Author:
Karsten Julie,Hartman Catharina A.,Smit Johannes H.,Zitman Frans G.,Beekman Aartjan T. F.,Cuijpers Pim,van der Does A. J. Willem,Ormel Johan,Nolen Willem A.,Penninx Brenda W. J. H.
Abstract
BackgroundPast episodes of depressive or anxiety disorders and subthreshold
symptoms have both been reported to predict the occurrence of depressive
or anxiety disorders. It is unclear to what extent the two factors
interact or predict these disorders independently.AimsTo examine the extent to which history, subthreshold symptoms and their
combination predict the occurrence of depressive (major depressive
disorder, dysthymia) or anxiety disorders (social phobia, panic disorder,
agoraphobia, generalised anxiety disorder) over a 2-year period.MethodThis was a prospective cohort study with 1167 participants: the
Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety. Anxiety and depressive
disorders were determined with the Composite International Diagnostic
Interview, subthreshold symptoms were determined with the Inventory of
Depressive Symptomatology–Self Report and the Beck Anxiety Inventory.ResultsOccurrence of depressive disorder was best predicted by a combination of
a history of depression and subthreshold symptoms, followed by either one
alone. Occurrence of anxiety disorder was best predicted by both a
combination of a history of anxiety disorder and subthreshold symptoms
and a combination of a history of depression and subthreshold symptoms,
followed by any subthreshold symptoms or a history of any disorder
alone.ConclusionsA history and subthreshold symptoms independently predicted the
subsequent occurrence of depressive or anxiety disorder. Together these
two characteristics provide reasonable discriminative value. Whereas
anxiety predicted the occurrence of an anxiety disorder only, depression
predicted the occurrence of both depressive and anxiety disorders.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
120 articles.
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