Meyer Stephanie E, Carlson Gabrielle A, Youngstrom Eric, Ronsaville Donna S, Martinez Pedro E, Gold Philip W, Hakak Rashelle, Radke-Yarrow Marian
Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
J Affect Disord. 2009 Mar;113(3):227-35. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2008.05.024. Epub 2008 Jul 15.
Recent studies have identified a Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) profile that characterizes children with severe aggression, inattention, and mood instability. This profile has been coined the CBCL-Pediatric Bipolar Disorder (PBD) phenotype, because it is commonly seen among children with bipolar disorder. However, mounting evidence suggests that the CBCL-PBD may be a better tool for identifying children with severe functional impairment and broad-ranging psychiatric comorbidities rather than bipolar disorder itself. No studies have followed individuals with the CBCL-PBD profile through adulthood, so its long-term implications remain unclear. The present authors examined diagnostic and functional trajectories of individuals with the CBCL-PBD profile from early childhood through young adulthood using data from a longitudinal high-risk study.
Participants (n=101) are part of a 23-year study of youth at risk for major mood disorder who have completed diagnostic and functional assessments at regular intervals.
Across development, participants with the CBCL-PBD phenotype exhibited marked psychosocial impairment, increased rates of suicidal thoughts and behaviors and heightened risk for comorbid anxiety, bipolar disorder, cluster B personality disorders and ADHD in young adulthood, compared to participants without this presentation. However, diagnostic accuracy for any one particular disorder was found to be low.
Children with the CBCL-PBD profile are at risk for ongoing, severe, psychiatric symptomatology including behavior and emotional comorbidities in general, and bipolar disorder, anxiety, ADHD, cluster B personality disorders in particular. However, the value of this profile may be in predicting ongoing comorbidity and impairment, rather than any one specific DSM-IV diagnosis.
近期研究确定了一种儿童行为检查表(CBCL)特征模式,该模式可表征具有严重攻击行为、注意力不集中和情绪不稳定的儿童。这种模式被称为CBCL-小儿双相情感障碍(PBD)表型,因为它常见于双相情感障碍儿童中。然而,越来越多的证据表明,CBCL-PBD可能是识别具有严重功能损害和广泛精神疾病共病的儿童的更好工具,而非双相情感障碍本身。尚无研究追踪具有CBCL-PBD特征模式的个体至成年期,因此其长期影响仍不明确。本研究作者利用一项纵向高危研究的数据,考察了具有CBCL-PBD特征模式的个体从幼儿期到青年期的诊断和功能轨迹。
参与者(n = 101)是一项针对有患重大情绪障碍风险的青少年进行的为期23年研究的一部分,他们定期完成了诊断和功能评估。
在整个发育过程中,与无此特征模式的参与者相比,具有CBCL-PBD表型的参与者表现出明显的社会心理损害、自杀念头和行为发生率增加,以及在青年期患共病焦虑、双相情感障碍、B类人格障碍和注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)的风险更高。然而,发现对任何一种特定障碍的诊断准确性都较低。
具有CBCL-PBD特征模式的儿童有持续出现严重精神症状的风险,包括一般的行为和情绪共病,尤其是双相情感障碍、焦虑、ADHD、B类人格障碍。然而,这种特征模式的价值可能在于预测持续的共病和损害,而非任何一种特定的《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)诊断。