Mula Marco, McGonigal Aileen, Micoulaud-Franchi Jean-Arthur, May Theodor W, Labudda Kirsten, Brandt Christian
Epilepsy Group, Atkinson Morley Regional Neuroscience Centre, St. George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.
South West London & St. George's Mental Health Trust, London, United Kingdom.
Epilepsia. 2016 Jun;57(6):949-55. doi: 10.1111/epi.13373. Epub 2016 Mar 25.
Standard mortality ratio for suicide in patients with epilepsy is three times higher than in the general population, and such a risk remains high even after adjusting for clinical and socioeconomic factors. It is thus important to have suitable screening instruments and to implement care pathways for suicide prevention in every epilepsy center. The aim of this study is to validate the use of the Neurological Disorder Depression Inventory for Epilepsy (NDDIE) as a suicidality-screening instrument.
The study sample included adult patients with epilepsy assessed with the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) and the NDDIE. A high suicidality risk according to the Suicidality Module of the MINI was considered the gold standard. Receiver operating characteristic analyses for NDDIE total and individual item scores were computed and subsequently compared using a nonparametric approach. The best possible cutoff was identified with the highest Youden index (J). Likelihood ratios were then computed, and specificity, sensitivity, positive, and negative predictive values calculated.
The study sample consisted of 380 adult patients with epilepsy: 46.3% male; mean age was 39.4 ± 14.6; 76.7% had a diagnosis of focal epilepsy; mean age at onset of the epilepsy was 23.3 ± 17.5. According to the MINI, 74 patients (19.5%) fulfilled criteria for a major depressive episode and 19 (5%) presented a high suicidality risk. A score >2 (J = 0.751) for item 4 "I'd be better off dead" of the NDDIE displayed excellent psychometric properties with a good to excellent validity (area under the curve [AUC] 0.906; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.820-0.992; p < 0.001), sensitivity 84.21% (95% CI 60.4-96.6), specificity 90.86% (95% CI 87.4-93.6), likelihood ratio+ 9.21 (95% CI 6.3-13.5), likelihood ratio- 0.17 (95% CI 0.06-0.50).
Item 4 of the NDDIE has shown to be an excellent suicidality screening instrument allowing the development of further care pathways for suicide prevention in epilepsy centers.
癫痫患者的自杀标准死亡率比普通人群高3倍,即使在对临床和社会经济因素进行调整后,这种风险仍然很高。因此,在每个癫痫中心拥有合适的筛查工具并实施自杀预防护理路径非常重要。本研究的目的是验证癫痫神经障碍抑郁量表(NDDIE)作为自杀倾向筛查工具的有效性。
研究样本包括使用迷你国际神经精神访谈(MINI)和NDDIE进行评估的成年癫痫患者。根据MINI的自杀倾向模块确定的高自杀风险被视为金标准。计算NDDIE总分和单个项目得分的受试者工作特征分析,并随后使用非参数方法进行比较。用最高约登指数(J)确定最佳可能的截断值。然后计算似然比,并计算特异性、敏感性、阳性和阴性预测值。
研究样本包括380名成年癫痫患者:男性占46.3%;平均年龄为39.4±14.6岁;76.7%被诊断为局灶性癫痫;癫痫发病的平均年龄为23.3±17.5岁。根据MINI,74名患者(19.5%)符合重度抑郁发作标准,19名患者(5%)有高自杀风险。NDDIE第4项“我死了会更好”得分>2(J = 0.751)显示出优异的心理测量特性,效度良好至优异(曲线下面积[AUC] 0.906;95%置信区间[CI] 0.820 - 0.992;p < 0.001),敏感性84.21%(95% CI 60.4 - 96.6),特异性90.86%(95% CI 87.4 - 93.6),阳性似然比9.21(95% CI 6.3 - 13.5),阴性似然比为0.17(95% CI 0.06 - 0.50)。
NDDIE的第4项已被证明是一种出色的自杀倾向筛查工具,可为癫痫中心制定进一步的自杀预防护理路径提供依据。