TABLE 1.
Schizophrenia |
Controls |
|||||||
n | mean (SD) | n | mean (SD) | t1 | df | p | ||
Age (years) | 393 | 31.4 (9.8) | 276 | 33.0 (9.4) | 2.2 | 667 | 0.027 | |
Age at onset (years)2 | consanguineous (F>0.05) | 53 | 21.7 (6.1) | – | – | −0.49 | 373 | 0.62 |
not consanguineous (F<0.05) | 323 | 22.2 (6.9) | ||||||
Schizophrenia |
Controls |
|||||||
n | percent | n | percent | Chi-square3 | df | p | ||
Sex Ratio (Male) | 268 | 68.70% | 153 | 55.40% | 12.1 | 1 | 0.0005 | |
Geographic Region (Urban) | 115 | 30.40% | 68 | 24.70% | 2.7 | 1 | 0.1 | |
Self-reported Consanguinity (Yes) | 101 | 36.70% | 50 | 18.20% | 4.9 | 1 | 0.027 |
Two-sided Student’s t test.
Count for age at onset does not equal total cases, due to missing data in 23 individuals (Three consanguineous cases; 20 non-consanguineous cases).
Chi-square test corrected for sex, residential setting, and self-reported familial consanguinity.
F=inbreeding coefficient; n=subject count; SD=standard deviation; df=degrees of freedom; t=test statistic; p=probability.