Shalev Arieh Y, Gevonden Martin, Ratanatharathorn Andrew, Laska Eugene, van der Mei Willem F, Qi Wei, Lowe Sarah, Lai Betty S, Bryant Richard A, Delahanty Douglas, Matsuoka Yutaka J, Olff Miranda, Schnyder Ulrich, Seedat Soraya, deRoon-Cassini Terri A, Kessler Ronald C, Koenen Karestan C
Department of Psychiatry, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Biological Psychology, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
World Psychiatry. 2019 Feb;18(1):77-87. doi: 10.1002/wps.20608.
A timely determination of the risk of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a prerequisite for efficient service delivery and prevention. We provide a risk estimate tool allowing a calculation of individuals' PTSD likelihood from early predictors. Members of the International Consortium to Predict PTSD (ICPP) shared individual participants' item-level data from ten longitudinal studies of civilian trauma survivors admitted to acute care centers in six countries. Eligible participants (N=2,473) completed an initial clinical assessment within 60 days of trauma exposure, and at least one follow-up assessment 4-15 months later. The Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-IV (CAPS) evaluated PTSD symptom severity and diagnostic status at each assessment. Participants' education, prior lifetime trauma exposure, marital status and socio-economic status were assessed and harmonized across studies. The study's main outcome was the likelihood of a follow-up PTSD given early predictors. The prevalence of follow-up PTSD was 11.8% (9.2% for male participants and 16.4% for females). A logistic model using early PTSD symptom severity (initial CAPS total score) as a predictor produced remarkably accurate estimates of follow-up PTSD (predicted vs. raw probabilities: r=0.976). Adding respondents' female gender, lower education, and exposure to prior interpersonal trauma to the model yielded higher PTSD likelihood estimates, with similar model accuracy (predicted vs. raw probabilities: r=0.941). The current model could be adjusted for other traumatic circumstances and accommodate risk factors not captured by the ICPP (e.g., biological, social). In line with their use in general medicine, risk estimate models can inform clinical choices in psychiatry. It is hoped that quantifying individuals' PTSD risk will be a first step towards systematic prevention of the disorder.
及时确定创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)风险是高效提供服务和预防的前提条件。我们提供了一种风险评估工具,可根据早期预测指标计算个体患PTSD的可能性。国际创伤后应激障碍预测联盟(ICPP)的成员分享了来自六个国家急性护理中心收治的平民创伤幸存者的十项纵向研究中个体参与者的项目级数据。符合条件的参与者(N = 2473)在创伤暴露后60天内完成了初始临床评估,并在4 - 15个月后至少进行了一次随访评估。采用临床医生管理的DSM-IV创伤后应激障碍量表(CAPS)在每次评估时评估PTSD症状严重程度和诊断状态。对参与者的教育程度、既往终身创伤暴露情况、婚姻状况和社会经济状况进行了评估,并在各项研究中进行了统一。该研究的主要结果是根据早期预测指标得出随访时患PTSD的可能性。随访时PTSD的患病率为11.8%(男性参与者为9.2%,女性为16.4%)。使用早期PTSD症状严重程度(初始CAPS总分)作为预测指标的逻辑模型对随访时的PTSD产生了非常准确的估计(预测概率与原始概率:r = 0.976)。在模型中加入受访者的女性性别、较低的教育程度以及既往人际创伤暴露情况,得出的PTSD可能性估计值更高,模型准确性相似(预测概率与原始概率:r = 0.941)。当前模型可针对其他创伤情况进行调整,并纳入ICPP未涵盖的风险因素(如生物学、社会因素)。与它们在普通医学中的应用一致,风险评估模型可为精神病学的临床选择提供参考。希望量化个体的PTSD风险将是系统性预防该疾病的第一步。