Garnaat Sarah L, Boisseau Christina L, Yip Agustin, Sibrava Nicholas J, Greenberg Benjamin D, Mancebo Maria C, McLaughlin Nicole C R, Eisen Jane L, Rasmussen Steven A
Butler Hospital OCD Research, 345 Blackstone Blvd, Providence, RI 02906
J Clin Psychiatry. 2015 Dec;76(12):e1605-10. doi: 10.4088/JCP.14m09468.
Few data are available to inform clinical expectations about course and prognosis of severe obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Such information is necessary to guide clinicians and to inform criteria for invasive interventions for severe and intractable OCD. This study sought to examine course and prospective predictors of a chronic course in patients with severe OCD over 5 years.
A selected subset of adults in the Brown Longitudinal Obsessive-Compulsive Study (BLOCS) was included. Adult BLOCS participants were enrolled between 2001 and 2006. All participants in the current study (N = 113) had DSM-IV OCD diagnosis, severe OCD symptoms at baseline, and at least 1 year of follow-up data.
Cox proportional hazard models were used to examine the general pattern of course in the severe OCD sample based on Longitudinal Interval Follow-Up Evaluation (LIFE) psychiatric status ratings, as well as test predictors of chronically severe course. Results indicated that approximately half of patients with severe OCD at baseline had illness drop to a moderate or lower range of severity during 5 years of follow-up (50.4%) and that marked improvement was rare after 3 years of severe illness. The only unique predictor of a more chronically severe course was patient report of ever having been housebound for a week or more due to OCD symptoms (P < .05).
Findings of this study were 3-fold: (1) half of participants with severe OCD have symptom improvement over 5 years of follow-up, (2) the majority of participants that drop out of the severe range of symptom severity do so within the first 3 years of follow-up, and (3) patient-reported history of being housebound for 1 week or more due to OCD is a significant predictor of OCD's remaining severe over the 5-year follow-up.
关于重度强迫症(OCD)的病程和预后,可供临床参考的数据很少。此类信息对于指导临床医生以及制定针对重度难治性OCD的侵入性干预标准至关重要。本研究旨在探讨重度OCD患者5年病程及慢性病程的前瞻性预测因素。
纳入了布朗纵向强迫症研究(BLOCS)中选定的成年患者子集。成年BLOCS参与者于2001年至2006年入组。本研究的所有参与者(N = 113)均符合DSM-IV强迫症诊断标准,基线时存在重度OCD症状,且至少有1年的随访数据。
采用Cox比例风险模型,根据纵向间隔随访评估(LIFE)精神状态评分,研究重度OCD样本的总体病程模式,并测试慢性重度病程的预测因素。结果表明,基线时患有重度OCD的患者中,约一半在5年随访期间病情降至中度或更低严重程度范围(50.4%),且在重度疾病3年后很少有明显改善。慢性重度病程的唯一独特预测因素是患者报告曾因OCD症状居家一周或更长时间(P < .05)。
本研究结果有三点:(1)一半的重度OCD参与者在5年随访期间症状有所改善;(2)大多数症状严重程度从重度范围下降的参与者在随访的前3年内出现这种情况;(3)患者报告因OCD居家1周或更长时间的病史是5年随访期间OCD仍严重的重要预测因素。