Okai David, Askey-Jones Sally, Mack Joel, Martin Anne, Chaudhuri Kallol Ray, Samuel Michael, David Anthony S, Brown Richard G
Section of Cognitive Neuropsychiatry Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience King's College London London United Kingdom; Department of Psychological Medicine Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust Oxford United Kingdom.
Section of Cognitive Neuropsychiatry Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience King's College London London United Kingdom; School of Psychology Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne United Kingdom.
Mov Disord Clin Pract. 2016 Sep-Oct;3(5):494-499. doi: 10.1002/mdc3.12316. Epub 2016 Jan 25.
Impulse-control behaviors (ICBs) are increasingly recognized in Parkinson's disease (PD) as drug-related effects of dopaminergic mediation that occur in 15% to 35% of patients with PD. The authors describe the design and evaluation of a new, clinician-rated severity scale for the assessment of syndromal and subsyndromal forms of impulse-control disorders (ICDs), simple (punding) and complex (hobbyism) repetitive behaviors, and compulsive overuse of medication (dopamine dysregulation syndrome).
The Parkinson's Impulse-Control Scale (PICS), the first PD-specific, semistructured interview to cover the full range of PD-related ICBs, is described along with initial evidence on its clinimetric properties including interrater reliability, discriminant validity and sensitivity to change. A convenience sample of PD patients with ICBs and those without were administered a semistructured interview (n = 92).
The scale distinguished between those with and without clinically detected ICBs and between patients with syndromal ICD and subsyndromal ICB (receiver operating characteristic areas under the curve, 92%-95%). Cutoff values were suggested, and substantial agreement was reported on weighted kappa (Κ) values for clinician-clinician rating of severity (Κ = 0.92). Significant improvements were detected on the scale after a randomized controlled trial of cognitive-behavioral therapy and medication adjustment ([22] = 5.47; < 0.001).
The PICS appears to be a reliable measure of the full range of PD ICBs with good levels of interrater reliability. It may provide a useful measure to assess the severity of ICBs and monitor change in clinical and research settings; although, given the specialized centers used for recruitment of this sample, further psychometric evaluation is required.
冲动控制行为(ICBs)在帕金森病(PD)中越来越被认为是多巴胺能介导的药物相关效应,在15%至35%的PD患者中出现。作者描述了一种新的、由临床医生评定的严重程度量表的设计和评估,该量表用于评估冲动控制障碍(ICDs)的综合征和亚综合征形式、简单(刻板行为)和复杂(爱好成瘾)重复行为以及药物强迫性过度使用(多巴胺调节异常综合征)。
描述了帕金森冲动控制量表(PICS),这是首个涵盖所有与PD相关ICBs的PD特异性半结构化访谈,并给出了其测量学特性的初步证据,包括评分者间信度、区分效度和对变化的敏感性。对有ICBs和无ICBs的PD患者便利样本进行了半结构化访谈(n = 92)。
该量表能够区分有和无临床检测到ICBs的患者,以及综合征ICD和亚综合征ICB患者(曲线下接受者操作特征面积,92% - 95%)。提出了截断值,并报告了临床医生对严重程度评分的加权kappa(Κ)值有实质性一致性(Κ = 0.92)。在认知行为疗法和药物调整的随机对照试验后,该量表有显著改善([22] = 5.47;< 0.001)。
PICS似乎是一种可靠的测量方法,可全面评估PD的ICBs,评分者间信度良好。它可能为评估ICBs的严重程度以及监测临床和研究环境中的变化提供有用的测量方法;不过,鉴于该样本招募所使用的专业中心,还需要进一步的心理测量学评估。