The moderating role of lifetime social engagement on the relationship between C-reactive protein and negative symptoms among young adults at clinical high risk for psychosis
Goldsmith D, Yuan Q, Addington J, Bearden C, Cadenhead K, Cannon T, Carrión R, Keshavan M, Mathalon D, Perkins D, Stone W, Tsuang M, Woods S, Walker E, Ku B. The moderating role of lifetime social engagement on the relationship between C-reactive protein and negative symptoms among young adults at clinical high risk for psychosis. Brain Behavior And Immunity 2025, 129: 890-897. PMID: 40730261, PMCID: PMC12360851, DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2025.07.023.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsScale of Psychosis-risk SymptomsNegative symptomsCHR-P groupClinical high riskCHR-PC-reactive proteinAssociated with negative symptomsNorth American Prodrome Longitudinal StudySocial engagementDevelopment of negative symptomsPsychosis-risk symptomsSimple slope analysesCHR-P individualsYoung adultsHealthy controlsCHR-P subjectsLevels of social engagementSocial engagement levelsEarly developmental periodDepressive symptomsSimple slopesHC subjectsPsychosisHigh riskC-reactive protein values
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