| Literature DB >> 29754591 |
Anna C Barbano1, Willem F van der Mei1, Richard A Bryant2, Douglas L Delahanty3, Terri A deRoon-Cassini4, Yutaka J Matsuoka5, Miranda Olff6, Wei Qi1, Andrew Ratanatharathorn7, Ulrich Schnyder8, Soraya Seedat9, Ronald C Kessler10, Karestan C Koenen11, Arieh Y Shalev1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Projected changes to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) diagnostic criteria in the upcoming International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-11 may affect the prevalence and severity of identified cases. This study examined differences in rates, severity, and overlap of diagnoses using ICD-10 and ICD-11 PTSD diagnostic criteria during consecutive assessments of recent survivors of traumatic events.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; ICD-10; ICD-11; individual participant-level data; longitudinal; post-traumatic stress disorder
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29754591 PMCID: PMC6331687 DOI: 10.1017/S0033291718001101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Med ISSN: 0033-2917 Impact factor: 7.723
Participating studies’ design, sample size, and follow-up periods
| Study | Study design | Study duration | Country | Sample size | Sample size ( | Sample size ( | Trauma type (% MVA, OA, IV) | Last follow-up | Number of PTSD assessments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hepp | Observational | 1995–1997 | Switzerland | 121 | 121 | 109 | 60.9%, 39.1%, 0.0% | 3 years | 4 |
| Shalev | Observational | 1995–1998 | Israel | 222 | 208 | 41 | 84.3%, 8.1%, 7.6% | 4 months | 2 |
| Bonne | Observational | 1997–1998 | Israel | 43 | 0 | 43 | 79.1%, 4.6%, 16.3% | 6 months | 1 |
| Jenewein | Observational | 1999–2000 | Switzerland | 323 | 323 | 255 | 30.4%, 69.6%, 0.0% | 6 months | 2 |
| Irish | Observational | 2000–2004 | USA | 263 | 183 | 227 | 100.0%, 0.0%, 0.0% | 1 year | 3 |
| Bryant | Observational | 2004–2006 | Australia | 1084 | 1082 | 828 | 65.1%, 29.4%, 5.5% | 1 year | 3 |
| Shalev | Observational | 2005–2006 | Israel | 169 | 118 | 154 | 80.8%, 6.4%, 12.8% | 4 months | 2 |
| Shalev | Intervention | 2003–2007 | Israel | 732 | 732 | 528 | 82.0%, 5.8%, 12.2% | 3 years | 4 |
| Matsuoka | Observational | 2004–2008 | Japan | 171 | 155 | 108 | 100.0%, 0.0%, 0.0% | 1.5 years | 4 |
| Mouthaan | Observational | 2005–2009 | The Netherlands | 676 | 478 | 546 | 70.8%, 18.8%, 10.4% | 1 year | 4 |
| Frijling | Intervention | 2012–2015 | The Netherlands | 54 | 54 | 42 | 65.7%, 30.5%, 3.8% | 6 months | 4 |
Studies are listed by chronological order of the end year, from earliest to most recent studies. If two studies ended in the same year, alphabetic order of the principal investigator's last name is used.
Sample sizes reflect the number of participants used in the current analyses (rather than the total number of participants in the original studies).
MVA, motor vehicle accident; OA, other accident; IV, interpersonal violence.
Unpublished at the time of data transfer.
CAPS items and corresponding ICD-10 and ICD-11 diagnostic criteria
| CAPS item | ICD-10 | ICD-11 |
|---|---|---|
| B1. Recurrent, intrusive, distressing recollections, including images, thoughts, or perceptions of the event | X | (X)* |
| B2. Recurrent, distressing dreams of the event | X | X |
| B3. Acting or feeling as if the traumatic event were recurring (dissociative flashback episodes) | X | X |
| B4. Intense psychological distress at exposure to internal or external reminders of the event | X | |
| B5. Physiological reactivity on exposure to internal or external reminders of the event | X | |
| C1. Efforts to avoid thoughts, feelings, or conversations associated with the event | X | X |
| C2. Efforts to avoid activities, places, or people associated with the event | X | X |
| C3. Inability to recall an important aspect of the event | X | |
| C4. Markedly diminished interest or participation in significant activities | ||
| C5. Feeling of detachment or estrangement from others | ||
| C6. Restricted range of affect (e.g. unable to have loving feelings) | ||
| C7. Sense of foreshortened future | ||
| D1. Difficulty falling or staying asleep | X | |
| D2. Irritability or outbursts of anger | X | |
| D3. Difficulty concentrating | X | |
| D4. Hypervigilance | X | X |
| D5. Exaggerated startle response | X | X |
*Following previous recommendations (Brewin, 2013), we used six disorder-defining symptom criteria for ICD-11 in primary analyses. However, in order to test an extended set of CAPS-derived ICD-11 diagnostic identifiers, item B1 was used in an auxiliary sensitivity analysis.
Fig. 1.Overlap of ICD-10 and ICD-11 diagnoses at four time intervals following trauma.
CAPS severity by PTSD group and time interval
| No PTSD mean ± | 95% (CI) | ICD-10 mean ± | 95% (CI) | ICD-11 mean ± | 95% (CI) | ICD-10-only mean ± | 95% (CI) | ICD-10-only | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–60 Days | |||||||||
| CAPS score | 16.64 ± 13.70 | (16.11–17.17) | 63.23 ± 20.55 | (61.85–64.60) | 71.09 ± 20.65 | (69.17–73.01) | 54.11 ± 17.03 | (52.48–55.73) | <0.0001 |
| 22–60 Days | |||||||||
| CAPS score | 17.63 ± 14.10 | (16.80–18.47) | 62.90 ± 20.51 | (60.83–64.97) | 68.83 ± 21.87 | (65.90–71.78) | 54.14 ± 15.99 | (51.71–56.57) | <0.0001 |
| 122–456 Days | |||||||||
| CAPS score | 13.28 ± 13.50 | (12.75–13.82) | 59.26 ± 21.15 | (57.19–61.32) | 67.93 ± 22.27 | (64.81–71.05) | 50.31 ± 16.31 | (48.10–52.51) | <0.0001 |
| 122–270 Days | |||||||||
| CAPS score | 13.34 ± 13.09 | (12.72–13.97) | 56.55 ± 20.83 | (54.29–58.81) | 65.87 ± 22.59 | (62.10–69.63) | 49.13 ± 16.54 | (46.77–51.49) | <0.0001 |
| 271–456 Days | |||||||||
| CAPS score | 13.45 ± 13.35 | (12.73–14.17) | 62.70 ± 20.90 | (59.56–65.85) | 71.33 ± 21.07 | (66.94–75.72) | 52.26 ± 15.55 | (48.84–55.67) | <0.0001 |
The p values reflect significance levels for comparisons between ICD-10-only and ICD-11 diagnoses.
Fig. 2.Studies’ heterogeneity at two time intervals.