Reliability and validity of the DSM-5 anxious distress specifier interview

M Zimmerman, H Clark, P McGonigal, L Harris… - Comprehensive …, 2017 - Elsevier
Comprehensive psychiatry, 2017Elsevier
Background To acknowledge the clinical significance of anxiety in depressed patients, DSM-
5 included an anxious distress specifier for major depressive disorder (MDD). In the present
report we describe the reliability and validity of a semi-structured interview assessing the
features of the anxious distress specifier. Our goal was to develop an instrument that could
be used for both diagnostic and outcome measurement purposes. Methods One hundred
seventy-three psychiatric patients with MDD were interviewed by a trained diagnostic rater …
Background
To acknowledge the clinical significance of anxiety in depressed patients, DSM-5 included an anxious distress specifier for major depressive disorder (MDD). In the present report we describe the reliability and validity of a semi-structured interview assessing the features of the anxious distress specifier. Our goal was to develop an instrument that could be used for both diagnostic and outcome measurement purposes.
Methods
One hundred seventy-three psychiatric patients with MDD were interviewed by a trained diagnostic rater who administered the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID) supplemented with questions from the DSM-5 Anxious Distress Specifier Interview (DADSI). Inter-rater (n = 25) and test–retest (n = 25) reliability of the DADSI was examined in separate groups of patients. The patients were rated on clinician rating scales of depression, anxiety and irritability, and patients completed self-report measures of these constructs. Sensitivity to change was examined in 16 patients.
Results
Approximately three-quarters of the depressed patients met the criteria for the anxious distress specifier (78.0%, n = 135). The DADSI had excellent joint-interview reliability and good test–retest reliability. DADSI total scores were more highly correlated with other clinician-rated and self-report measures of anxiety than with measures of depression and anger. DADSI scores were significantly higher in depressed outpatients with a current anxiety disorder than depressed patients without a comorbid anxiety disorder. The DADSI was sensitive to improvement.
Conclusion
The DADSI is a reliable and valid measure of the presence of the DSM-5 anxious distress specifier for MDD as well as the severity of the features of the specifier.
Elsevier
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