| Literature DB >> 27176723 |
Henna Haravuori1,2, Olli Kiviruusu3, Laura Suomalainen4, Mauri Marttunen3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The proposed posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) criteria for the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) 11th revision are simpler than the criteria in ICD-10, DSM-IV or DSM-5. The aim of this study was to evaluate the ICD-11 PTSD factor structure in samples of young people, and to compare PTSD prevalence rates and diagnostic agreement between the different diagnostic systems. Possible differences in clinical characteristics of the PTSD cases identified by ICD-11, ICD-10 and DSM-IV are explored.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; DSM-IV; ICD-10; ICD-11; Mass shooting; PTSD; Posttraumatic stress disorder; Young adult
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27176723 PMCID: PMC4864920 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-0849-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Proportions of the studied subjects meeting PTSD symptom criteria and diagnoses
| DSM-IV | ICD-10 | Three-factor ICD-11 | Two-factor ICD-11 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Stressor criterion A | ||||
| A1. Traumatic event | 228 (100.0) | 228 (100.0) | 228 (100.0) | 228 (100.0) |
| A2. Emotional response | 186 (81.6) | |||
| Re-experiencing criterion B | ||||
| B1. Distressing recollections | 133 (58.3) | 133 (58.3) | ||
| B2. Distressing dreams | 117 (51.3) | 117 (51.3) | 117 (51.3) | 117 (51.3) |
| B3. Sense or reliving, illusions, hallucinations, or dissociative flashbacks | 52 (22.8) | |||
| (B3.) Dissociative flashbacks only | 44 (19.3) | 44 (19.3) | 44 (19.3) | |
| B4. Psychological reactivity | 89 (39.0) | 89 (39.0) | ||
| B5. Physiological reactivity | 62 (27.2) | |||
| Avoidance criterion C | ||||
| C1. Avoiding internal reminders | 90 (39.5) | 90 (39.5) | 90 (39.5) | 90 (39.5) |
| C2. Avoiding external reminders | 55 (24.1) | 55 (24.1) | 55 (24.1) | 55 (24.1) |
| C3. Specific amnesia | 39 (17.1) | 39 (17.1) | ||
| C4. Diminished interest | 48 (21.1) | |||
| C5. Detachment | 26 (11.4) | |||
| C6. Restricted affect | 45 (19.7) | |||
| C7. Foreshortened future | 17 (7.5) | |||
| Hyperarousal criterion D | ||||
| D1. Difficulty sleeping | 107 (46.9) | 107 (46.9) | ||
| D2. Irritability | 64 (28.1) | 64 (28.1) | ||
| D3. Difficulty concentrating | 96 (42.1) | 96 (42.1) | ||
| D4. Hypervigilance | 88 (38.6) | 88 (38.6) | 88 (38.6) | 88 (38.6) |
| D5. Exaggerated startle response | 106 (46.5) | 106 (46.5) | 106 (46.5) | 106 (46.5) |
| Criterion fulfilled | ||||
| Exposure and symptom criteria positive | 52 (22.8) |
| 66 (28.9) | 74 (32.5) |
| Exposure and symptom criteria positive with positive impairment criteria |
| 62 (27.2) |
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DSM-IV diagnosis requires stressor criterion A1 and A2 as well as 1/5 of re-experiencing symptoms, 3/7 avoidance symptoms, 2/5 hyperarousal symptoms, and impairment. ICD-10 diagnosis requires stressor criterion A1 as well as 1/4 re-experiencing symptoms, 1/2 avoidance symptoms, and specific amnesia OR 2/5 hyperarousal symptoms. ICD-11 three-factor diagnosis requires stressor criterion A1 as well as 1/2 of re-experiencing symptoms, 1/2 avoidance symptoms, 1/2 hyperarousal symptoms, and impairment. ICD-11 two-factor diagnosis requires stressor criterion A1 as well as 2/4 of re-experiencing symptoms or avoidance symptoms, 1/2 hyperarousal symptoms, and impairment
Bolded numbers indicate when the diagnostic criteria are met
Diagnostic agreement of the proposed three-factor ICD-11 PTSD criteria with DSM-IV, ICD-10 and two-factor ICD-11 PTSD criteria
| PTSD status | Three-factor ICD-11 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| yes, | no, | ||
|
| Kappa | ||
| DSM-IV | .679*** | ||
| yes, | 35 (15.4) | 8 (3.5) | |
| no, | 16 (7.0) | 169 (74.1) | |
| ICD-10 | .653*** | ||
| yes, | 51 (22.4) | 34 (14.9) | |
| no, | 0 (0.0) | 143 (62.7) | |
| ICD-10 with impairment | .871*** | ||
| yes, | 51 (22.4) | 11 (4.8) | |
| no, | 0 (0.0) | 166 (72.8) | |
| Two-factor ICD-11 | .939*** | ||
| yes, | 51 (22.4) | 5 (2.2) | |
| no, | 0 (0.0) | 172 (75.4) | |
***p < 0.001
Demographics and clinical characteristics of the interviewed sample and the PTSD cases identified by DSM-IV, ICD-10 and the proposed ICD-11 two- and three factor models
| PTSD cases by diagnostic system | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WHOLE SAMPLE | DSM-IV | ICD-10 | Two-factor ICD-11 | Three-factor ICD-11 | |||||
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| Sex, | 7.30** | 10.65** | 7.04** | 7.59** | |||||
| Male | 44 (19.3) | 2 (4.7) | 7 (8.2) | 4 (7.1) | 3 (5.9) | ||||
| Female | 184 (80.7) | 41 (95.3) | 78 (91.8) | 52 (92.9) | 48 (94.1) | ||||
| Age, M (SD) | 17.6 (3.7) | 17.2 (3.8) | .48 | 17.6 (3.9) | .04 | 17.6 (3.8) | .00 | 17.3 (3.8) | .35 |
| Range 12–30 years | |||||||||
| Study group, | .02 | .79 | .58 | .01 | |||||
| Jokela | 124 (54.4) | 23 (53.5) | 43 (50.6) | 28 (50.0) | 28 (54.9) | ||||
| Kauhajoki | 104 (45.6) | 20 (46.5) | 42 (49.4) | 28 (50.0) | 23 (45.1) | ||||
| Exposure, | 20.40*** | 16.51** | 19.89** | 20.93*** | |||||
| Mild-to-moderate | 55 (24.1) | 5 (11.6) | 10 (11.8) | 4 (7.1) | 3 (5.9) | ||||
| Significant | 124 (54.4) | 18 (41.9) | 48 (56.5) | 30 (53.6) | 27 (52.9) | ||||
| Severe-to-extreme | 49 (21.5) | 20 (46.5) | 27 (31.8) | 22 (39.3) | 21 (41.2) | ||||
| GAS, M (SD) | 75.9 (11.1) | 64.1 (11.6) | 78.96*** | 69.1 (11.8) | 65.18*** | 67.2 (12.0) | 53.86*** | 66.8 (11.8) | 51.84*** |
| GHQ-12, M (SD)b | 3.3 (3.3) | 6.5 (3.5) | 62.39*** | 4.7 (3.6) | 29.00*** | 6.1 (3.4) | 66.64*** | 5.9 (3.5) | 46.35*** |
| IES-22, M (SD)b | 29.2 (23.7) | 53.4 (25.0) | 68.60*** | 44.8 (24.9) | 73.37*** | 53.1 (22.2) | 104.83*** | 53.0 (23.0) | 85.04*** |
| Depression, | 20 (8.8) | 8 (18.6) | 6.40* | 15 (17.6) | 13.34*** | 11 (19.6) | 10.96** | 10 (19.6) | 9.64** |
| Anxiety disorder, | 23 (10.1) | 7 (16.3) | 2.24 | 12 (14.1) | 2.43 | 7 (12.5) | .48 | 6 (11.8) | .20 |
| Alcohol problem use, | 29 (12.8) | 6 (14.0) | .07 | 10 (11.8) | .13 | 8 (14.5) | .20 | 8 (15.7) | .50 |
aPTSD vs. no PTSD within the diagnostic classification system
breported four months after the incident
*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001