Gaynes Bradley N, Pence Brian Wells, Eron Joseph J, Miller William C
Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7160, USA.
Psychosom Med. 2008 May;70(4):505-11. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e31816aa0cc. Epub 2008 Mar 31.
To study the prevalence of psychiatric comorbidity based on reference standard diagnostic criteria in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Psychiatric illness is common in patients with HIV and has been associated with negative health behaviors and poorer clinical outcomes. Among those persons with psychiatric illness, psychiatric comorbidity (multiple simultaneous diagnoses) is associated with increased psychiatric severity and higher HIV risk behaviors.
A total of 152 consecutively presenting HIV+ patients at an academic medical center in the southeastern US completed a modified Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4(th) Edition) that assessed mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders in the past year and past month.
Fifty percent and 33% of patients had a past-year and past-month diagnosis, respectively. The most common diagnoses were mood disorders (32% past year/21% past month) followed by anxiety (21%/17%) and substance use disorders (22%/11%). Half of those with past-year disorders and 40% of those with past-month disorders met the criteria for multiple diagnoses. Of those with a mood disorder in the past month, 53% also had an anxiety or substance use disorder; of those with an anxiety disorder, 62% also had a mood or substance use disorder; and of those with a substance use disorder, 63% also had a mood or anxiety disorder. Psychiatric comorbidity was associated with younger age, White non-Hispanic race/ethnicity, and greater HIV symptomatology.
Comorbidity of mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders was the exception rather than the rule in this sample. Potential co-occurring disorders should be considered for HIV+ patients presenting with a psychiatric diagnosis.
基于参考标准诊断标准研究人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)患者中精神疾病共病的患病率。精神疾病在HIV患者中很常见,并且与不良健康行为及较差的临床结局相关。在那些患有精神疾病的人群中,精神疾病共病(同时存在多种诊断)与精神疾病严重程度增加及更高的HIV风险行为相关。
在美国东南部一家学术医疗中心,共有152名连续就诊的HIV阳性患者完成了一份经过修改的DSM-IV(《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第4版)结构化临床访谈,该访谈评估了过去一年和过去一个月内的情绪、焦虑及物质使用障碍。
分别有50%和33%的患者在过去一年和过去一个月有诊断。最常见的诊断是情绪障碍(过去一年为32%/过去一个月为21%),其次是焦虑(21%/17%)和物质使用障碍(22%/11%)。过去一年有障碍的患者中有一半以及过去一个月有障碍的患者中有40%符合多重诊断标准。在过去一个月有情绪障碍的患者中,53%也患有焦虑或物质使用障碍;在患有焦虑障碍的患者中,62%也患有情绪或物质使用障碍;在患有物质使用障碍的患者中,63%也患有情绪或焦虑障碍。精神疾病共病与年龄较小、非西班牙裔白人种族/族裔以及更严重的HIV症状相关。
在这个样本中,情绪、焦虑和物质使用障碍共病是例外而非普遍情况。对于有精神疾病诊断的HIV阳性患者,应考虑潜在的共病情况。