| Literature DB >> 25237518 |
Frank Röhricht1, Thomas Elanjithara2.
Abstract
Aims and method Service utilisation and clinical outcomes of a newly developed specialist primary-secondary care liaison clinic for patients with medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) were evaluated in a cross-sectional and feasibility pilot study. The impact of body-oriented psychological therapy (BOPT) was explored in a small cohort of patients with an identified somatoform disorder. Results Of 147 consecutive referrals, 113 patients engaged with the assessment process. Of patients with MUS, 42% (n = 45) had a primary diagnosis of somatoform disorder, 36% (n = 38) depressive disorder, and depressive symptoms (even subsyndromal) mediated the effect of somatic symptoms. A marked variation of presenting complaints and service utilisation across ethnic groups was noted. A significant reduction in somatic symptom levels and service utilisation was achieved for patients undergoing BOPT. Clinical implications A high proportion of patients with MUS have undiagnosed and therefore untreated mental disorders. New and locally derived collaborative care models of active engagement in primary care settings are required. Patients with somatoform disorder may benefit from BOPT; this requires further evaluation in adequately powered clinical trials.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25237518 PMCID: PMC4115375 DOI: 10.1192/pb.bp.112.040733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatr Bull (2014) ISSN: 2053-4868
Fig 1Main presenting complaint for somatoform and depressive disorder diagnosis groups.
Diagnostic group characteristics
| All patients | Somatoform | Depressive | Dissociative | Anxiety | Other | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Comorbidity | Depressive disorder | Anxiety disorder | Depressive disorder | Depressive disorder | Depressive disorder | |
| 106 | 45 (42.5) | 38 (35.8) | 4 (3.8) | 8 (7.5) | 11 (10.4) | |
| Age, years: mean (s.d.) | 41 (9.1) | 48 (8.9) | 30.7 (7) | 42.3 (9.5) | 39.5 (9) | |
| Gender, | Male 34 (32), female 72 (68) | Male 13 (28.9), female 32 (71.1) | Male 11 (28.9), female 27 (71.1) | Male 1 (25), female 3 (75) | Male 1 (12.5), female 7 (87.5) | Male 8 (72.7) |
| PHQ-15, mean (s.d.) | 17.6 (6.7) | 18.2 (7.1) | 18.5 (6.4) | 10.6 (4.9) | 13.2 (2.4) | 14.4 (8.4) |
| HRSD total, mean (s.d.) | 18.4 (8.4) | 16 (8.3) | 22 (6) | 15 (2) | 7 (3.5) | 19 (11) |
| SOMS-7 total, mean (s.d.) | 52.7 (26.3) | 49 (29) | 53 (21) | 38 (12) | 36 (11) | 66 (22) |
| GAF, mean (s.d.) | 54.3 (13.4) | 54.4 (15) | 52.3 (12.5) | 60 (15) | 85 (10) | 48 (18) |
GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning; HRSD, Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression; PHQ-15, Patient Health Questionnaire; SOMS-7, Screening for Somatoform Symptoms; s.d. = standard deviation.
ICD-10 code primary diagnosis.
Post hoc test of mean difference between somatoform disorder and depression groups, P<0.01.
Post hoc test of mean difference between depression and dissociative disorder groups, P<0.01.
Comparison between other diagnostic group and rest of the cohort together, Pearson’s χ2 = 10, d.f. = 1, P<0.05.
Post hoc test of mean difference between somatoform disorder and depression groups, P<0.05.
Body-oriented psychological therapy group outcomes
| Outcome measures | Before treatment | 3 months post-treatment | Paired-sample |
|---|---|---|---|
| HRSD total | 19 (7.7) | 18.2 (7.9) | |
| PHQ-15 total | 17.7 (3.3) | 15.1 (4.9) | |
| GP attendance | 17.8 (10) | 10.5 (7.8) | |
| Specialist referrals | 3.4 (2) | 1.2 (1.5) | |
| A&E attendance | 2.5 (1.9) | 0.9 (0.7) |
A&E, accident and emergency; GP, general practice; HRSD, Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression; PHQ-15, Patient Health Questionnaire; n.s., not significant.