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Moccia, L.;  Kotzalidis, G.D.;  Bartolucci, G.;  Ruggiero, S.;  Monti, L.;  Biscosi, M.;  Terenzi, B.;  Ferrara, O.M.;  Mazza, M.;  Nicola, M.D.; et al. COVID-19 and New-Onset Psychosis. Encyclopedia. Available online: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/40573 (accessed on 17 November 2024).
Moccia L,  Kotzalidis GD,  Bartolucci G,  Ruggiero S,  Monti L,  Biscosi M, et al. COVID-19 and New-Onset Psychosis. Encyclopedia. Available at: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/40573. Accessed November 17, 2024.
Moccia, Lorenzo, Georgios D. Kotzalidis, Giovanni Bartolucci, Sara Ruggiero, Laura Monti, Marco Biscosi, Beatrice Terenzi, Ottavia M. Ferrara, Marianna Mazza, Marco Di Nicola, et al. "COVID-19 and New-Onset Psychosis" Encyclopedia, https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/40573 (accessed November 17, 2024).
Moccia, L.,  Kotzalidis, G.D.,  Bartolucci, G.,  Ruggiero, S.,  Monti, L.,  Biscosi, M.,  Terenzi, B.,  Ferrara, O.M.,  Mazza, M.,  Nicola, M.D.,  Janiri, D.,  Simonetti, A.,  Caroppo, E.,  Janiri, L., & Sani, G. (2023, January 30). COVID-19 and New-Onset Psychosis. In Encyclopedia. https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/40573
Moccia, Lorenzo, et al. "COVID-19 and New-Onset Psychosis." Encyclopedia. Web. 30 January, 2023.
COVID-19 and New-Onset Psychosis
Edit

Psychosis is a multifactorial condition that typically involves delusions, hallucinations, and disorganized thought, speech or behavior. The observation of an association between infectious epidemics and acute psychosis dates back to the last century. Though infrequently, cases of new-onset psychosis have been observed in patients with COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic, leading to concerns that SARS-CoV-2 infection may be associated with an increased risk for the development of psychosis. 

schizophrenia bipolar disorder inflammation delirium side effects viral infection

1. Viral Infections and Risk for Psychosis

The documented connection between viral epidemics and psychosis can be traced back to more than a century ago, when several cases of acute post-influenzal psychosis were reported during the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic. In a pioneering writing published in 1919, Karl Menninger described a cohort of patients presenting symptoms of “dementia praecox” and other disturbances, including delusions, confusion, and psychomotor agitation; patients were admitted to the Boston Psychopathic Hospital from 15 September 1918, through 15 December 1918, at the peak of Spanish flu pandemic in New England [1]. Menninger made a considerable effort to distinguish these patients from those who presented with psychotic symptoms as part of a more generalized impairment of consciousness or delirium. In 1926, Menninger published a follow-up study of 50 patients diagnosed with dementia praecox after the 1918 influenza outbreak [2]. He was astonished to recognize that the majority of the cases previously diagnosed as dementia praecox had completely recovered at follow-up, an observation that was in contrast with the Kraepelinian notion that dementia praecox patients, later termed schizophrenia (SCZ), were expected to experience a chronic and deteriorating clinical course.
During other viral flu-like pandemics, including the 2003 SARS-CoV-1, the 2009 H1N1, and the 2012 MERS outbreaks, data suggesting an increased incidence of psychosis were obtained [3]. A review of the literature, conducted by Brown et al. [4], estimated that around 0.9–4% of individuals exposed to H1N1 influenza, Ebola, SARS, MERS, or COVID-19 developed psychosis or psychotic symptoms, a significantly higher percentage than the median incidence of 0.015% observed among the general population. Similar observations have been made in the context of the exposure to several other viral agents, including herpes simplex virus, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), Epstein–Barr virus, and cytomegalovirus [5][6].

2. COVID-19 and New-Onset Psychosis

Despite the fact that the incidence of psychosis appears to increase in the general population following historical viral pandemics, to date there is still relatively limited evidence linking psychosis and SARS-CoV-2. Reports of new-onset psychosis in individuals presenting with either current COVID-19 or previous SARS-CoV-2 infection have been described, but have been beset with several issues, including inadequate sample size and lack of attention to potential confounding factors.
A retrospective cohort study investigating neurological and psychiatric sequelae among 236,379 patients with COVID-19 over a 6-month follow-up reported an estimated incidence of 0.42% for a first diagnosis of psychotic disorder as well as a significantly increased hazard risk (HR) of presenting psychotic symptoms compared to patients with influenza (HR 2.27) or other respiratory tract infections (HR 1.49) in the same period [7]. However, caution should be made when interpreting these results in the light of possible confounders, especially among patient with COVID-19 who required hospitalization, including misdiagnosis of delirium [8][9], undocumented previous mental illness, and iatrogenic factors [4]. To tackle this issue, Chaudhary et al. [10] conducted a systematic review targeting case reports and case series that evaluated the occurrence of new-onset psychosis or exacerbation of clinically stable psychosis among patients with COVID-19. Studies involving patients with delirium, encephalitis, or steroid use, as well as other medical conditions that could have contributed to psychotic symptoms, were excluded. Fifty-seven unique cases were included of whom 66.7% had no previous psychiatric history. Most patients were above the typical age of onset for psychosis with a mean age at onset of 43.4 years for men and 40.3 years for women. The majority of patients had mild COVID-19-related respiratory illnesses, neurological, or psychotic symptoms, with around 26.3% of patients presenting with moderate-to-severe COVID-19-related disease and complications. Delusions and hallucinations were the most common psychotic symptoms. Most patients responded to low-to-moderate antipsychotic doses with a complete recovery observed in about 72% of the sample.

3. Potential Etiological Pathways Linking SARS-CoV-2 Infection and New-Onset Psychosis

The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) represents a severe multiorgan pathology that, in addition to cardio-respiratory manifestations, may affect the function of the central nervous system (CNS) [11]. SARS-CoV-2, similarly to other respiratory viruses, may damage the CNS via both direct invasion and immune activation. SARS-CoV-2 infects the epithelial cells of lungs and gastrointestinal tract as primary targets. It gains access into cells following binding to plasmalemmal ACE2 enzyme with subsequent endocytic internalization [12]. The endocytosis of the ACE2–virus complex leads to a depletion of the plasmalemmal pool of ACE2 with a secondary reduction in conversion of angiotensin II to angiotensin 1–7; the latter peptide possesses marked anti-inflammatory properties, and its reduction significantly contributes to lung failure and to the massive occurrence of pulmonary fibrosis observed among patients with COVID-19. The ACE2 enzyme is also significantly expressed in other tissues, including heart, kidney, endothelium, and the CNS [13][14]. As a consequence, SARS-CoV-2 can reach multiple organs. The virus can enter the brain through several routes. It can migrate through the axons of many nerves, including the olfactory, trigeminal, and vagus nerves. SARS-CoV-2 can also access the CNS by infecting endothelial cells of cerebral vessels or by invading perivascular spaces of the glymphatic system [15][16]. At the CNS level, the ACE2 expressing neural cells include dopaminergic and serotonergic nuclei, glutamatergic neurons, and the lateral ventricles. Furthermore, in the substantia nigra, the percentage expression of ACE2 is comparable to that of the lungs [17]. All these brain regions are neurochemically and structurally involved in SCZ and while damage to these CNS sites may not necessarily reflect causation; their relative vulnerability to SARS-CoV-2 infection may play a role in shaping future psychopathology [18]. Localization matters in this respect, inasmuch penetration of the virus in circumventricular organs may confer vulnerability to many neuropsychiatric outcomes [19]. In addition, ACE2 exhibits significant genetic co-expression with dopamine decarboxylase, an enzyme involved in dopamine and serotonin synthetic pathways [20]. Accordingly, it has been suggested that SARS-CoV-2-induced downregulation of ACE2 expression may be paralleled by alterations of both dopamine and serotonin synthesis [21], possibly leading to psychiatric sequelae.
COVID-19-related CNS dysfunction may also result from systemic inflammation, often known as systemic inflammatory response syndrome or “cytokine storm”. In the context of COVID-19, the massive increase in circulating pro-inflammatory factors may deeply affect the blood–brain barrier (BBB) integrity, allowing inflammatory cells and molecules to access the CNS. Neuroinflammation perturbs brain homeostasis, alters neural networks, and eventually induces neuronal deaths [22]. Both the infection itself and hypoxia stimulate cytokine release, which can increase BBB permeability. Cerebral hypoxia may activate key inflammatory transcription factors, resulting in an overproduction of pro-inflammatory messengers as well as in an excessive glial reactivity which further contributes to the loss of synapses and neurons [23]. In addition, circulating pro-inflammatory factors may enhance hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis activity, which contributes to sustaining and promoting neuroinflammation due to glucocorticoid increase [24]. Furthermore, though SARS-CoV-2 is rarely found in the cerebrospinal fluid [25], viral-induced immune reactions and autoimmunity (during or after the acute infection) may provide another route by which SARS-CoV-2 can impact CNS function [22].
Systemic inflammation has long been recognized as a potential immune-related trigger in the pathogenesis of neuropsychiatric manifestations associated with viral infections [26]. According to a vulnerability–stress–inflammation hypothesis of psychotic illness, stress during both pre- and postnatal neurodevelopment may prime the individual for an abnormal response to future stressors, typically during adolescence or early adulthood [18]. Biological stressors, such as viral infections and immune activation, may affect the HPA axis, whose dysregulation contributes to some abnormalities observed in SCZ, including increased baseline cortisol and reduced hippocampal volume, as well as disturbances in dopamine and glutamate transmission [27][28]. In addition, microglia may release pro-inflammatory factors in response to stress or infection and, similarly to the HPA axis, can be primed by neurodevelopmental stressors [29]. Notably, overactivation of microglial cells may be involved in the pathophysiology of SCZ, leading to abnormal synaptic pruning and to altered neurotransmitter metabolism secondary to augmented cytokine release [30]. Patients with COVID-19 and associated psychotic symptoms may show an increased level of pro-inflammatory cytokines, including IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1β, CRP, ferritin, LDH, and D-Dimer [31][32][33][34]. Likewise, an upregulation of pro-inflammatory factors seems to characterize drug-naïve patients in their first episode of psychosis [35]. Furthermore, there is evidence for a longitudinal association between increased C-reactive protein (CRP) serum levels in adolescence and diagnosis of psychotic spectrum disorders in adulthood [36].
Autoimmunity may also be implicated in the pathogenesis of psychotic illness [37]. Accordingly, there is evidence for both shared genetic risk factors between several immune diseases and SCZ [38], and for an increased risk of developing psychotic spectrum disorders in individuals with autoimmune illnesses and severe infections that required admission to hospital [39]. In the context of SARS-CoV-2 infection, several cases of patients with COVID-19 and associated CNS autoimmune demyelinating disease have been reported [40]. Notably, several demyelinating disorders are related to the presence of psychotic symptoms and, according to evidence, reduced CNS white matter integrity secondary to demyelination may play a role in the pathophysiology of SCZ [41].

4. COVID-19 and New-Onset Psychosis: Possible Confounders

Causality is a condition required to determine the association between COVID-19 and new-onset psychosis [42]. This issue may prove to be challenging for both clinicians and researchers. Considering the summary of available evidence, the assumption of several studies targeting the association between COVID-19 and new-onset psychosis does not meet the Bradford Hill criteria of strength, consistency, specificity, or temporality, required for a confident determination of causality [43]. However, in the light of existing knowledge, there is biological plausibility supporting this association. Several confounders need to be addressed when examining any case for neuropsychiatric sequelæ in patients with COVID-19, including psychosocial and iatrogenic factors [42]. The association between psychosis and a range of psychosocial factors, including stressful life events, has been extensively explored, suggesting that psychosocial stressors are an important risk factor for both the onset and the exacerbation of symptoms [44][45]. On the one hand, individuals with COVID-19 suffered various stressors during the pandemic, including stress related to the quarantine, issues related to the treatment environment, and limited information about COVID-19 [46][47]. On the other hand, social stress can affect brain function, and in particular the molecular targets involved in psychosis, including dopaminergic signaling [48].
As regards iatrogenic factors, the neuropsychiatric side effects of treatments should be considered. Several drugs have been adopted empirically, especially in the first phase of the pandemic, in the treatment of COVID-19, including antibiotics, antivirals, antimalarials, and corticosteroids [49]. Even though antibiotics are not indicated as a treatment for SARS-CoV-2 infection, the four most frequently prescribed therapeutic classes in the first wave of the pandemic were azithromycin (50.7%), doxycycline (13.0%), amoxicillin (9.4%), and levofloxacin (6.7%) [50]. Notably, there is evidence suggesting a direct relationship between acute psychosis and antibiotic exposure, with macrolides and fluoroquinolones presenting the greatest increased odds of psychosis [51]. Similarly, for the antimalarial hydroxychloroquine, which was one of the most promising therapies tested in patients with COVID-19 at the beginning of the pandemic, a documented association with neuropsychiatric adverse effect, including acute psychosis, is well established [52][53][54][55]. Hydroxychloroquine typically crosses the blood–brain barrier to concentrate within the CNS [56][57][58][59]. Several mechanisms have been proposed as contributing to the neuropsychiatric side effects of chloroquine, including increased dopaminergic activity, NMDA excitotoxicity, GABAergic inhibition, and lysosomal dysfunction [60]. Transient, acute psychosis is a well-documented, long-known [61][62] adverse effect of corticosteroids that usually occurs with systemic steroid treatment [63][64][65][66], but it may also occur with topical application [67] and be long-lasting [68]. Findings coming from the previous SARS outbreak highlighted that patients on higher doses of corticosteroids had an increased risk of psychosis [4].

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