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APA: DSM-5 leaves one-third of soldiers with subthreshold PTSD in limbo, expert says

TORONTO – The most effective ways to diagnose and treat posttraumatic stress disorder in military populations is at issue after the results of a recent study showed that a third of soldiers who previously would have qualified for the diagnosis do not under updated criteria. The matter is far from settled, however, and continues to be a matter of debate.

Data from a randomized, controlled study published last year (Lancet Psychiatry 2014;1:269-77)* and presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association indicate that about a third of soldiers who would have received a clinical diagnosis of PTSD under the DSM-IV criteria do not meet the standard under the DSM-5, released in 2013.

Col. (Ret.) Charles W. Hoge

The DSM-5 definition added criteria denoting a person’s efforts to avoid any person, place, or thing that causes them to remember details or feelings experienced during a specific traumatic event. According to former Army psychiatrist Col. (Ret.) Charles W. Hoge, this kind of emotional suppression is exactly what military, law enforcement, and first responder personnel are trained to do in order to accomplish their duties. Indeed, his study indicated that most of the soldiers who did not meet the clinical threshold for PTSD failed criterion C, the section that addresses avoidance.

“The reason to change a definition is to improve clinical utility or improve specificity, but what we’ve done is just shifted the deck chairs,” said Dr. Hoge during his presentation at the meeting.

Not so, said Dr. Matthew J. Friedman, who served on the DSM-5 Work Group that addressed PTSD, and recently retired as executive director of the Veterans Affairs’ National Center for PTSD. In an interview, Dr. Friedman disagreed with framing the findings in terms of clinical utility, particularly if the diagnostic criteria are seen as “easily and reliably utilized by different clinicians.” In that case, Dr. Friedman said in the DSM-5 field trials conducted prior to the manual’s release, the proposed PTSD criteria proved to be among the “best.”

Rather than view the findings merely as a shuffling of seats, Dr. Friedman suggested the findings could lead to a deeper line of inquiry around whether there is in fact a response bias in military personnel who might be less likely to “endorse avoidance symptoms. If the study had been done by a structured interview with a trained clinician instead of by self-report, would the results have looked the same?”

Dr. Matthew J. Friedman

In addition to increasing the number of criteria for PTSD from 17 to 20 symptoms, including the avoidant criteria, the DSM-5 reworded 8 symptoms, and further specified symptom clusters from three groups to four, with the addition of alterations in cognitions and mood to the third cluster, and alterations in arousal and reactivity becoming the fourth. The DSM-5 also reclassified the disorder from one of anxiety to one of trauma and stress.

Dr. Hoge, currently a researcher at the Center for Psychiatry and Neuroscience at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Silver Spring, Md., and his colleagues conducted a head-to-head comparison of the number of PTSD diagnoses obtained according to criteria in either the DSM-IV or the DSM-5. They surveyed 1,822 infantry soldiers for a single brigade combat team, more than half of whom had been deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan. Each survey included items from both the DSM-IV’s PTSD Check List, specific for “stressful experiences,” as well as the PCL-5 from the DSM-5. The questions from each were separated in the same survey by several other health-related items. Two versions of the survey were created and distributed randomly across the cohort; one version of the study listed the DSM-IV PCL-S questions first, the other survey had the PCL-5 version first.

The demographic and health outcomes in each group were essentially identical: Respondents were almost entirely male, aged 18-25 years, and roughly half of each group was married. Nearly one-fifth of each group was found by the survey to have moderate to severe general anxiety disorder.

The prevalence rates of PTSD in both survey groups were nearly identical: 12.9% vs. 12.2%, respectively; however, 30% of those surveyed who previously would have met the criteria for PTSD in the DSM-IV did not meet the DSM-5 criteria. Meanwhile, 28% of those who met DSM-5 criteria would not have met the DSM-IV criteria.

Dr. Friedman said the method used in Dr. Hoge’s study did not specifically explore the effect of the A criteria that identify the level of actual exposure to a traumatic event and a person’s immediate reaction to it. The DSM-IV stipulated in criterion A2 that a person experience “fear, helplessness, or horror” directly after a traumatic event. “One of the things that we found is that many soldiers who have all of the PTSD symptoms were ineligible for a PTSD diagnosis because they did not meet the A2 criterion.”

 

 

Dr. Friedman did not say whether this necessarily was the result of one’s crisis response training but noted that based on an evidence review, his work group dropped the criterion, and that now many people previously considered subclinical receive a PTSD diagnosis. “Had the A criteria been included in [Dr. Hoge’s] exploration, then a soldier who would not have met the A criteria in DSM-VI would make it in DSM-5, so it becomes a different ball game,” said Dr. Friedman, senior adviser at the National Center for PTSD, and professor of psychiatry and of pharmacology and toxicology at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H.

In the study, Dr. Hoge and his coauthors wrote, “there is good evidence lending support to removal of the criterion A2,” yet during his presentation, he emphasized that just as service members learn to override fear, hopelessness, or horror, “they also learn to override avoidance symptoms as part of their training.” He concluded that because the prevalence rates are virtually the same between the fourth and fifth editions of the DSM, but for different reasons, there is no clinical utility in the new criteria. “Technically, [these soldiers] don’t meet the new definition, but clearly, they are individuals who need trauma-focused therapy and would have met the previous definition.”

Former Army psychiatrist Col. (Ret.) Elspeth Cameron Ritchie, meanwhile, said in an interview that Dr. Hoge and Dr. Friedman are “both world-renowned researchers in the field of PTSD and other related injuries of war.”

“All of us are struggling with the right way to diagnose PTSD, especially after almost 14 years of war and hundreds of thousands of wounded service members,” Dr. Ritchie said. “In addition, PTSD is not a simple, uniform diagnosis. It probably is many overlapping diagnoses.”

She has warned clinicians to proceed with caution, since how military personnel are diagnosed can have serious implications for their careers and benefits.

Currently, the VA and the Department of Defense support the status quo for any personnel previously diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria, but how subclinical cases should be handled is still at issue. The DSM-5 recommendation for subthreshold symptoms is to consider them an adjustment disorder.

Dr. Hoge rejected this as unhelpful, noting that a failure to adjust or adapt in the military setting has a “pejorative connotation.”

Dr. Friedman and the National Center for PTSD currently recommend using 308.89 from the DSM-5, which is “other specified trauma and stressor-related disorder.” Using “chronic adjustment disorder” is not appropriate, said Dr. Friedman, “because it has a 6-month time limit.” Dr. Friedman also noted that 308.89 in the DSM-5 is the same as the DSM-IV anxiety not otherwise specified, which prior to the DSM-5 was what was used for subthreshold PTSD. According to Dr. Hoge, however, 308.89 is linked in military electronic health records to “adjustment reaction with aggression antisocial behavior/destructiveness” and “aggressor identified syndrome,” both of which could have similar deleterious effects to a soldier as an “adjustment disorder.”

The current U.S. Army Medical Command policy allows physicians to continue diagnosing PTSD according to DSM-IV standards or to apply an unspecified anxiety code (ICD-9 300.00) for any subthreshold PTSD patients.

The fractious approach to diagnosis, according to Dr. Hoge, might be simplified by implementation later this year of the ICD-10, although he said early indications of the ICD-11 in Europe do not show better specificity when compared with the DSM-IV. He noted that the ICD-11 is simpler and has fewer symptom criteria. Here in the United States, he said, “We are not going in the right direction.”

Dr. Hoge said his presentation was based on his own findings and does not represent the opinions or policies of the U.S. Army.

[email protected]

On Twitter @whitneymcknight

*Correction, 6/2/2014: An earlier version of this article misattributed a reference to Lancet Psychiatry.

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TORONTO – The most effective ways to diagnose and treat posttraumatic stress disorder in military populations is at issue after the results of a recent study showed that a third of soldiers who previously would have qualified for the diagnosis do not under updated criteria. The matter is far from settled, however, and continues to be a matter of debate.

Data from a randomized, controlled study published last year (Lancet Psychiatry 2014;1:269-77)* and presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association indicate that about a third of soldiers who would have received a clinical diagnosis of PTSD under the DSM-IV criteria do not meet the standard under the DSM-5, released in 2013.

Col. (Ret.) Charles W. Hoge

The DSM-5 definition added criteria denoting a person’s efforts to avoid any person, place, or thing that causes them to remember details or feelings experienced during a specific traumatic event. According to former Army psychiatrist Col. (Ret.) Charles W. Hoge, this kind of emotional suppression is exactly what military, law enforcement, and first responder personnel are trained to do in order to accomplish their duties. Indeed, his study indicated that most of the soldiers who did not meet the clinical threshold for PTSD failed criterion C, the section that addresses avoidance.

“The reason to change a definition is to improve clinical utility or improve specificity, but what we’ve done is just shifted the deck chairs,” said Dr. Hoge during his presentation at the meeting.

Not so, said Dr. Matthew J. Friedman, who served on the DSM-5 Work Group that addressed PTSD, and recently retired as executive director of the Veterans Affairs’ National Center for PTSD. In an interview, Dr. Friedman disagreed with framing the findings in terms of clinical utility, particularly if the diagnostic criteria are seen as “easily and reliably utilized by different clinicians.” In that case, Dr. Friedman said in the DSM-5 field trials conducted prior to the manual’s release, the proposed PTSD criteria proved to be among the “best.”

Rather than view the findings merely as a shuffling of seats, Dr. Friedman suggested the findings could lead to a deeper line of inquiry around whether there is in fact a response bias in military personnel who might be less likely to “endorse avoidance symptoms. If the study had been done by a structured interview with a trained clinician instead of by self-report, would the results have looked the same?”

Dr. Matthew J. Friedman

In addition to increasing the number of criteria for PTSD from 17 to 20 symptoms, including the avoidant criteria, the DSM-5 reworded 8 symptoms, and further specified symptom clusters from three groups to four, with the addition of alterations in cognitions and mood to the third cluster, and alterations in arousal and reactivity becoming the fourth. The DSM-5 also reclassified the disorder from one of anxiety to one of trauma and stress.

Dr. Hoge, currently a researcher at the Center for Psychiatry and Neuroscience at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Silver Spring, Md., and his colleagues conducted a head-to-head comparison of the number of PTSD diagnoses obtained according to criteria in either the DSM-IV or the DSM-5. They surveyed 1,822 infantry soldiers for a single brigade combat team, more than half of whom had been deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan. Each survey included items from both the DSM-IV’s PTSD Check List, specific for “stressful experiences,” as well as the PCL-5 from the DSM-5. The questions from each were separated in the same survey by several other health-related items. Two versions of the survey were created and distributed randomly across the cohort; one version of the study listed the DSM-IV PCL-S questions first, the other survey had the PCL-5 version first.

The demographic and health outcomes in each group were essentially identical: Respondents were almost entirely male, aged 18-25 years, and roughly half of each group was married. Nearly one-fifth of each group was found by the survey to have moderate to severe general anxiety disorder.

The prevalence rates of PTSD in both survey groups were nearly identical: 12.9% vs. 12.2%, respectively; however, 30% of those surveyed who previously would have met the criteria for PTSD in the DSM-IV did not meet the DSM-5 criteria. Meanwhile, 28% of those who met DSM-5 criteria would not have met the DSM-IV criteria.

Dr. Friedman said the method used in Dr. Hoge’s study did not specifically explore the effect of the A criteria that identify the level of actual exposure to a traumatic event and a person’s immediate reaction to it. The DSM-IV stipulated in criterion A2 that a person experience “fear, helplessness, or horror” directly after a traumatic event. “One of the things that we found is that many soldiers who have all of the PTSD symptoms were ineligible for a PTSD diagnosis because they did not meet the A2 criterion.”

 

 

Dr. Friedman did not say whether this necessarily was the result of one’s crisis response training but noted that based on an evidence review, his work group dropped the criterion, and that now many people previously considered subclinical receive a PTSD diagnosis. “Had the A criteria been included in [Dr. Hoge’s] exploration, then a soldier who would not have met the A criteria in DSM-VI would make it in DSM-5, so it becomes a different ball game,” said Dr. Friedman, senior adviser at the National Center for PTSD, and professor of psychiatry and of pharmacology and toxicology at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H.

In the study, Dr. Hoge and his coauthors wrote, “there is good evidence lending support to removal of the criterion A2,” yet during his presentation, he emphasized that just as service members learn to override fear, hopelessness, or horror, “they also learn to override avoidance symptoms as part of their training.” He concluded that because the prevalence rates are virtually the same between the fourth and fifth editions of the DSM, but for different reasons, there is no clinical utility in the new criteria. “Technically, [these soldiers] don’t meet the new definition, but clearly, they are individuals who need trauma-focused therapy and would have met the previous definition.”

Former Army psychiatrist Col. (Ret.) Elspeth Cameron Ritchie, meanwhile, said in an interview that Dr. Hoge and Dr. Friedman are “both world-renowned researchers in the field of PTSD and other related injuries of war.”

“All of us are struggling with the right way to diagnose PTSD, especially after almost 14 years of war and hundreds of thousands of wounded service members,” Dr. Ritchie said. “In addition, PTSD is not a simple, uniform diagnosis. It probably is many overlapping diagnoses.”

She has warned clinicians to proceed with caution, since how military personnel are diagnosed can have serious implications for their careers and benefits.

Currently, the VA and the Department of Defense support the status quo for any personnel previously diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria, but how subclinical cases should be handled is still at issue. The DSM-5 recommendation for subthreshold symptoms is to consider them an adjustment disorder.

Dr. Hoge rejected this as unhelpful, noting that a failure to adjust or adapt in the military setting has a “pejorative connotation.”

Dr. Friedman and the National Center for PTSD currently recommend using 308.89 from the DSM-5, which is “other specified trauma and stressor-related disorder.” Using “chronic adjustment disorder” is not appropriate, said Dr. Friedman, “because it has a 6-month time limit.” Dr. Friedman also noted that 308.89 in the DSM-5 is the same as the DSM-IV anxiety not otherwise specified, which prior to the DSM-5 was what was used for subthreshold PTSD. According to Dr. Hoge, however, 308.89 is linked in military electronic health records to “adjustment reaction with aggression antisocial behavior/destructiveness” and “aggressor identified syndrome,” both of which could have similar deleterious effects to a soldier as an “adjustment disorder.”

The current U.S. Army Medical Command policy allows physicians to continue diagnosing PTSD according to DSM-IV standards or to apply an unspecified anxiety code (ICD-9 300.00) for any subthreshold PTSD patients.

The fractious approach to diagnosis, according to Dr. Hoge, might be simplified by implementation later this year of the ICD-10, although he said early indications of the ICD-11 in Europe do not show better specificity when compared with the DSM-IV. He noted that the ICD-11 is simpler and has fewer symptom criteria. Here in the United States, he said, “We are not going in the right direction.”

Dr. Hoge said his presentation was based on his own findings and does not represent the opinions or policies of the U.S. Army.

[email protected]

On Twitter @whitneymcknight

*Correction, 6/2/2014: An earlier version of this article misattributed a reference to Lancet Psychiatry.

TORONTO – The most effective ways to diagnose and treat posttraumatic stress disorder in military populations is at issue after the results of a recent study showed that a third of soldiers who previously would have qualified for the diagnosis do not under updated criteria. The matter is far from settled, however, and continues to be a matter of debate.

Data from a randomized, controlled study published last year (Lancet Psychiatry 2014;1:269-77)* and presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association indicate that about a third of soldiers who would have received a clinical diagnosis of PTSD under the DSM-IV criteria do not meet the standard under the DSM-5, released in 2013.

Col. (Ret.) Charles W. Hoge

The DSM-5 definition added criteria denoting a person’s efforts to avoid any person, place, or thing that causes them to remember details or feelings experienced during a specific traumatic event. According to former Army psychiatrist Col. (Ret.) Charles W. Hoge, this kind of emotional suppression is exactly what military, law enforcement, and first responder personnel are trained to do in order to accomplish their duties. Indeed, his study indicated that most of the soldiers who did not meet the clinical threshold for PTSD failed criterion C, the section that addresses avoidance.

“The reason to change a definition is to improve clinical utility or improve specificity, but what we’ve done is just shifted the deck chairs,” said Dr. Hoge during his presentation at the meeting.

Not so, said Dr. Matthew J. Friedman, who served on the DSM-5 Work Group that addressed PTSD, and recently retired as executive director of the Veterans Affairs’ National Center for PTSD. In an interview, Dr. Friedman disagreed with framing the findings in terms of clinical utility, particularly if the diagnostic criteria are seen as “easily and reliably utilized by different clinicians.” In that case, Dr. Friedman said in the DSM-5 field trials conducted prior to the manual’s release, the proposed PTSD criteria proved to be among the “best.”

Rather than view the findings merely as a shuffling of seats, Dr. Friedman suggested the findings could lead to a deeper line of inquiry around whether there is in fact a response bias in military personnel who might be less likely to “endorse avoidance symptoms. If the study had been done by a structured interview with a trained clinician instead of by self-report, would the results have looked the same?”

Dr. Matthew J. Friedman

In addition to increasing the number of criteria for PTSD from 17 to 20 symptoms, including the avoidant criteria, the DSM-5 reworded 8 symptoms, and further specified symptom clusters from three groups to four, with the addition of alterations in cognitions and mood to the third cluster, and alterations in arousal and reactivity becoming the fourth. The DSM-5 also reclassified the disorder from one of anxiety to one of trauma and stress.

Dr. Hoge, currently a researcher at the Center for Psychiatry and Neuroscience at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Silver Spring, Md., and his colleagues conducted a head-to-head comparison of the number of PTSD diagnoses obtained according to criteria in either the DSM-IV or the DSM-5. They surveyed 1,822 infantry soldiers for a single brigade combat team, more than half of whom had been deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan. Each survey included items from both the DSM-IV’s PTSD Check List, specific for “stressful experiences,” as well as the PCL-5 from the DSM-5. The questions from each were separated in the same survey by several other health-related items. Two versions of the survey were created and distributed randomly across the cohort; one version of the study listed the DSM-IV PCL-S questions first, the other survey had the PCL-5 version first.

The demographic and health outcomes in each group were essentially identical: Respondents were almost entirely male, aged 18-25 years, and roughly half of each group was married. Nearly one-fifth of each group was found by the survey to have moderate to severe general anxiety disorder.

The prevalence rates of PTSD in both survey groups were nearly identical: 12.9% vs. 12.2%, respectively; however, 30% of those surveyed who previously would have met the criteria for PTSD in the DSM-IV did not meet the DSM-5 criteria. Meanwhile, 28% of those who met DSM-5 criteria would not have met the DSM-IV criteria.

Dr. Friedman said the method used in Dr. Hoge’s study did not specifically explore the effect of the A criteria that identify the level of actual exposure to a traumatic event and a person’s immediate reaction to it. The DSM-IV stipulated in criterion A2 that a person experience “fear, helplessness, or horror” directly after a traumatic event. “One of the things that we found is that many soldiers who have all of the PTSD symptoms were ineligible for a PTSD diagnosis because they did not meet the A2 criterion.”

 

 

Dr. Friedman did not say whether this necessarily was the result of one’s crisis response training but noted that based on an evidence review, his work group dropped the criterion, and that now many people previously considered subclinical receive a PTSD diagnosis. “Had the A criteria been included in [Dr. Hoge’s] exploration, then a soldier who would not have met the A criteria in DSM-VI would make it in DSM-5, so it becomes a different ball game,” said Dr. Friedman, senior adviser at the National Center for PTSD, and professor of psychiatry and of pharmacology and toxicology at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H.

In the study, Dr. Hoge and his coauthors wrote, “there is good evidence lending support to removal of the criterion A2,” yet during his presentation, he emphasized that just as service members learn to override fear, hopelessness, or horror, “they also learn to override avoidance symptoms as part of their training.” He concluded that because the prevalence rates are virtually the same between the fourth and fifth editions of the DSM, but for different reasons, there is no clinical utility in the new criteria. “Technically, [these soldiers] don’t meet the new definition, but clearly, they are individuals who need trauma-focused therapy and would have met the previous definition.”

Former Army psychiatrist Col. (Ret.) Elspeth Cameron Ritchie, meanwhile, said in an interview that Dr. Hoge and Dr. Friedman are “both world-renowned researchers in the field of PTSD and other related injuries of war.”

“All of us are struggling with the right way to diagnose PTSD, especially after almost 14 years of war and hundreds of thousands of wounded service members,” Dr. Ritchie said. “In addition, PTSD is not a simple, uniform diagnosis. It probably is many overlapping diagnoses.”

She has warned clinicians to proceed with caution, since how military personnel are diagnosed can have serious implications for their careers and benefits.

Currently, the VA and the Department of Defense support the status quo for any personnel previously diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria, but how subclinical cases should be handled is still at issue. The DSM-5 recommendation for subthreshold symptoms is to consider them an adjustment disorder.

Dr. Hoge rejected this as unhelpful, noting that a failure to adjust or adapt in the military setting has a “pejorative connotation.”

Dr. Friedman and the National Center for PTSD currently recommend using 308.89 from the DSM-5, which is “other specified trauma and stressor-related disorder.” Using “chronic adjustment disorder” is not appropriate, said Dr. Friedman, “because it has a 6-month time limit.” Dr. Friedman also noted that 308.89 in the DSM-5 is the same as the DSM-IV anxiety not otherwise specified, which prior to the DSM-5 was what was used for subthreshold PTSD. According to Dr. Hoge, however, 308.89 is linked in military electronic health records to “adjustment reaction with aggression antisocial behavior/destructiveness” and “aggressor identified syndrome,” both of which could have similar deleterious effects to a soldier as an “adjustment disorder.”

The current U.S. Army Medical Command policy allows physicians to continue diagnosing PTSD according to DSM-IV standards or to apply an unspecified anxiety code (ICD-9 300.00) for any subthreshold PTSD patients.

The fractious approach to diagnosis, according to Dr. Hoge, might be simplified by implementation later this year of the ICD-10, although he said early indications of the ICD-11 in Europe do not show better specificity when compared with the DSM-IV. He noted that the ICD-11 is simpler and has fewer symptom criteria. Here in the United States, he said, “We are not going in the right direction.”

Dr. Hoge said his presentation was based on his own findings and does not represent the opinions or policies of the U.S. Army.

[email protected]

On Twitter @whitneymcknight

*Correction, 6/2/2014: An earlier version of this article misattributed a reference to Lancet Psychiatry.

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Key clinical point: The DSM-5 definition of posttraumatic stress disorder disqualifies a third of soldiers who once qualified for the diagnosis.

Major finding: Thirty percent of soldiers who previously would have met the criteria for PTSD in the DSM-IV did not meet the DSM-5 criteria.

Data source: Randomized, controlled study of 1,822 infantry soldiers for a single brigade combat team, half of whom had been deployed in war zones.

Disclosures: Dr. Hoge said his presentation was based on his own findings and does not represent the opinions or policies of the U.S. Army.