Validity and clinical utility of DSM and prototype diagnosis for depressive and anxiety spectrum disorders in predicting adaptive functioning

Ora Nakash, Maayan Nagar, Daphne Bentov-Gofrit, Evelyne MD, Rvital Amiaz, Shaul Lev-Ran, Drew Westen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Prototype matching, which involves comparing a patient clinical presentation with a prototype description of the disorder, addresses some of the clinical limitations of categorical approaches. Most research to-date on prototype matching has been conducted with personality disorders. Here, we examined the validity and clinical utility of prototype diagnosis for mood and anxiety disorders. We compared clinicians prototype diagnosis (based on DSM IV and empirically derived) to categorical diagnosis (based on independent SCID interview) in predicting patient global adaptive functioning rated across the clinician, patient and independent interviewer among N = 80 clinicians and N = 170 patients. Our findings show that prototype diagnosis (both one that is based on DSM criteria and empirically derived) demonstrates some incremental validity over and above the categorical DSM IV, in predicting patient's global adaptive functioning. This is particularly pronounced for mood disorders (MDD and dysthymia) as well as several anxiety disorders (OCD, social phobia) across a range of experience level of diagnosticians. Furthermore, clinicians rated the prototype matching approach as more useful in clinical practice compared with the binary categorical system. Using a dimensional approach, which is based on prototype matching that also preserves the advantages of categorical system offers a valid and efficient approach to psychiatric assessment.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)50-56
Number of pages7
JournalPsychiatry Research
Volume270
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2018
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018

Funding

This study was supported by the Israel-US binational Science Foundation (# 2011163 to Nakash and Westen).

FundersFunder number
United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation2011163

    Keywords

    • Anxiety
    • Clinical utility
    • Depression
    • Diagnosis
    • Prototype matching
    • Validity

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