Wisco Blair E, Marx Brian P, Miller Mark W, Wolf Erika J, Krystal John H, Southwick Steven M, Pietrzak Robert H
University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Psychology Department, PO Box 26170, Greensboro, NC 27402, United States.
National Center for PTSD, VA Boston Healthcare System/Boston University School of Medicine, United States.
J Affect Disord. 2017 Dec 1;223:17-19. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2017.07.006. Epub 2017 Jul 6.
The proposed ICD-11 criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) differ substantially from the DSM-5. ICD-11 eliminated several PTSD symptoms thought to be nonspecific, with the goal of reducing psychiatric comorbidities. However, this change also results in a narrower PTSD definition that may fail to capture individuals with clinically significant PTSD. The purpose of the current study was to compare prevalence and psychiatric comorbidities of DSM (IV/5) and ICD-11 PTSD.
We evaluated concordance between DSM (IV/5) and ICD-11 PTSD diagnoses in a web survey of two nationally representative samples of U.S. military veterans (ns = 3517 and 1484). Lifetime and past-month PTSD symptoms were assessed with the DSM-IV-based PTSD Checklist-Specific Stressor version and the DSM-5-based PTSD Checklist-5. Psychiatric comorbidities were assessed using MINI Neuropsychiatric Interview modules.
A significantly greater proportion of veterans met criteria for lifetime and past-month PTSD under DSM-IV/5 than under ICD-11. 21.8-35.9% of those who met criteria under DSM IV/5 did not meet under ICD-11, whereas only 2.4-7.1% of those who met under ICD-11 did not meet under DSM-IV/5. Psychiatric comorbidities did not significantly differ between DSM-IV/5 and ICD-11.
This study relied upon self-report measures of PTSD, distress/impairment, and psychiatric comorbidities.
The proposed ICD-11 criteria identify fewer PTSD cases than DSM-IV/5 without reducing psychiatric comorbidities. Veterans with clinically significant PTSD symptoms may not meet ICD-11 PTSD criteria, possibly affecting eligibility for healthcare, disability, and other services. The ICD-11 criteria could be revised to capture more PTSD cases before ICD-11 is published in 2018.
拟议的国际疾病分类第11版(ICD - 11)创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)标准与《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第5版(DSM - 5)有很大不同。ICD - 11剔除了一些被认为是非特异性的PTSD症状,目的是减少精神疾病共病情况。然而,这一变化也导致PTSD的定义变窄,可能无法涵盖具有临床显著意义的PTSD患者。本研究的目的是比较DSM(第四版/第五版)和ICD - 11 PTSD的患病率及精神疾病共病情况。
我们在美国退伍军人的两个全国代表性样本(n分别为3517和1484)的网络调查中评估了DSM(第四版/第五版)和ICD - 11 PTSD诊断之间的一致性。使用基于DSM - IV的PTSD检查表 - 特定应激源版本和基于DSM - 5的PTSD检查表 - 5评估终生及过去一个月的PTSD症状。使用简明国际神经精神访谈模块评估精神疾病共病情况。
与ICD - 11相比,在DSM - IV/5标准下,符合终生及过去一个月PTSD标准的退伍军人比例显著更高。在DSM - IV/5标准下符合标准的人中有21.8 - 35.9%在ICD - 11标准下不符合,而在ICD - 11标准下符合的人只有2.4 - 7.1%在DSM - IV/5标准下不符合。DSM - IV/5和ICD - 11之间的精神疾病共病情况没有显著差异。
本研究依赖于PTSD、痛苦/功能损害及精神疾病共病情况的自我报告测量。
拟议的ICD - 11标准识别出的PTSD病例比DSM - IV/5少,且未减少精神疾病共病情况。具有临床显著意义的PTSD症状的退伍军人可能不符合ICD - 11 PTSD标准,这可能会影响其获得医疗保健、残疾及其他服务的资格。在2018年ICD - 11发布之前,可对ICD - 11标准进行修订以识别更多PTSD病例。