| Literature DB >> 32964335 |
Maria E Loades1,2, Rebecca Read3, Lucie Smith3, Nina T Higson-Sweeney3, Amanda Laffan4, Paul Stallard5, David Kessler6, Esther Crawley6,4.
Abstract
Adolescents with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) appear to be more likely to experience anxiety and/or depression using Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs). However, we do not know how accurate these are at detecting problems in this patient group given the primary symptom of fatigue. We aimed to accurately determine the prevalence of anxiety/depression using gold-standard diagnostic interviews and evaluate the accuracy of PROMs measuring mood disorders in this patient group. We conducted a cross-sectional epidemiological study in a specialist tertiary paediatric CFS/ME service, England. The participants were164 12-18-year olds with clinician confirmed CFS/ME and their parents. The measures were a semi-structured diagnostic interview, the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia, K-SADS, and questionnaires (Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale, RCADS; Spence Children's Anxiety Scale, SCAS; Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, HADS). Parents completed the RCADS-P. 35% met the criteria for at least one common mental health problem. 20% had major depressive disorder, and 27% an anxiety disorder, with social anxiety and generalised anxiety being the most common. There was high co-morbidity, with 61% of those who were depressed also having at least one anxiety disorder. The questionnaires were moderately accurate (AUC > 0.7) at detecting clinically significant anxiety/depression, although only the RCADS-anxiety reached the predefined 0.8 sensitivity, 0.7 specificity target. Mental health problems are particularly common amongst adolescents with CFS/ME. Most screening tools were not sufficiently accurate in detecting clinically significant anxiety and depression, so these should be used with care in combination with thorough psychological/psychiatric assessment.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; CFS; Depression; Mood; Prevalence; Screeni
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32964335 PMCID: PMC8558286 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-020-01646-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Fig. 1Consort diagram showing number of participants at each stage of recruitment
Characteristics of the sample
| Gender | |
| Male | 49 (29.9%) |
| Female | 115 (70.1%) |
| Ethnic origin | |
| White British | 146 (89.0%) |
| Unspecified | 10 (6.1%) |
| Other White | 6 (3.7%) |
| Other British | 1 (0.6%) |
| Pakistani | 1 (0.6%) |
CFQ Chalder Fatigue Questionnaire, HADS-A Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale-Anxiety, HADS-D Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale-Depression, RCADS-A Revised Children’s Anxiety and Depression Scale-Any Anxiety, RCADS-D Revised Children’s Anxiety and Depression Scale-Depression, SCAS Spence Children’s Anxiety Scale, SF36PFS Short Form 36 Physical Functioning Subscale
Number of participants meeting DSM-5 diagnostic criteria on the KSADS
| Disorder | Participants who received diagnosis— |
|---|---|
| Major depressive disorder | 33 (20.1) |
| Any anxiety disorder | 45 (27.4) |
| Panic | 6 (3.7) |
| Agoraphobia | 4 (2.4) |
| Separation anxiety | 1 (0.6) |
| Social anxiety | 19 (11.6) |
| Phobia | 14 (8.5) |
| Generalised anxiety disorder (GAD) | 17 (10.4) |
| Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD)a | 3 (1.8) |
| Eating disorder | 0 |
| Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)a | 1 (0.6) |
aOCD was included as an anxiety disorder, but PTSD was not, as this is consistent with the PROMs used
Frequency of threshold symptoms of depression on the KSADS in those diagnosed with Major depressive disorder (MDD)—data shown as N (%)
| DSM symptom | Yes |
|---|---|
| Depressed mood | 23 (69.7) |
| Irritable mood | 21 (63.6) |
| Anhedonia | 18 (54.5) |
| Appetite/weight change | 17 (51.5) |
| Insomnia/hypersomnia | 21 (63.6) |
| Psychomotor agitation/retardation | 23 (69.7) |
| Fatiguea | 30 (90.9) |
| Feelings of worthlessness/excessive or inappropriate guilt | 13 (39.4) |
| Reduced concentration/slowed thinking/indecisiveness | 29 (87.9) |
| Recurrent thoughts of death/suicidal ideation/suicide attempt | 6 (18.2) |
aFatigue was scored as threshold only if it was perceived to be linked to mood by (1) becoming more prominent at the onset of the low mood episode and/or (2) tending to be worse when mood was worse
ROC analysis for PROMs
| Measure | AUC | SE of AUC | 95% CI for AUC | Optimum threshold for diagnosis | Sensitivity | Specificity | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adolescent self-reported measures | ||||||||
| Depression (MDD) | RCADS-D raw score | 0.789 | 0.0464 | 0.690–0.869 | 6.238 | > 14 > 15 | 92.00 72.00 | 59.38 68.75 |
| RCADS-D | 0.787 | 0.0485 | 0.685–0.869 | 5.929 | > 68 > 69 | 80.00 72.00 | 63.33 66.67 | |
| HADS-D | 0.714 | 0.0425 | 0.636–0.783 | 5.032 | > 7 > 8 | 80.65 67.74 | 55.20 61.60 | |
| Anxiety (any anxiety disorder diagnosis) | RCADS-A (37 item) raw score | 0.879 | 0.0357 | 0.792–0.938 | 10.602 | |||
| RCADS-A (37 item) | 0.889 | 0.0347 | 0.802–0.947 | 11.221 | ||||
| RCADS-A (15 item) raw score | 0.890 | 0.0337 | 0.806–0.946 | 11.582 | ||||
| RCADS-A (15 item) | 0.889 | 0.0347 | 0.802–0.947 | 11.221 | ||||
| HADS-A | 0.774 | 0.0403 | 0.700–0.837 | 6.795 | > 9 > 10 | 83.33 71.43 | 60.18 68.14 | |
| SCAS | 0.744 | 0.0449 | 0.665–0.814 | 5.438 | > 37 > 39 | 76.32 71.05 | 70.48 76.19 | |
| Parent informant-reported measures | ||||||||
| Depression (MDD) | RCADSP-D raw score | 0.780 | 0.0517 | 0.688–0.869 | 5.582 | > 15 | 69.6 | 79.7 |
| RCADSP D | 0.787 | 0.0485 | 0.685–0.869 | 5.929 | > 68 | 80 | 63.33 | |
| Anxiety (any anxiety disorder diagnosis) | RCADSP-A (37 item) | 0.858 | 0.0417 | 0.765–0.924 | 8.565 | |||
| RCADSP-A (37 item) | 0.858 | 0.0438 | 0.762–0.925 | 8.162 | ||||
| RCADSP-A (15 item) | 0.780 | 0.0517 | 0.765–0.922 | 8.449 | ||||
| RCADSP-A (15 item) | 0.861 | 0.0421 | 0.767–0.928 | 8.572 | ||||
Bold indicates that the minimum required 0.8 sensitivity/0.7 specificity criterion is met by this threshold score
Fig. 2Receiver operating curves for depression measures
Fig. 3Receiver operating curves for anxiety measures