Michael S Gaffrey1, Andy C Belden, Joan L Luby. 1. Washington University School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Saint Louis, Missouri 63110, USA. gaffreym@wustl.edu
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although validity for DSM-IV MDD symptom criteria in preschoolers has been demonstrated, whether the 2-week duration criterion is an appropriate threshold of clinical significance at this age remains unclear. The current study aimed to begin addressing this question. METHOD: Three hundred and six preschoolers were recruited from community sites and followed longitudinally for 2 years. A subsample including healthy preschoolers (N=77) and those with MDD (N=74) were examined. The MDD group was further divided based upon meeting (DSM, N=24) or failing to meet (<DSM, N=50) the DSM-IV 2-week duration criterion. Groups were compared on parent and teacher report measures of symptom severity and functional impairment at baseline and 2-year follow-up. LIMITATIONS: A larger sample of depressed preschoolers and refined measures of duration are needed to replicate the current study. RESULTS: Preschoolers with MDD differed significantly from controls on the majority of measures examined regardless of duration status and time of assessment. Further, the DSM group significantly differed from the<DSM group at baseline on measures of MDD symptom severity and impairment. No differences in the risk of a MDD diagnosis at follow-up were found on the basis of duration group status. CONCLUSIONS: DSM-IV duration criterion failed to capture all clinically affected preschoolers at baseline or confer greater predictive validity for a depression diagnosis 2 years later. Findings suggest that preschoolers meeting all DSM-IV MDD criteria except for episode duration exhibit a clinically significant form of depression and experience a 2-year MDD outcome similar to those meeting full criterion.
BACKGROUND: Although validity for DSM-IV MDD symptom criteria in preschoolers has been demonstrated, whether the 2-week duration criterion is an appropriate threshold of clinical significance at this age remains unclear. The current study aimed to begin addressing this question. METHOD: Three hundred and six preschoolers were recruited from community sites and followed longitudinally for 2 years. A subsample including healthy preschoolers (N=77) and those with MDD (N=74) were examined. The MDD group was further divided based upon meeting (DSM, N=24) or failing to meet (<DSM, N=50) the DSM-IV 2-week duration criterion. Groups were compared on parent and teacher report measures of symptom severity and functional impairment at baseline and 2-year follow-up. LIMITATIONS: A larger sample of depressed preschoolers and refined measures of duration are needed to replicate the current study. RESULTS: Preschoolers with MDD differed significantly from controls on the majority of measures examined regardless of duration status and time of assessment. Further, the DSM group significantly differed from the<DSM group at baseline on measures of MDD symptom severity and impairment. No differences in the risk of a MDD diagnosis at follow-up were found on the basis of duration group status. CONCLUSIONS: DSM-IV duration criterion failed to capture all clinically affected preschoolers at baseline or confer greater predictive validity for a depression diagnosis 2 years later. Findings suggest that preschoolers meeting all DSM-IV MDD criteria except for episode duration exhibit a clinically significant form of depression and experience a 2-year MDD outcome similar to those meeting full criterion.
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