Article, 2019

DSM-5 Personality Disorders and Traits in Patients With Severe Health Anxiety.

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, ISSN 1539-736X, 0022-3018, Volume 208, 2, Pages 108-117, 10.1097/nmd.0000000000001108

Contributors

Skjernov, Mathias Bach, Bo S 0000-0002-5744-1769 [1] Fink, Per Klausen 0000-0003-2921-4099 [2] Fallon, Brian A 0000-0003-1797-9713 [3] Soegaard, Ulf Simonsen, Erik Hertel 0000-0002-6134-2392

Affiliations

  1. [1] Region Zealand
  2. [NORA names: Region Zealand; Hospital; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Research Clinic for Functional Disorders, Aarhus, Denmark.
  4. [NORA names: Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  5. [3] Columbia University Irving Medical Center
  6. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD]

Abstract

Severe health anxiety (SHA)/hypochondriasis (HY) is often associated with personality pathology; however, studies report inconsistent results. In general populations, 12% have a personality disorder (PD). We assessed physician-referred psychiatric outpatients with SHA enrolled for a treatment study (n = 84) with the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition (DSM-IV) axis II (SCID-II), Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5), Whiteley Index 7, and Short Health Anxiety Inventory, and the healthy controls (n = 84) with PID-5 only. There were 71.4% of the patients who met criteria for PDs: avoidant (22.6%), obsessive-compulsive (16.7%), depressive (16.7%), dependent (7.1%), paranoid (3.6%), borderline (2.4%), and not otherwise specified (32.1%). Severity of personality pathology was associated with severity of health anxiety. In group comparisons, PID-5 trait domains of negative affectivity, detachment, low antagonism, and low disinhibition, and facets of anxiousness, separation insecurity, and low attention seeking emerged as unique predictors of SHA. Personality pathology is common among individuals with SHA/HY. Further research is needed to understand the nature of the relationship between health anxiety and personality pathology and to determine whether treatments that target both SHA/HY and personality pathology will improve short- and long-term outcomes.

Keywords

Anxiety Inventory, DSM-5, DSM-5 personality disorders, Health Anxiety Inventory, PID-5, Personality Inventory, SCID-II, SHA, Short Health Anxiety Inventory, Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic, Whiteley, Whiteley Index-7, affect, antagonism, anxiety, anxiousness, associated with severity, attention, borderline, comparison, control, criteria, depression, detachment, diagnostics, disinhibition, disorders, domains of Negative Affectivity, facets, group, group comparisons, health, health anxiety, healthy controls, individuals, insecurity, inventory, long-term outcomes, low antagonism, low attention, low disinhibition, nature, negative affect, obsessive-compulsive, outcomes, outpatients, paranoid, pathology, patients, personality disorder, personality pathology, persons, predictors, psychiatric outpatients, relationship, research, results, separation, separation insecurity, severe health anxiety, severity, severity of health anxiety, severity of personality pathology, short-, study, traits, treatment, treatment studies

Data Provider: Digital Science