| Literature DB >> 26408026 |
Randy Stinchfield1, John McCready2, Nigel E Turner3, Susana Jimenez-Murcia4,5, Nancy M Petry6, Jon Grant7, John Welte8, Heather Chapman9, Ken C Winters10.
Abstract
The DSM-5 was published in 2013 and it included two substantive revisions for gambling disorder (GD). These changes are the reduction in the threshold from five to four criteria and elimination of the illegal activities criterion. The purpose of this study was to twofold. First, to assess the reliability, validity and classification accuracy of the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for GD. Second, to compare the DSM-5-DSM-IV on reliability, validity, and classification accuracy, including an examination of the effect of the elimination of the illegal acts criterion on diagnostic accuracy. To compare DSM-5 and DSM-IV, eight datasets from three different countries (Canada, USA, and Spain; total N = 3247) were used. All datasets were based on similar research methods. Participants were recruited from outpatient gambling treatment services to represent the group with a GD and from the community to represent the group without a GD. All participants were administered a standardized measure of diagnostic criteria. The DSM-5 yielded satisfactory reliability, validity and classification accuracy. In comparing the DSM-5 to the DSM-IV, most comparisons of reliability, validity and classification accuracy showed more similarities than differences. There was evidence of modest improvements in classification accuracy for DSM-5 over DSM-IV, particularly in reduction of false negative errors. This reduction in false negative errors was largely a function of lowering the cut score from five to four and this revision is an improvement over DSM-IV. From a statistical standpoint, eliminating the illegal acts criterion did not make a significant impact on diagnostic accuracy. From a clinical standpoint, illegal acts can still be addressed in the context of the DSM-5 criterion of lying to others.Entities:
Keywords: Classification accuracy; DSM-5; DSM-IV; Diagnosis; Gambling disorder
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26408026 PMCID: PMC4993799 DOI: 10.1007/s10899-015-9573-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gambl Stud ISSN: 1050-5350
Source, demographics and group membership sample size for each dataset
| Dataset | Gender | Age | Sample size by group |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Stinchfield et al. ( | 208 (49) | 18–75 | 200 (47) |
| 214 (51) | 44.3 | 222 (53) | |
| (2) Stinchfield et al. ( | 91 (43) | 18–68 | 92 (43) |
| 121 (57) | 42.2 | 120 (57) | |
| (3) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | 252 (90) | 17–79 | 232 (82) |
| 28 (10) | 43.6 | 50 (18) | |
| (4) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | 522 (92) | 17–88 | 286 (50) |
| 47 (8) | 40 | 283 (50) | |
| (5) Stinchfield et al. ( | 51 (38 %) | 20–63 | 91 (67) |
| 84 (62 %) | 42 | 44 (33) | |
| (6) Stinchfield et al. ( | 71 (41) | 18–67 | 150 (86) |
| 104 (59) | 42 | 25 (14) | |
| (7) Stinchfield et al. ( | 170 (44) | 19–78 | 121 (31) |
| 196 (50) | 44 | 269 (69) | |
| (8) Stinchfield ( | 506 (48) | 18–90 | 259 (24) |
| 556 (52) | 44 | 803 (76) |
Convergent and discriminant validity of DSM-IV and DSM-5
| Dataset | Convergent and discriminant validity variable | DSM-IV | DSM-5 |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Stinchfield et al. ( | Convergent validity variables | ||
| SOGS | .93 | .93 | |
| PGSI | .95 | .95 | |
| GA-20 | .95 | .95 | |
| Gambling frequency | .54 | .54 | |
| Money spent gambling | .25 | .25 | |
| Time spent gambling | .44 | .43 | |
| Days gambling in past month | .40 | .39 | |
| Money spent gambling in a typical month | .24 | .24 | |
| Discriminant validity variables | |||
| Sex | .17 | .17 | |
| Age | .15 | .15 | |
| Race | .12 | .11 | |
| Marital status | .23 | .22 | |
| Educational level | −.27 | −.26 | |
| Employment status | −.25 | −.23 | |
| Personal income | −.06 | −.05 | |
| (2) Stinchfield et al. ( | Convergent validity variables | ||
| SOGS | .95 | .94 | |
| PGSI | .96 | .96 | |
| GA-20 | .96 | .96 | |
| Gambling frequency | .46 | .46 | |
| Money spent gambling | .42 | .40 | |
| Time spent gambling | .21 | .21 | |
| Days gambling in past month | .60 | .59 | |
| Money spent gambling in a typical month | .44 | .42 | |
| Discriminant validity variables | |||
| Sex | −.01 | −.01 | |
| Age | .40 | .40 | |
| Race | .18 | .18 | |
| Marital status | .18 | .18 | |
| Educational level | −.17 | −.17 | |
| Employment status | −.13 | −.14 | |
| Personal income | .09 | .08 | |
| Household income | .00 | −.02 | |
| (3) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | Convergent validity variables | ||
| SOGS | .86 | .86 | |
| PGSI | .89 | .89 | |
| GA-20 | .90 | .89 | |
| Gambling frequency | .50 | .49 | |
| Days gambling in past month | .35 | .34 | |
| Discriminant validity variables | |||
| Sex | −.03 | −.01 | |
| Age | −.27 | −.26 | |
| Race | .11 | .10 | |
| Marital status | .11 | .10 | |
| Educational level | .00 | −.02 | |
| Employment status | .15 | .14 | |
| Personal income | −.29 | −.28 | |
| (4) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | Convergent validity variables | ||
| Gambling frequency | .50 | .50 | |
| Largest amount gambled in 1 day | .85 | .85 | |
| SOGS | .95 | .95 | |
| Discriminant validity variables | |||
| Sex | .00 | .00 | |
| Age | −.01 | .00 | |
| Marital status | −.11 | −.11 | |
| Educational level | −.21 | −.21 | |
| Employment status | .14 | .14 | |
| (5) Stinchfield et al. ( | Convergent validity variables | ||
| SOGS | .93 | .92 | |
| Gambling frequency | .57 | .57 | |
| Number of days gambling in past 30 days | .53 | .51 | |
| Largest amount gambled in 1 day | .22 | .21 | |
| Gambling debt from past 12 months | .36 | .36 | |
| Number of financial problems | .69 | .67 | |
| Discriminant validity variables | |||
| Gender | .28 | .27 | |
| Age | .21 | .23 | |
| Marital status | .18 | .18 | |
| Level of education | −.35 | −.36 | |
| Employment status | −.13 | −.14 | |
| Personal income | −.11 | −.12 | |
| (6) Stinchfield et al. ( | Convergent validity variables | ||
| SOGS | .88 | .87 | |
| Gambling frequency | .50 | .50 | |
| Number of financial problems | .65 | .62 | |
| Discriminant validity variables | |||
| Gender | .11 | .10 | |
| Age | .04 | .04 | |
| Race | .05 | .05 | |
| Marital status | .19 | .16 | |
| Level of education | .02 | .00 | |
| Employment status | .20 | .18 | |
| Personal income | .20 | .18 | |
| (7) Stinchfield et al. ( | Convergent validity variables | ||
| SOGS | .97 | .97 | |
| Gambling frequency | .71 | .71 | |
| Largest amount gambled in 1 day | .65 | .66 | |
| Discriminant validity variables | |||
| Gender | −.08 | −.08 | |
| Age | −.18 | −.18 | |
| Marital status | .05 | .05 | |
| Level of education | −.05 | −.06 | |
| Employment status | −.07 | −.07 | |
| Personal income | −.34 | −.34 | |
| (8) Stinchfield ( | Convergent validity variables | ||
| SOGS | .97 | .97 | |
| Gambling frequency | .71 | .71 | |
| Largest amount gambled in 1 day | .65 | .65 | |
| Discriminant validity variables | |||
| Gender | −.08 | −.08 | |
| Age | −.18 | −.18 | |
| Marital status | .05 | .05 | |
| Level of education | −.05 | −.06 | |
| Employment status | −.07 | −.07 | |
| Personal income | −.34 | −.34 | |
Reliability of DSM-IV and DSM-5
| Dataset | Internal consistency | Temporal stability | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DSM-IV | DSM-IV | DSM-IV | DSM-5 | |
| (1) Stinchfield et al. ( | .95 | .95 | NA | NA |
| (2) Stinchfield et al. ( | .94 | .94 | NA | NA |
| (3) Jimenez-Murcia et al ( | .87 | .87 | NA | NA |
| (4) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | .94 | .94 | NA | NA |
| (5) Stinchfield et al. ( | .94 | .94 | .74 | .71 |
| (6) Stinchfield et al. ( | .88 | .88 | .76 | .71 |
| (7) Stinchfield et al. ( | .94 | .94 | NA | NA |
| (8) Stinchfield ( | .98 | .98 | NA | NA |
NA not available
Classification accuracy of DSM-IV and DSM-5
| Source of data | Classification indices | DSM-IV | DSM-5 |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Stinchfield et al. ( | Base rate | .47 | .47 |
| Hit rate | .95 | .94 | |
| Sensitivity | .96 | .98 | |
| Specificity | .94 | .91 | |
| FPR | .06 | .09 | |
| FNR | .04 | .02 | |
| PPP | .93 | .91 | |
| NPP | .96 | .98 | |
| (2) Stinchfield et al. ( | Base rate | .43 | .43 |
| Hit rate | .94 | .90 | |
| Sensitivity | .99 | 1.00 | |
| Specificity | .90 | .83 | |
| FPR | .10 | .17 | |
| FNR | .01 | .00 | |
| PPP | .88 | .81 | |
| NPP | .99 | 1.00 | |
| (3) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | Base rate | .82 | .82 |
| Hit rate | .81 | .90 | |
| Sensitivity | .77 | .88 | |
| Specificity | 1.00 | 1.00 | |
| FPR | 0 | 0 | |
| FNR | .23 | .13 | |
| PPP | 1.00 | 1.00 | |
| NPP | .49 | .63 | |
| (4) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | Base rate | .50 | .50 |
| Hit rate | .95 | .97 | |
| Sensitivity | .92 | .95 | |
| Specificity | .99 | .99 | |
| FPR | .01 | .01 | |
| FNR | .08 | .05 | |
| PPP | .99 | .99 | |
| NPP | .92 | .96 | |
| (5) Stinchfield et al. ( | Base rate | .33 | .33 |
| Hit rate | .95 | .95 | |
| Sensitivity | .97 | .98 | |
| Specificity | .93 | .91 | |
| FPR | .07 | .09 | |
| FNR | .03 | .02 | |
| PPP | .97 | .96 | |
| NPP | .93 | .95 | |
| (6) Stinchfield ( | Base rate | .86 | .86 |
| Hit rate | .95 | .97 | |
| Sensitivity | .95 | .97 | |
| Specificity | .96 | .96 | |
| FPR | .04 | .04 | |
| FNR | .05 | .03 | |
| PPP | .99 | .99 | |
| NPP | .77 | .86 | |
| (7) Stinchfield et al. ( | Base rate | .31 | .31 |
| Hit rate | .94 | .96 | |
| Sensitivity | .83 | .92 | |
| Specificity | .99 | .98 | |
| FPR | .01 | .02 | |
| FNR | .17 | .08 | |
| PPP | .97 | .96 | |
| NPP | .93 | .96 | |
| (8) Stinchfield ( | Base rate | .25 | .25 |
| Hit rate | .98 | .99 | |
| Sensitivity | .95 | .97 | |
| Specificity | .996 | .993 | |
| FPR | .004 | .007 | |
| FNR | .05 | .03 | |
| PPP | .99 | .98 | |
| NPP | .98 | .99 |
FPR false positive rate, FNR false negative rate, PPP positive predictive power, NPP negative predictive power (Baldessarini et al. 1983; Fleiss 1981; Friedman and Cacciola 1998)
Comparison of GD prevalence rates between DSM-IV and DSM-5
| Source of data: Investigator, date, and type of study | DSM-IV | DSM-5 | Difference in prevalence | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | z |
| |||
| (1) Stinchfield et al. ( | 205/422 = .486 | 215/422 = .509 | .023 | −.69 | .49 |
| (2) Stinchfield et al. ( | 103/212 = .486 | 113/212 = .533 | .047 | −.97 | .33 |
| (3) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | 179/282 = .635 | 203/282 = .720 | .085 | −2.16 | .03 |
| (4) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | 265/569 = .466 | 277/569 = .487 | .021 | −.71 | .48 |
| (5) Stinchfield et al. ( | 87/130 = .669 | 89/130 = .685 | .016 | −.27 | .79 |
| (6) Stinchfield ( | 144/175 = .823 | 147/175 = .840 | .017 | −.43 | .67 |
| (7) Stinchfield et al. ( | 104/390 = .267 | 116/390 = .297 | .030 | −.96 | .34 |
| (8) Stinchfield ( | 248/1059 = .234 | 256/1059 = .242 | .008 | −.41 | .68 |
Endorsement rates for illegal acts criterion in clinical and community samples and effect of absence/presence of illegal acts criterion for diagnosis of GD
| Source of data: Investigator, date, and sample size | Endorsement rate in clinical sample | Endorsement rate in community sample | Number diagnosed with GD with illegal acts criterion | Number diagnosed with GD without illegal acts criterion | Number of people no longer diagnosed with GD after illegal acts criterion was deleted |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Stinchfield et al. ( | 66/133 = .50 | 0/222 = .00 | 215 | 215 | 0 |
| (2) Stinchfield et al. ( | 52/92 = .57 | 1/120 = .01 | 113 | 113 | 0 |
| (3) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | 43/232 = .19 | 0/50 = .00 | 204 | 203 | 1 |
| (4) Jimenez-Murcia et al. ( | 53/284 = .19 | 1/283 = .004 | 277 | 277 | 0 |
| (5) Stinchfield et al. ( | 53/87 = .61 | 2/43 = .05 | 90 | 89 | 1 |
| (6) Stinchfield et al. ( | 76/150 = .51 | 0/25 = .00 | 147 | 146 | 1 |
| (7) Stinchfield et al. ( | 81/121 = .67 | 4/269 = .01 | 118 | 116 | 2 |
| (8) Stinchfield ( | 135/259 = .52 | 1/800 = .001 | 256 | 256 | 0 |
Preface to all questions: in the past 12 months…
| 1. How often have you spent a lot of time thinking about past gambling experiences, planning your next gambling activity, or thinking of ways to get money to gamble? |
| 2. How often have you needed to gamble with larger amounts of money or with larger bets in order to obtain the same feeling of excitement? |
| 3. How often have you tried to control, cut back, or stop gambling several times and were unsuccessful? For example, setting a money or time limit for yourself and then going over it |
| 4. How often have you felt restless or irritable when you tried to cut down or stop gambling? |
| 5. How often did you feel that your gambling was a way of avoiding or escaping from personal problems or a way of relieving uncomfortable emotions, such as feelings of nervousness, helplessness, guilt, anxiousness or sadness? |
| 6. After you lost money gambling how often did you return another day to get even or try to win back your losses? |
| 7. How often have you lied to family members, therapists, or others to hide your gambling from them? |
| 8. How often have you committed any illegal acts such as forgery, fraud, theft, or embezzlement to get money to gamble or to pay gambling debts? |
| 9. How often have you risked or lost a relationship with someone important to you, or a job, or career opportunity because of gambling? |
| 10. How often have you relied on others to pay your gambling debts or to pay your bills when you had financial problems caused by your gambling? |