Department of General Practice and Elderly Care Medicine, EMGO Institute, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of General Practice and Elderly Care Medicine, EMGO Institute, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Psychosom Res. 2016 Mar;82:4-10. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2016.01.004. Epub 2016 Jan 12.
This study aimed (1) to describe frequencies of DSM IV somatisation disorder, undifferentiated somatoform disorder and pain disorder versus DSM 5 somatic symptom disorder (SSD) in a multi-setting population of patients with medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS), (2) to investigate differences in sociodemographic and (psycho)pathological characteristics between these diagnostic groups and (3) to explore the clinical relevance of the distinction between mild and moderate DSM 5 SSD.
We used baseline data of a cohort of 325 MUPS patients. Measurements included questionnaires about symptom severity, physical functioning, anxiety, depression, health anxiety and illness perceptions. These questionnaires were used as proxy measures for operationalization of DSM IV and DSM 5 diagnostic criteria.
92.9% of participants fulfilled criteria of a DSM IV somatoform disorder, while 45.5% fulfilled criteria of DSM 5 SSD. Participants fulfilling criteria of DSM 5 SSD suffered from more severe symptoms than those only fulfilling criteria of a DSM IV somatoform disorder(mean PHQ-15 score of 13.98 (SD 5.17) versus 11.23 (SD 4.71), P-value<0.001). Furthermore their level of physical functioning was significantly lower. Compared to patients with mild SSD, patients with moderate SSD suffered from significantly lower physical functioning and higher levels of depression.
Within a population of MUPS patients DSM 5 SSD criteria are more restrictive than DSM IV criteria for somatoform disorders. They are associated with higher symptom severity and lower physical functioning. However, further specification of the positive psychological criteria of DSM 5 SSD may improve utility in research and practice.
本研究旨在(1)描述在多环境就诊的有无法解释躯体症状的患者中,DSM-IV 躯体化障碍、未分化躯体形式障碍和疼痛障碍与 DSM-5 躯体症状障碍(SSD)的频率,(2)调查这些诊断组之间的社会人口学和(心理)病理特征差异,(3)探索 DSM-5 SSD 轻度和中度之间的区别的临床相关性。
我们使用了 325 例 MUPS 患者队列的基线数据。测量包括症状严重程度、身体功能、焦虑、抑郁、健康焦虑和疾病认知的问卷。这些问卷被用作操作 DSM-IV 和 DSM-5 诊断标准的代理措施。
92.9%的参与者符合 DSM-IV 躯体形式障碍的标准,而 45.5%符合 DSM-5 SSD 的标准。符合 DSM-5 SSD 标准的参与者比仅符合 DSM-IV 躯体形式障碍标准的参与者有更严重的症状(PHQ-15 平均得分 13.98(SD 5.17)对 11.23(SD 4.71),P 值<0.001)。此外,他们的身体功能水平明显较低。与轻度 SSD 患者相比,中度 SSD 患者的身体功能明显较低,抑郁水平较高。
在 MUPS 患者人群中,DSM-5 SSD 标准比 DSM-IV 躯体形式障碍标准更具限制性。它们与更高的症状严重程度和更低的身体功能有关。然而,进一步规范 DSM-5 SSD 的积极心理标准可能会提高在研究和实践中的效用。