Variability among research diagnostic interview instruments in the application of DSM-IV-TR criteria for pediatric bipolar disorder.

Title
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsGalanter CA, Hundt SR, Goyal P, Le J, Fisher PW
JournalJ Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry
Volume51
Issue6
Pagination605-21
Date Published2012 Jun
ISSN1527-5418
KeywordsAdolescent, Age Factors, Bipolar Disorder, Child, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Diagnostic Errors, Female, Humans, Interview, Psychological, Male, Observer Variation, Patient Selection, Reproducibility of Results
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The DSM-IV-TR criteria for a manic episode and bipolar disorder (BD) were developed for adults but are used for children. The manner in which clinicians and researchers interpret these criteria may have contributed to the increase in BD diagnoses given to youth. Research interviews are designed to improve diagnostic reliability and validity, but vary in how they incorporate DSM-IV-TR criteria for pediatric BD.

METHOD: We examined DSM-IV-TR criteria and the descriptive text for a manic episode and the mania sections of six commonly used pediatric diagnostic research interviews focusing on the following: interpretation of DSM-IV-TR, recommendations for administration, and scoring methods.

RESULTS: There are differences between the DSM-IV-TR manic episode criteria and descriptive text. Instruments vary in several ways including in their conceptualization of the mood criterion, whether symptoms must represent a change from the child's usual state, and whether B-criteria are required to co-occur with the A-criterion. Instruments also differ on recommendations for administration and scoring methods.

CONCLUSIONS: Given the differences between DSM-IV-TR manic episode criteria and explanatory text, it is not surprising that there is considerable variation between diagnostic instruments based on DSM-IV-TR. These differences likely lead to dissimilarities in subjects included in BD research studies and inconsistent findings across studies. The field of child psychiatry would benefit from more uniform methods of assessing symptoms and determining pediatric BD diagnoses. We discuss recommendations for changes to future instruments, interviews, assessment, and the DSM-5.

DOI10.1016/j.jaac.2012.03.010
Alternate JournalJ Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry
PubMed ID22632620
Grant List1 K23 MH071337-1 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States
P30MH071478 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States