was compared across these independent age group samples. Multiple-group CFA using maximum likelihood estimation assessed adequacy of fit comparing unconstrained and measurement weight-constrained models. The fit of previous exploratory factor analysis-defined three- and five-factor models on adults was also examined using CFA. RESULTS A four-factor solution provided adequate but imperfect fit across age groups, with comparable indices to the only previous OCD CFA: factor 1 (aggressive/sexual/religious/somatic/checking); factor 2 (symmetry/ordering/counting/repeating); factor 3 (contamination/cleaning), and factor 4 (hoarding). Models in which factor loadings were constrained and unconstrained across the three age groups yielded comparable model fit. Factors were highly correlated and were not mutually exclusive. The four-factor solution provided an improved fit to both three- and five-factor solutions using CFA across the three age groups. CONCLUSIONS A four-factor, CFA-defined, category-based model of OCD symptom dimensions is adequate for use in children, adolescents, and adult age groups. The factor structure of this multiple age group sample has limitations and is imperfect, but current findings support the comparability of the defined latent OCD dimensions across age groups. Further work is needed to optimize a comprehensive symptom dimension model reflecting clinical heterogeneity for use in emergent translational studies.


British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2008

Assessment of the pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of maraviroc, a novel CCR5 antagonist, in healthy volunteers

Samantha Abel; Elna van der Ryst; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Caroline E. Ridgway; Christine Medhurst; Richard J. Taylor‐Worth; Gary J. Muirhead

AIMS To evaluate the pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of single and multiple oral doses of maraviroc in healthy volunteers. METHODS Three double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-escalation studies with either single or multiple doses of maraviroc were conducted in healthy volunteers. Plasma and urine samples were collected to investigate the pharmacokinetics of maraviroc and evaluate any changes with respect to dose and duration/frequency of dosing. Safety and toleration of maraviroc were also assessed. RESULTS Maraviroc is rapidly absorbed following oral administration, and plasma T(max) is achieved within 0.5-4.0 h postdose. Steady-state plasma concentrations are achieved after 7 consecutive days of dosing. Although the pharmacokinetics of maraviroc is nonproportional over the dose range studied (3-1200 mg), the degree of nonproportionality is small at clinically relevant doses. Renal clearance is approximately 10-12 l h(-1) and appears unaffected by increasing maraviroc doses. Maraviroc does not significantly modulate the activity of CYP2D6 or CYP3A4 at clinically relevant doses. There were no serious adverse events in any of these studies, and doses up to 900 mg were generally well tolerated, with postural hypotension being the dose-limiting event. There was no pattern or dose relationship observed with maraviroc with regard to laboratory abnormalities, including hepatic transaminases. No clinically significant increases in QTc were noted at clinically relevant doses. CONCLUSIONS Maraviroc is absorbed into the systemic circulation and reaches steady state by day 7 of multiple dosing. It does not significantly influence the activity of major drug-metabolizing enzymes and is well tolerated at clinically relevant doses, with most adverse events being mild or moderate.


The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2011

Suicidality in obsessive-compulsive disorder: prevalence and relation to symptom dimensions and comorbid conditions.

Albina Rodrigues Torres; Ana Teresa de Abreu Ramos-Cerqueira; Ygor Arzeno Ferrão; Leonardo F. Fontenelle; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Euripedes C. Miguel

BACKGROUND Suicidal thoughts and behaviors, also known as suicidality, are a fairly neglected area of study in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). OBJECTIVE To evaluate several aspects of suicidality in a large multicenter sample of OCD patients and to compare those with and without suicidal ideation, plans, and attempts according to demographic and clinical variables, including symptom dimensions and comorbid disorders. METHOD This cross-sectional study included 582 outpatients with primary OCD (DSM-IV) recruited between August 2003 and March 2008 from 7 centers of the Brazilian Research Consortium on Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders. The following assessment instruments were used: the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale, the Dimensional Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale, the Beck Depression and Anxiety Inventories, the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders, and 6 specific questions to investigate suicidality. After univariate analyses, logistic regression analyses were performed to adjust the associations between the dependent and explanatory variables for possible confounders. RESULTS Thirty-six percent of the patients reported lifetime suicidal thoughts, 20% had made suicidal plans, 11% had already attempted suicide, and 10% presented current suicidal thoughts. In the logistic regression, only lifetime major depressive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) remained independently associated with all aspects of suicidal behaviors. The sexual/religious dimension and comorbid substance use disorders remained associated with suicidal thoughts and plans, while impulse-control disorders were associated with current suicidal thoughts and with suicide plans and attempts. CONCLUSIONS The risk of suicidal behaviors must be carefully investigated in OCD patients, particularly those with symptoms of the sexual/religious dimension and comorbid major depressive disorder, PTSD, substance use disorders, and impulse-control disorders.


International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research | 2015

High risk cohort study for psychiatric disorders in childhood: rationale, design, methods and preliminary results.

Giovanni Abrahão Salum; Ary Gadelha; Pedro Mario Pan; Tais S. Moriyama; Ana Soledade Graeff-Martins; Ana Carina Tamanaha; Pedro Gomes de Alvarenga; Fernanda Valle Krieger; Bacy Fleitlich-Bilyk; Andrea Parolin Jackowski; João Ricardo Sato; Elisa Brietzke; Guilherme V. Polanczyk; Helena Brentani; Jair de Jesus Mari; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Gisele Gus Manfro; Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan; Marcos Tomanik Mercadante; Euripedes C. Miguel; Luis A. Rohde

The objective of this study is to present the rationale, methods, design and preliminary results from the High Risk Cohort Study for the Development of Childhood Psychiatric Disorders. We describe the sample selection and the components of each phases of the study, its instruments, tasks and procedures. Preliminary results are limited to the baseline phase and encompass: (i) the efficacy of the oversampling procedure used to increase the frequency of both child and family psychopathology; (ii) interrater reliability and (iii) the role of differential participation rate. A total of 9937 children from 57 schools participated in the screening procedures. From those 2512 (random =958; high risk =1554) were further evaluated with diagnostic instruments. The prevalence of any child mental disorder in the random strata and high‐risk strata was 19.9% and 29.7%. The oversampling procedure was successful in selecting a sample with higher family rates of any mental disorders according to diagnostic instruments. Interrater reliability (kappa) for the main diagnostic instrument range from 0.72 (hyperkinetic disorders) to 0.84 (emotional disorders). The screening instrument was successful in selecting a sub‐sample with “high risk” for developing mental disorders. This study may help advance the field of child psychiatry and ultimately provide useful clinical information. Copyright


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2005

A pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic disease model to predict in vivo antiviral activity of maraviroc.

Maria Conceição do Rosário; Philippe Jacqmin; Pat Dorr; Elna van der Ryst; Chris Hitchcock

The viral dynamics of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection has been widely studied and expressed as mathematic equations. For most of the current registered antiretroviral drugs, the pharmacokinetics is well characterized and some relationships with the viral load‐time profiles in plasma from HIV patients have been established. The integration of these models in a pharmacokinetic (PK)–pharmacodynamic (PD)–disease model can help toward a better understanding of the complexity of the interactions, as well as in the identification and clarification of the current model assumptions.


Cns Spectrums | 2006

What is the Optimal Way to Subdivide Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder?

Maria Alice de Mathis; Juliana Belo Diniz; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Albina Rodrigues Torres; Marcelo Q. Hoexter; Gregor Hasler; Euripedes C. Miguel

The clinical presentation of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) varies not only across patients but over the course of the disorder. This diversity indicates that OCD is a heterogeneous disorder, which may have an important impact on psychopathological, longitudinal, genetic, and treatment research. To better understand OCD heterogeneity, more homogeneous phenotypic descriptions are necessary to delimiting clinically meaningful subgroups of patients. Besides phenotypic descriptions, another method of delimiting OCD patient subgroups includes the search for endophenotypes (extended phenotypes) based on neurophysiological, immunological, genetic, neuropsychological, or neuroanatomic (neuroimaging) paradigms. This article will describe some strategies that deal with OCD heterogeneity, including the identification of more homogeneous phenotypical categories, an improved understanding of obsessive-compulsive symptom dimensions and how to use them as quantitative traits, and broadening the diagnostic boundaries of OCD to include other related conditions. The relevance and limitations of each approach are also discussed. Since the etiological mechanisms associated with the expressions of OCD are unknown, there is probably not one but several heuristic strategies to search for more homogeneous OCD subgroup, that combined may provide the most fruitful results.


Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2012

Clinical features of obsessive-compulsive disorder with hoarding symptoms: A multicenter study

Albina Rodrigues Torres; Leonardo F. Fontenelle; Ygor Arzeno Ferrão; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Ricardo Cezar Torresan; Euripedes C. Miguel; Roseli Gedanke Shavitt

BACKGROUND Factor analyses indicate that hoarding symptoms constitute a distinctive dimension of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), usually associated with higher severity and limited insight. The aim was to compare demographic and clinical features of OCD patients with and without hoarding symptoms. METHOD A cross sectional study was conducted with 1001 DSM-IV OCD patients from the Brazilian Research Consortium of Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders (CTOC), using several instruments. The presence and severity of hoarding symptoms were determined using the Dimensional Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale. Statistical univariate analyses comparing factors possibly associated with hoarding symptoms were conducted, followed by logistic regression to adjust the results for possible confounders. RESULTS Approximately half of the sample (52.7%, n = 528) presented hoarding symptoms, but only four patients presented solely the hoarding dimension. Hoarding was the least severe dimension in the total sample (mean score: 3.89). The most common lifetime hoarding symptom was the obsessive thought of needing to collect and keep things for the future (44.0%, n = 440). After logistic regression, the following variables remained independently associated with hoarding symptoms: being older, living alone, earlier age of symptoms onset, insidious onset of obsessions, higher anxiety scores, poorer insight and higher frequency of the symmetry-ordering symptom dimension. Concerning comorbidities, major depressive, posttraumatic stress and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorders, compulsive buying and tic disorders remained associated with the hoarding dimension. CONCLUSION OCD hoarding patients are more likely to present certain clinical features, but further studies are needed to determine whether OCD patients with hoarding symptoms constitute an etiologically discrete subgroup.


European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2013

Trajectory in obsessive-compulsive disorder comorbidities.

Maria Alice de Mathis; Juliana Belo Diniz; Ana Gabriela Hounie; Roseli Gedanke Shavitt; Victor Fossaluza; Ygor Arzeno Ferrão; James F. Leckman; Carlos de B. Pereira; Maria Conceição do Rosário; Euripedes C. Miguel

The main goal of this study is to contribute to the understanding of the trajectory of comorbid disorders associated with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) according to the first manifested psychiatric disorder and its impact in the clinical course of OCD and subsequent psychiatric comorbidities. One thousand and one OCD patients were evaluated at a single time point. Standardized instruments were used to determine the current and lifetime psychiatric diagnoses (Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I and for impulse-control disorders) as well as to establish current obsessive-compulsive, depressive and anxiety symptom severity (Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale; Dimensional Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale, Beck Depression and Anxiety Inventories and the OCD Natural History Questionnaire). To analyze the distribution of comorbidities according to age at onset Bayesian approach was used. Five hundred eight patients had the first OC symptom onset till the age of 10 years old. The first comorbidity to appear in the majority of the sample was separation anxiety disorder (17.5%, n=175), followed by ADHD (5.0%, n=50) and tic disorders (4.4%, n=44). OCD patients that presented with separation anxiety disorder as first diagnosis had higher lifetime frequency of post-traumatic stress disorder (p=0.003), higher scores in the Sexual/Religious dimension (p=0.04), Beck Anxiety (p<0.001) and Depression (p=0.005) Inventories. OCD patients that initially presented with ADHD had higher lifetime frequencies of substance abuse and dependence (p<0.001) and worsening OCD course (p=0.03). OCD patients that presented with tic disorders as first diagnosis had higher lifetime frequencies of OC spectrum disorders (p=0.03). OCD is a heterogeneous disorder and that the presence of specific comorbid diagnoses that predate the onset of OCD may influence its clinical presentation and course over the lifetime.

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Leonardo F. Fontenelle

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Gisele Gus Manfro

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Pedro Mario Pan

Federal University of São Paulo

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Rodrigo Affonseca Bressan

Federal University of São Paulo

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