| Literature DB >> 22570257 |
Pierre C M Herpers1, Nanda N J Rommelse, Daniëlle M A Bons, Jan K Buitelaar, Floor E Scheepers.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Callous-unemotional (CU) traits are currently viewed as the defining signs and symptoms of juvenile psychopathy. It is unclear, however, whether CU traits have validity only in the context of conduct disorder (CD) as proposed by Frick and Moffitt (A proposal to the DSM-V childhood disorders and the ADHD and disruptive behavior disorders work groups to include a specifier to the diagnosis of conduct disorder based on the presence of callous-unemotional traits, American Psychiatric Association, Washington, DC, 2010), or also outside CD, either in combination with other forms of psychopathology or as a stand-alone construct.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22570257 PMCID: PMC3496473 DOI: 10.1007/s00127-012-0513-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ISSN: 0933-7954 Impact factor: 4.328
Proposed specifier for callous–unemotional traits in the DSM-V
| 1. | Meets full criteria for conduct disorder |
| 2. | Shows two or more of the following characteristics persistently over at least 12 months and in more than one relationship or setting.The clinician should consider multiple sources of information to determine the presence of these traits, such as whether the person self-reports them as being characteristic of him or herself and if they are reported by others (e.g. parents, other family members, teachers, peers) who have known the person for significant periods of time |
| Lack of remorse or guilt: does not feel bad or guilty when he/she does something wrong (except if expressing remorse when caught and/or facing punishment) | |
| Callous-lack of empathy: disregards and is unconcerned about the feelings of others | |
| Unconcerned about performance: does not show concern about poor/problematic performance at school, work, or in other important activities. | |
| Shallow or deficient affect: does not express feelings or show emotions to others, except in ways that seem shallow or superficial (e.g. emotions are not consistent with actions; can turn emotions “on” or “off” quickly) or when they are used for gain (e.g. to manipulate or intimidate others) |
http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=424
Assessment instruments for measuring psychopathic traits in youth
| Full name | Abbreviation | Reference | Rater |
|---|---|---|---|
| Psychopathy Checklist: revised | PCL-R | [ | Clinician rated |
| Self-Report Psychopathy Scale: II | SRP-II | [ | Self-report |
| Psychopathy Checklist: Screening Version | PCL:SV | [ | Clinician rated |
| Survey of Attitudes and Life Experiences | SALE | [ | Self-report |
| Childhood Psychopathy Scale | CPS | [ | Clinician rated |
| Psychopathy Content Scale | PCS | [ | Self-report |
| Psychopathy Screening Device | PSD | [ | Self-report |
| Antisocial Process Screening Device | APSD | [ | Self-report Teacher-report Parent-report |
| Youth Psychopathy traits Inventory | YPI | [ | Self-report |
| Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version | PCL:YV | [ | Clinician rated |
| Inventory of Callous–Unemotional traits | ICU | [ | Self-report Teacher-report Parent-report |
| Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire | MPQ | [ | Self-report |
| Minnesota Temperament Inventory | MTI | [ | Self-report |
| Social and Emotional Detachment Questionnaire | SEDQ | [ | Parent-report |
| NEO Psychopathy Resemblance Index | NEO PRI | [ | Self-report |
| Five Factor Model Psychopathy count | FFM PP count | [ | Self-report Parent-report |
| Psychopathic Personality Inventory Short-Form | PPI-SF | [ | Self-report |
Relationship between CU traits and specific diagnoses
| Diagnosis | Support | No support |
|---|---|---|
| Conduct disorder | Core references: [ Reviews: [ | |
| Oppositional-defiant disorder | [ | [ |
| Personality disorder | [ | [ |
| Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder | [ | [ |
| Mental retardation | [ | |
| Substance abuse | [ | |
| Autism spectrum disorder | [ | |
| Anxiety disorder | ||
| Self-reported anxiety ↓ | [ | [ |
| Parent-rated anxiety ↓ | [ | |
| Teacher-rated anxiety ↓ | [ | |
| Clinician-rated anxiety ↓ | [ | |
| Mood disorder | [ | |
↓, decreased in the presence of high CU traits
Prevalence of CU traits
| Study | Sample | Male (%) | CD-only (%) | CD + CU (%) | CU-only (%) | CP + CU (%) | CP-only (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Community | 51 | n.i. | n.i. | 7.2 | 5.6 | 7.9 |
| [ | Community | 51–76 | n.i. | n.i. | 7–11 | n.i. | |
| Incarderated | 51–76 | n.i. | 12–33 | n.i. | n.i. | n.i. | |
| [ | Community | 57 | 32 % of those with CD met criteria for specifier for CU traits 7 % of those without CD met criteria for specifier for CU traits | ||||
| Clinic-referred | 60 | 50 % of those with CD met criteria for specifier for CU traits 32 % of those without CD met criteria for specifier for CU traits | |||||
| [ | Community | 0 | 40.5 % reported at least once above 1 SD on CU traits over a 4-year period 65.5 % of the group meeting criteria for CD had high CU scores 44.3 % of the group with high CU traits met criteria for CD | ||||
| [ | Community | – | 1.1 | 0.9 | 2.9 | n.i. | n.i. |
| [ | Community | 49 | n.i. | n.i. | 3.8 | n.i. | |
| Incarcerated | 42 | n.i. | n.i. | 8.9 | n.i. | ||
CD conduct disorder, CP conduct problems, CU callous–unemotional traits, SD standard deviation, n.i. no information given
Characteristic course and outcome when CU traits are present in youth with conduct problems
| Follow-up studies | Result | Support | No support |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short-term (0–4 years) | Social non-conformity ↑ Days detained ↑ Antisocial behaviour ↑ Symptoms of psychopathology ↑ | [ | |
| Substance use ↑ | [ | ||
| Proactive aggression ↑ | [ | ||
| General and violent recidivism ↑ | [ | [ | |
| Delinquency ↑ | [ | ||
| Seriousness charges ↑ | [ | ||
| Impairment ↑ | [ | ||
| Stability of CU traits | [ | [ | |
| Long-term (4–12 years) | Severeness and chronicity of antisocial behaviour and delinquency ↑ | [ | |
| Affiliation with deviant peers ↑ | [ | ||
| CU traits show long-term stability | [ |
[135], community twin sample; [52, 133], community sample; ↑, increased in the presence of high CU traits; ↓, decreased in the presence of high CU traits
Genetic influences on CU traits
| Reference |
| Age (years) | Male (%) | Measure | Genetic influences (variance; %) | Shared environmental influences (variance; %) | Non-shared environmental influences (variance; %) | Genetic stability (variance; %) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 1,252 twins | Same group at 17 and at 24 years | 46 | MPQ | 17 yr: 48 24 yr: 42 | 17 yr: 52 24 yr: 58 | 58 | |
| [ | 9,462 twins | Same group at 7, 9 and 12 years | 47.3 | 3 items APSD + 4 items SDQ | 78a (boys) 0a (girls) | 1a (boys) 75a (girls) | 2a (boys) 25a (girls) | |
| [ | 1,467 twins | Same group at 16 and at 19 | 40 | YPI | 82 | |||
| [ | 2,198 twins | 16–17 | 47.6 | YPI | 43 | 0 | 57 | |
| [ | 398 | 16–18 | 100 | MTI | 42 | 58 | ||
| [ | 832 twins 1,056 probands | 6–8 | n.i. | 3 items APSD + 4 items SDQ | 67 | 6 | 27 | |
| [ | 3,196 twins | 7 | 48.0 | Idem | 67 (boys) 48 (girls) | 4 (boys) 20 (girls) | 29 (boys) 32 (girls) | |
| [ | 464 twins 314 probands | 9 | n.i. | Idem + 2 items ICU | 75 | 0 | ||
| [ | 4.508 twins | Same group at 7 and at 12 | n.i. | 3 items APSD + 4 items SDQ | 7 yr/P: 63 12 yr/P: 81 7 yr/T: 71 12 yr/T: 56 | 7 yr/P: 27 12 yr/P: 23 7 yr/T: 31 12 yr/T: 40 |
MPQ Minnesota Personality Questionnaire [141], YPI Youth Psychopathic Traits Inventory [31], MTI Minnesota Temperament Inventory [136], APSD Antisocial Process Screening Device [30], SDQ Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire [237], Yr year, P parent rating, T teacher rating
aStandardized estimates when stability over time was high
Correlational environmental studies
| Type of environmental influence | Support | No support |
|---|---|---|
| Parenting style (−) | [ | [ |
| SES (−) | [ | |
| Physical traumatization (+) | [ | |
| Prenatal risk (+) | [ [ |
−, inverse correlation with CU traits; +, positive correlation with CU traits
Neurobiological and neuropsychological studies on CU traits
| Focus | Support | No support | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neurobiological markers | fMRI: Amgdala ↓ vmPFC ↓ | [ | [ |
| sMRI: Amygdala = | [ | ||
| Cortisol ↓ | [ | [ | |
| Testosteron = | [ | ||
| Skin Conductance ↓ | [ | ||
| Heart rate ↓ | [ | [ | |
| Prosocial reasoning | Prosocial reasoning ↓ | [ | [ |
| Cognitive, but not affective empathy improves during growth | [ | ||
| Egoistic functioning and acceptance of social deviant behaviour | [ | ||
| Positive labelling of aggression and acceptance of social deviant behaviour | [ | ||
| Reward sensitivity | Reward sensitivity ↑ Impulse inhibition ↓ Punishment avoidance ↓ | [ | |
| Emotional reactivity | Emotional reactivity ↓ | [ | |
| Self-reported arousal ↓ | [ | [ | |
| Emotion recognition | Recognition of fear ↓ | [ | |
| Recognition of sadness ↓ | [ |
↑, increased in the presence of high CU traits; ↓, decreased in the presence of high CU traits, =, no differences between high CU traits and control; ?, results inconsistent
Treatment response in youth with conduct problems moderated by the presence of CU traits
| Reference |
| Age (years) | % male | Diagnosis | Measure | Treatment type | Clinical improvement on behaviour | Length of treatment | Treatment compliance | Follow-up after treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 248 | 12–14 | 100 | Conduct problems | PCL:YV | Residential treatment for adjudicated youth with severe conduct problems | High CU = low CU | |||
| [ | 69 | 11–17 | 60 | Conduct problems | APSD mCPS | Juvenile diversion program | Program failure → high CU > low CU | Rearrest at 1 year → high CU > low CU | ||
| [ | 70 | 6–13 | 34.3 | ODD or CD and ADHD (77.1 %) No Dx (22.9 %) | APSD | Summer treatment program | Social skills and problem solving → high CU < low CU | Negative behaviours in time-out → high CU < low CU | ||
| [ | 56 | 4–8 | n.i. | ODD (and conduct probems; and secondary ADHD) | APSD | Parent training | Disciplinary measures → high CU < low CU | Treatment sessions → high CU > low CU | Outcome at 6 months after treatment → high CU < low CU | |
| [ | 56 | 4–8 | n.i. | ODD (and conduct probems; and secondary ADHD) | APSD | Parent training | In stable-high CU group → most severe conduct problems at 6 months | |||
| [ | 177 | 6–11 | ODD or CD (and ADHD) | APSD | Modular treatment at (1) outpatient clinic, (2) at home and school and (3) treatment as usual | High CU = low CU | High CU = low CU | |||
| [ | 38 | 6–14 | 73.7 | ODD/CD | APSD ICU | 6-month therapeutic program including cognitive behavior programs | High CU < low CU | |||
| [ | 64 | 15–19 | 100 | Substance abuse | PCL:YV | Substance abuse program for adjudicated adolescents | High CU < low CU | High CU < low CU | Rearrest rate → high CU > low CU ( | |
| [ | 85 | 11–18 | 100 | Conduct problems | PCL:YV APSD mCPS | Residential treatment for adjudicated youth | Physical incidents → High CU > low CU (APSD; mCPS) Back to lower level of treatment → high CU > low CU (mCPS) | Days of treatment to reach next level → high CU > low CU (mCPS) high CU = low CU (APSD) | ||
| [ | 100 | 7–17 | 66 | ODD or CD (68 %) Other Dx (32 %) | APSD | Psychiatric hospitalization | Length of treatment → high CU > low CU | |||
| [ | 37 | 7–13 | 78.4 | ADHD/ODD (43.2 %) ADHD/CD (56.8 %) | APSD | RCT: BT + Placebo vs. BT + MPH | BT + Placebo → high CU < low CU BT + MPH → high CU = low CU | Compliance → high CU < low CU (marginally) |
RCT randomized controlled trial, BT behaviour therapy, MPH methylphenidate, ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, CD conduct disorder, Dx diagnosis, ODD oppositional-defiant disorder, n.i. no information given, PCL:YV Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version [29], APSD Antisocial Process Screening Device [30], mCPS modified Child Psychopathy Scale [232]