MIDAS Project Publication Abstracts

Zimmerman, M. & Chelminski, I. Generalized anxiety disorder in patients with major depressive disorder: Is DSM-IV's hierarchy correct? American Journal of Psychiatry, 2005, 160, 504-512.

Objective: In DSM-III a hierarchical relationship was imposed in diagnosing anxiety disorders in depressed patients, i.e. anxiety disorders could not be diagnosed if their occurrence was limited to the course of a mood disorder. In the subsequent versions of the DSM this hierarchy was eliminated for all anxiety disorders except generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). In the present report we examined the validity of this remaining hierarchical relationship between mood and anxiety disorders.

Method: Three hundred thirty-two psychiatric outpatients with major depressive disorder (MDD) were evaluated with a semistructured diagnostic interview and completed some paper-and-pencil questionnaires upon presentation for treatment. To study the validity of the DSM-IV hierarchical relationship between GAD and mood disorders we made a diagnosis of modified GAD in those patients with MDD who met all GAD criteria except for the exclusion criterion. In our analyses we compared three nonoverlapping groups of patients: 1.) patients with DSM-IV MDD and GAD; 2.) depressed patients with modified GAD; and 3.) MDD patients without GAD.

Results: Compared to depressed patients without GAD, depressed patients with DSM-IV and modified GAD had higher levels of suicidal ideation, poorer social functioning, greater frequency of other anxiety disorders, eating disorders, and somatoform disorders, higher scores on most subscales of a multidimensional self-report measure of DSM-IV Axis I disorders, greater level of pathological worry, and a higher morbid risk for GAD in first-degree family members. The two GAD groups did not differ from each other.

Conclusions: Our findings question the validity of the DSM-IV hierarchical relationship between MDD and GAD, and suggest that the exclusion criterion should be eliminated.

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