Ratajska Adrianna M, Rodriguez Katie, Appleton Hannah, Schade Rachel N, Gertler Joshua, Kenney Lauren E, Pontone Gregory M, Bowers Dawn
Department of Clinical and Health Psychology (Ratajska, Rodriguez, Appleton, Schade, Gertler, Kenney, Bowers) and Department of Neurology, Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases (Pontone, Bowers), University of Florida, Gainesville.
J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2025 Apr 28:appineuropsych20240227. doi: 10.1176/appi.neuropsych.20240227.
Apathy is a prevalent neuropsychiatric feature of Parkinson's disease (PD), marked by reduced goal-directed behavior. Apathy is distinct from depression and significantly affects daily functioning and quality of life. Despite this, the DSM-5 does not acknowledge apathy as its own diagnostic category. The authors sought to examine how individuals with PD who score high on a self-report apathy scale are diagnostically classified by psychiatrists within a clinical setting.
Fifty-five individuals with "pure apathy" were identified from a larger clinical convenience sample of 458 patients with PD. The pure-apathy group consisted of patients who scored above the clinical cutoff on a self-report measure of apathy but whose symptoms were below the cutoffs for depression and anxiety measures. These patients also received a standard clinical psychiatric evaluation using DSM-5 criteria. The authors examined the diagnoses provided by psychiatrists who were unaware of results of the mood scales.
More than half (53%) of the pure-apathy group had received no psychiatric diagnosis. The remainder had received the following diagnoses: anxiety (27%), depression (5%), comorbid depression and anxiety (5%), and other psychiatric diagnoses (9%). The most common anxiety diagnoses were unspecified or other specified anxiety disorders and generalized anxiety disorder. The most common depression diagnoses were unspecified or other specified depressive disorders.
This study highlights a gap in diagnosing psychiatric conditions in PD, specifically for individuals with primarily apathetic presentations. More than 50% of PD patients in the pure-apathy group had received no psychiatric diagnosis, possibly resulting in unmet clinical needs.
冷漠是帕金森病(PD)常见的神经精神特征,其特点是目标导向行为减少。冷漠有别于抑郁,会显著影响日常功能和生活质量。尽管如此,《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM - 5)并未将冷漠列为独立的诊断类别。作者试图研究在临床环境中,精神科医生如何对在自我报告冷漠量表上得分高的PD患者进行诊断分类。
从458例PD患者的更大规模临床便利样本中,识别出55例“单纯冷漠”患者。单纯冷漠组由那些在冷漠自我报告测量中得分高于临床临界值,但症状低于抑郁和焦虑测量临界值的患者组成。这些患者还接受了使用DSM - 5标准的标准临床精神科评估。作者检查了不知道情绪量表结果的精神科医生给出的诊断。
超过一半(53%)的单纯冷漠组患者未得到精神科诊断。其余患者得到了以下诊断:焦虑(27%)、抑郁(5%)、共病抑郁和焦虑(5%)以及其他精神科诊断(9%)。最常见的焦虑诊断是未特定的或其他特定的焦虑障碍以及广泛性焦虑障碍。最常见的抑郁诊断是未特定的或其他特定的抑郁障碍。
本研究凸显了PD患者精神疾病诊断方面的差距,特别是对于主要表现为冷漠的个体。单纯冷漠组中超过50%的PD患者未得到精神科诊断,这可能导致临床需求未得到满足。