scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Journal ArticleDOI

Mixed anxiety–depression in a 1 year follow-up study: shift to other diagnoses or remission?

TL;DR: While depressive disorders and anxiety disorders showed relatively high stability, MAD cannot be seen as a stable diagnosis: most of MAD patients remit; many of them shift to other diagnoses than depression or anxiety.
About: This article is published in Journal of Affective Disorders.The article was published on 2004-04-01 and is currently open access. It has received 47 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Anxiety disorder & Anxiety.

Summary (2 min read)

1. Introduction

  • A substantial number of patients suffer from depressive and anxiety symptoms without meeting official criteria of either ICD-10 or DSM-IV depressive and/or anxiety disorders (Zinbarg et al., 1994; Stein et al., 1995; see Katon and Roy-Byrne, 1991; Wittchen and Essau, 1993; Boulenger et al., 1997 for reviews).
  • To provide a clinical definition for those patients the ICD-10 (WHO, 1992) introduced the concept of mixed anxiety–depression disorder (MAD).
  • The status of the ICD-10-MAD diagnosis — in relation to depressive and anxiety disorders — needs further research.
  • Data were collected within the scope of the World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborative Study on ‘Psychological Problems in General Health Care’, which is a cross-sectional and prospectivelongitudinal international study (Sartorius et al., 1993; Üstün and Sartorius, 1995).

2. Methods

  • From the sample of the WHO Collaborative Study1 patients meeting ICD-10 criteria for a depressive episode, dysthymia, agoraphobia, panic disorder, generalised anxiety disorder (GAD), comorbid depressive and anxiety disorder, and MAD at the baseline assessment were identified and reassessed after 12 months.
  • Patients older than 65 years were excluded.
  • ICD-10 diagnoses were obtained using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview- Primary Health Care Version (CIDI-PHC), a modification of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI; Division of Mental Health, 1990).
  • The interviewer–observer reliability coefficient (across different centres) of the CIDI-PHC was 0.92 overall, ranging between 0.81 to 1.0 on the item level.
  • Single comparisons within the whole contingency table were carried out (Jesdinsky, 1968).

3.1. Sample characteristics

  • A total of 1856 patients were identified to meet ICD- 10 criteria for a depressive episode, dysthymia, agoraphobia, panic disorder, GAD, comorbid anxiety and depressive disorder, and MAD at the baseline diagnostic assessment.
  • A total of 673 (36.3%) did not participate in the follow-up examination because they had moved and were not found anymore, because of refusal or because of death.
  • The study sample of the baseline assessment is described in Table 1.

3.2. Twelve month outcome

  • MAD, depressive episodes, dysthymia, agoraphobia, panic disorder only, GAD, and comorbid depressive and anxiety disorder showed a substantial improvement (average remission rate: 41.9%).
  • 7% of all patients had exactly the same ICD- 10-diagnosis at both assessments with MAD showing the lowest rate of stable diagnoses (1.2%).
  • The majority of MAD patients remitted or shifted to other (non-depressive and non-anxiety) diagnoses (see Table 2).
  • There were no differences regarding follow-up depression rates between patients with a depressive disorder and comorbid patients [χ2 = 0.01, df =1, not significant (n.s.)] and no significant differences regarding follow-up anxiety rates between patients with an anxiety disorder and comorbid patients at baseline (χ2 = 0.9065, df =1, n.s.).

4. Discussion

  • The data presented herein did not show temporal stability of MAD as compared to depressive and anxiety disorders.
  • The authors results are in contrast to the findings of Usall and Marquez (1999) who concluded that MAD is a stable diagnosis.
  • These authors applied DSM-IV research criteria so that their results cannot be directly compared with their findings.

4.1. Implications

  • ICD-10 MAD criteria are relatively vague compared to DSM-IV research criteria (APA, 1994) clearly specifying symptoms necessary for the MAD diagnosis.
  • For such a revision several possibilities are conceivable: Preskorn and Fast (1993) argue against a MAD diagnosis and are in favour of a careful psychiatric assessment resulting in either depression or anxiety diagnoses.
  • Either way, the present study shows that an assiduous psychiatric assessment incorporating longitudinal information (i.e., medical history and follow-up assessments) is indispensable.
  • Of course, the question arises whether the ICD-10 classification lives up to rather minor disorders frequently seen in primary care and whether an appropriate ICD-10 diagnosis suffices.
  • Especially in minor disorders, where psychotherapeutical approaches play an important role, the formulation of an individual disease model and an according treatment is much more determining.

4.2. Limitations

  • Depressive and anxiety disorders might be more severe disorders than MAD, therefore, more easily remitting.
  • Nevertheless, the remission rates for the other disorders were also quite high.
  • Moreover, GAD which also can be seen as relatively mild psychiatric condition shows a high degree of chronicity (Mancuso et al., 1993; Schweizer, 1995; Woodman et al., 1999).
  • In older patients with longer illness histories a MAD diagnosis might not be so easily corrected.
  • Other limitations are lacking information regarding treatment and remissions and relapses during the follow-up.

Did you find this useful? Give us your feedback

Citations
More filters
01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: MAD appears to be a viable diagnostic category for youth though it is recommended that future revisions of the DSM emphasize somewhat different criteria for this diagnosis.
Abstract: Background: Mixed anxiety depression (MAD) is a provisional diagnosis in the DSM-IV. This study determined whether MAD represents a discrete category thereby evaluating the validity of MAD as a diagnostic entity. Methods: Taxometric analyses and mixture modeling were used to discern whether MAD indicators constitute a distinct psychopathological category (i.e., a taxon) in a large school-based sample of adolescents (N=706). Results: Each taxometric procedure (MAXCOV, MAMBAC) identified a taxon with a prevalence of 13%±2%. A non-taxometric procedure (multivariate mixture modeling) also supported the existence of a taxon with a prevalence of 12%. Bootstrapping procedures were used to construct a measure of MAD (i.e., MAD-T). Scale construction suggested that MAD may be best represented by 12 criteria that largely overlap with the DSM-IV, though some modifications were suggested. Examination of the construct validity of the MAD taxon indicated that it is associated mood and anxiety symptoms. Taxon membership was predictive of the development of mood and anxiety disorders over a 14-month longitudinal follow-up. Limitations: This category should be studied in other populations including adult samples. Conclusions: MAD appears to be a viable diagnostic category for youth though it is recommended that future revisions of the DSM emphasize somewhat different criteria for this diagnosis.

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: MADD is not a relevant diagnosis in terms of prevalence and consequences when classified according to the currently proposed criteria, and should not be added to separate classifications of pure subthreshold depression and anxiety.

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Nefazodone was efficacious in symptom alleviation in patients with comorbid anxiety and depression and a small treatment study undertaken with elderly patients is reviewed.
Abstract: The frequent comorbidity of anxiety and depression, particularly among elderly, is widely recognized by clinicians, but the debate continues as to whether the combined diagnostic designation is merited. This article reviews the debate over the mixed diagnosis, discusses treatment implications, and reviews a small treatment study undertaken with elderly patients. Ten community-dwelling, older adults diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder and subsyndromal depression (n = 6) or generalized anxiety disorder and major depressive disorder (n = 4) were started on a 12-week, open-label trial of nefazodone. Clinicians' ratings on the Clinical Global Impression of Change and patients' self-ratings of symptoms on the Beck Depression Inventory and the Beck Anxiety Inventory identified statistically significant gains in patients' overall pre/post functioning. Nefazodone was efficacious in symptom alleviation in patients with comorbid anxiety and depression. Further double-blind, randomized investigations with newer antidepressant medications are required to extend these preliminary findings with nefazodone.

21 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Primary care patients screened for anxiety and depression while visiting their doctor indicated that none had symptoms of depression and anxiety accompanied by interference that the patient deemed significant and attributable to his or her symptoms, dispute the need for a mixed anxiety–depression category in future editions of the DSM.
Abstract: The diagnosis of mixed anxiety-depressive disorder, as proposed in DSM-IV, is intended to be useful in settings such as primary care, where low-level anxiety and depressive symptoms may cause clinically significant impairment but are undiagnosable using current criteria. Evidence of the prevalence of this diagnosis is, however, lacking, particularly since the publication of the proposed diagnostic criteria in DSM-IV. Our study examined symptoms of anxiety and depression in 65 primary care patients screened for anxiety and depression while visiting their doctor. Results indicated that of the 37 patients without a diagnosable anxiety or depressive disorder, none had symptoms of depression and anxiety accompanied by interference that the patient deemed significant and attributable to his or her symptoms. These data dispute the need for a mixed anxiety-depression category (beyond mood and anxiety syndromes currently in DSM-IV) in future editions of the DSM.

20 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings suggest that Mixed anxiety–depression is a commonly occurring, identifiable syndromal subtype that warrants further study and consideration for inclusion in future nosologic systems.
Abstract: Background. Mixed anxiety–depression (MAD) has been under scrutiny to determine its potential place in psychiatric nosology. The current study sought to investigate its prevalence, clinical characteristics, course and potential validators. Method. Restricted latent-class analyses were fit to 12-month self-reports of depression and anxiety symptom criteria in a large population-based sample of twins. Classes were examined across an array of relevant indicators (demographics, co-morbidity, adverse life events, clinical significance and twin concordance). Longitudinal analyses investigated the stability of, and transitions between, these classes for two time periods approximately 1.5 years apart. Results. In all analyses, a class exhibiting levels of MAD symptomatology distinctly above the unaffected subjects yet having low prevalence of either major depression (MD) or generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) was identified. A restricted four-class model, constraining two classes to have no prior disorder history to distinguish residual or recurrent symptoms from new onsets in the last year, provided an interpretable classification: two groups with no prior history that were unaffected or had MAD and two with prior history having relatively low or high symptom levels. Prevalence of MAD was substantial (9–11%), and subjects with MAD differed quantitatively but not qualitatively from those with lifetime MD or GAD across the clinical validators examined. Conclusions. Our findings suggest that MAD is a commonly occurring, identifiable syndromal subtype that warrants further study and consideration for inclusion in future nosologic systems.

19 citations


Cites methods from "Mixed anxiety–depression in a 1 yea..."

  • ...Barkow et al. (2004), using data from the large World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborative Project on Psychological Problems in General Health Care, * Address for correspondence: J. M. Hettema, VCU Department of Psychiatry, Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, PO Box…...

    [...]

References
More filters
Reference EntryDOI
11 Jun 2013

113,134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a tripartite structure consisting of general distress, physiological hyperarousal (specific anxiety), and anhedonia (specific depression), and a diagnosis of mixed anxiety-depression was proposed.
Abstract: We review psychometric and other evidence relevant to mixed anxiety-depression. Properties of anxiety and depression measures, including the convergent and discriminant validity of self- and clinical ratings, and interrater reliability, are examined in patient and normal samples. Results suggest that anxiety and depression can be reliably and validly assessed; moreover, although these disorders share a substantial component of general affective distress, they can be differentiated on the basis of factors specific to each syndrome. We also review evidence for these specific factors, examining the influence of context and scale content on ratings, factor analytic studies, and the role of low positive affect in depression. With these data, we argue for a tripartite structure consisting of general distress, physiological hyperarousal (specific anxiety), and anhedonia (specific depression), and we propose a diagnosis of mixed anxiety-depression.

3,465 citations

Book
01 Jan 1995
TL;DR: Partial table of contents: The Background and Rationale of the WHO Collaborative Sudy on 'Psychological Problems in General Health Care' (T. ?st?n & N. Sartiorius), form and Frequency of Mental Disorders Across Centres (D. Goldberg & Y. Lecrubier). Index.
Abstract: Partial table of contents: The Background and Rationale of the WHO Collaborative Sudy on 'Psychological Problems in General Health Care' (T. ?st?n & N. Sartiorius). Methods of the WHO Collaborative Study on 'Psychological Problems in General Health Care' (M. Von Korff & T. ?st?n). Results from the Athens Centre (V. Mavreas, et al.). Results from the Mainz Centre (R. Herr, et al.). Results from the Shanghai Centre (H. Yan, et al.). Form and Frequency of Mental Disorders Across Centres (D. Goldberg & Y. Lecrubier). Index.

848 citations


"Mixed anxiety–depression in a 1 yea..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...Data were collected within the scope of the World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborative Study on ‘Psychological Problems in General Health Care’, which is a cross-sectional and prospectivelongitudinal international study (Sartorius et al., 1993; Üstün and Sartorius, 1995)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using a two-stage case identification process, patients from a rural primary care practice were assessed for psychiatric disorders over a 15-month period, finding that suggests restricted usefulness of specialty-based categories for the range of clinical presentations in primary care.
Abstract: • Using a two-stage case identification process, patients from a rural primary care practice were assessed for psychiatric disorders (Research Diagnostic Criteria [RDC] categories) over a 15-month period. The prevalence of all psychiatric disorders was 26.5%; 10.0% were specific RDC depressive disorders, and 5.3% were disorders without depression, usually anxiety related. Another 11.2% of patients were thought to have a disorder with significant depressive symptomatology that could not be classified into a specific depressive disorder category, a finding that suggests restricted usefulness of specialty-based categories for the range of clinical presentations in primary care. The relationship of demographic variables to specific disorders was examined; there were age, sex, and marital status differences in the rates for certain disorders, although these findings need replication using large patient samples. The prevalence findings emphasize the need for research on outcome and treatment response for depression presentations in primary care.

513 citations


"Mixed anxiety–depression in a 1 yea..." refers background in this paper

  • ...These patients are frequent in primary care (Barrett et al., 1988; Wittchen and Essau, 1993; Barlow and Campbell, 2000)....

    [...]

Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "Mixed anxiety–depression in a 1 year follow-up study: shift to other diagnoses or remission?" ?

In 1992, the ICD-10 introduced the concept of mixed anxiety–depression disorder ( MAD ). However, a study examining the stability of this ICD-10-diagnosis is lacking. Limitations: Detailed information regarding treatment and disorders during the follow-up interval was lacking.