APA confirms publication date for draft proposals for DSM-5 diagnostic criteria

APA confirms publication date for draft proposals for DSM-5 diagnostic criteria

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American Psychiatric Association President, Alan F. Schatzberg, MD, has confirmed that the APA anticipates publishing draft proposals for DSM-5 criteria on Wednesday, 20 January. (Since rescheduled for 10 February 2010.)

It remains unclear how long the public consultation period will be – the only indication is “two to three months”. At the time of publishing, there is no information on the APA’s website around the consultation process.

Psychiatric News January 1, 2010
Volume 45 Number 1 Page 2
ASSOCIATION NEWS
by Jun Yan 

DSM-5 Postponed Until 2013; Field Trials Scheduled for Summer 

Psychiatrists and the public will be able to view and submit comments on proposed DSM-5 criteria this month and after extensive field trials.

The fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders will be released in May 2013, APA announced last month…

and on Page 3 

FROM THE PRESIDENT
by Alan F. Schatzberg, MD

Why is DSM-5 Being Delayed?

The draft guidelines for diagnostic criteria will be posted on the Web on January 20 with a comment period of two to three months. The field trials will commence in July…

Allen Frances; John Grohol on DSM-V revision process

Allen Frances, MD; John Grohol, PsyD, on DSM-V revision process

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There’s been no response, so far, on the DSM-V pages of Psychiatric Times to the news that the APA has extended its timeline by 12 months.

On 3 December, Dr Allen Frances, MD, who chaired the DSM-IV Task Force, had published that according to his sources, the APA’s original plan to schedule field trials before the proposed changes could be vetted by the field and with an “impossible publication deadline” of May 2012 was being shelved and that field trials would now follow the posting of options; the publication of DSM-5 was expected to be postponed until May 2013.

Psychiatric Times 

COMMENTARY
Alert to the Research Community—Be Prepared to Weigh in on DSM-V
by Allen Frances, MD
03 December 2009

Dr Frances was the chair of the DSM-IV Task Force and of the department of psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC. He is currently professor emeritus at Duke.

This commentary will suggest how the research community can be instrumental in improving DSM-V and helping it avoid unintended consequences. According to several converging, anonymous (but I think quite reliable) sources to which I have had access, the draft options for DSM-V will finally be posted between mid-January and mid-February 2010. There will then be just one additional month until mid-March for collecting comments.* The good news is that the products of a previously closed process will finally be available for wide review and correction. The bad news is that there will be only a very brief period allotted for this absolutely crucial input from the field…

…The research community has a central role and a great responsibility in taking advantage of this precious opportunity to carefully review and identify the problems in the DSM-V drafts and to suggest solutions…

Read full commentary here

The APA board has declined to comment on Dr Frances’ comments.

Catch up with the often acerbic exchanges between Drs Spitzer and Frances, APA board members and others with past and current involvement with DSM revisions on Psychiatric Times DSM-V Resource pages.

*APA has since rescheduled date of publication of draft options to 10 February 2010 

Commentary here on DSM revision controversies from Dr John M Grohol PsyD:

Psych Central
DSM-V: Suggestions for Change
by John M Grohol, PsyD

Dr. John Grohol is the CEO and founder of Psych Central.

Dr Grohol offers 8 suggestions for “Fixing the DSM Revision Process”

An earlier piece by Grohol around DSM-5:

Psych Central
Transparency, Kupfer and the DSM-V
by John M Grohol, PsyD

Christopher Lane on DSM revision and New Scientist article

Christopher Lane commentary on DSM revision and New Scientist article

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Update @ 9 January 10

On the Media | The Art of Diagnosis | 26 December 2008

Does very severe PMS constitute a mental disorder? That’s one of many questions facing psychiatrists as they work to revise the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders or DSM, the definitive compendium of our psychic maladies. Because the DSM influences not just doctors and patients but medical research, insurance companies, the pharmaceutical industry, advertising and the culture at large, controversy surrounding its new edition abounds. Brooke looks at this powerful book…

Audio and transcript: includes contributions from Christopher Lane, Brooke Gladstone, Dr Darrel Regier (Vice chair, DSM-5 Task Force), Dr Michael First and others.

Christopher Lane, PhD, is the Pearce Miller Research Professor at Northwestern University and author of Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness.

On 12 December, Dr Lane published a commentary around the editorial and article published a couple of days before, by New Scientist:

Psychology Today

American Psychiatry Is Facing “Civil War” over Its Diagnostic Manual
What’s the real reason DSM-V has been delayed?

Yesterday, the American Psychiatric Association announced that it is pushing back the publication of DSM-V until 2013. The APA tried to put a good face on this rather embarrassing admission – embarrassing, because several spokespeople for the organization had insisted, quite recently, that they were on-track for publication in 2012 and that nothing would deter them…

Read full article here

On Friday, 18 December, Christopher Lane gave an interview on WNCY Radio, on the Brian Lehrer Show.  You can listen to the interview here:

The Brian Lehrer Show  |  18 December 2009  |  Mental Illness by the Book

http://www.wnyc.org/shows/bl/episodes/2009/12/18/segments/146466

http://www.wnyc.org/stream/ram?file=/bl/bl121809bpod.mp3

http://www.wnyc.org/flashplayer/player.html#/play/%2Fstream%2Fxspf%2F146466

“The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, is commonly known as the “bible” of psychiatry. Christopher Lane, Northwestern University English literature professor and author of Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness, discusses the controversy around revising this manual.”

Related information:

Previous commentary from Christopher Lane on the DSM revision process:

Los Angeles Times
Opinion
Wrangling over psychiatry’s bible
by Christopher Lane
16 November 2008

and

Slate
Bitterness, Compulsive Shopping, and Internet Addiction
The diagnostic madness of DSM-V
by Christopher Lane
24 July 2009

DSM-5: Revision controversies in New Scientist 09.12.09

DSM-5: Revision controversies in New Scientist 09.12.09

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Just one day before the American Psychiatric Association (APA) announced its intention to shift the publication date for DSM-5 one year on, to May 2103, New Scientist published an editorial and an article by Peter Aldhous [New Scientist’s San Francisco bureau chief] on the controversies around the revision of DSM-IV:

New Scientist

Editorial:
Time’s up for psychiatry’s bible
09 December 2009

“…The final wording of the new manual will have worldwide significance. DSM is considered the bible of psychiatry, and if the APA broadens the diagnostic criteria for conditions such as schizophrenia and depression, millions more people could be placed on powerful drugs, some of which have serious side effects. Similarly, newly defined mental illnesses that deem certain individuals a danger to society could be used to justify locking these people up for life…”

Read full editorial here

Article:
Psychiatry’s civil war
by Peter Aldhous
09 December 2009

“…Two eminent retired psychiatrists are warning that the revision process is fatally flawed.* They say the new manual, to be known as DSM-V, will extend definitions of mental illnesses so broadly that tens of millions of people will be given unnecessary and risky drugs. Leaders of the American Psychiatric Association (APA), which publishes the manual, have shot back, accusing the pair of being motivated by their own financial interests – a charge they deny. The row is set to come to a head next month when the proposed changes will be published online. For a profession that exists to soothe human troubles, it’s incendiary stuff.”

“…Some of the most acrimonious arguments stem from worries about the pharmaceutical industry’s influence over psychiatry. This has led to the spotlight being turned on the financial ties of those in charge of revising the manual, and has made any diagnostic changes that could expand the use of drugs especially controversial.”

Read full article here

*See: Letter to APA Board of Trustees July 7 2009 From Allen Frances and Robert Spitzer 06 July 2009

See also:

Psychiatric Times
News
A Warning Sign on the Road to DSM-V: Beware of Its Unintended Consequences
Allen Frances, MD
26 June 2009

Dr Frances was chair of the DSM-IV Task Force

 

See: Psychiatric Times DSM-V Resource page for further commentaries by Spitzer, Frances and others and responses from APA board officials

APA announces revised timeline for publication of DSM-5

American Psychiatric Association (APA) announces revised timeline for publication of DSM-5

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Update@ 10 February

The APA released draft revisions and proposals for DSM-5 criteria on new webpages on 10 February, here:  DSM-5 Development

In a news release issued on 10 December, the APA has announced that the timeline for the publication of DSM-5 (DSM-V) is being extended from May 2012 to May 2013.

APA President Alan Schatzberg, MD, said:

Extending the timeline will allow more time for public review, field trials and revisions

The extension will also permit the DSM-5 to better link with the U.S. implementation of the ICD-10-CM codes for all Medicare/Medicaid claims reporting, scheduled for October 1, 2013.

David Kupfer, MD, chair of the DSM-5 Task Force, said:

Draft changes to the DSM will be posted on the DSM-5 Web site in January 2010. Comments will be accepted for two months and reviewed by the relevant DSM-5 Work Groups in each diagnostic category. Field trials for testing proposed changes will be conducted in three phases.

The APA news release does not confirm a date for the publication of draft category proposals but this MedPage Today write-up quotes 20 January* and also suggests a consultation period of “two to three months”:

*Since rescheduled for 10 February 2010

MedPage Today
DSM-V Publication Pushed Back to 2013
By John Gever, Senior Editor, MedPage Today
11 December 2009

On 1 January, the APA confirmed the draft publication date in this Psychiatric News article:

Psychiatric News  
Association News DSM-5 Postponed Until 2013; Field Trials Scheduled for Summer
by Jun Yan
Volume 45 Number 1 Page 2
01 January 2010

Proposed changes to the current diagnostic criteria will be posted on APA’s DSM-5 Web site at for public comments starting on January 20. After an open period of two to three months, feedback will be reviewed and incorporated by the appropriate work groups under the direction of the DSM-5 Task Force. The resulting draft criteria will then be tested in the first phase of field trials, which are set to begin this summer…

…Data collected in field trials will be analyzed to inform further revisions to the proposed criteria. The public will then have another window of opportunity to comment on the updated draft of DSM-5 criteria.

At the time of publishing, there is no information on the APA’s DSM-5 webpages around the draft consultation process. No progress reports have been issued by the DSM-5 Work Groups since April 2009.

 

The WHO is scheduled to publish its ICD-11 Alpha Draft in May, this year, but has yet to issue an ETA for the launch of iCAT, the wiki-like collaborative authoring platform though which the revision of ICD-10 and development of ICD-11 is being undertaken. ICD-11 Revision Steering Group has issued no comment on the APA’s decision to postpone publication of DSM-5 until 2013.

The PDF of the APA’s 10 December News Release is here 

Short link: http://DSM5toMay2013.notlong.com

and here is the full text of the APA News Release:

News Release  American Psychiatric Association

100 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 1825, Arlington, VA, 22209

For Information Contact:
Beth Casteel 703-907-8640
press@psych.org  Release No. 09-65
Jaime Valora 703-907-8562
jvalora@psych.org

For Immediate Release:
December 10, 2009
Release No. 09-65

DSM-5 Publication Date Moved to May 2013

ARLINGTON, Va. (Dec. 10, 2009) – The American Psychiatric Association revised the timeline for publishing the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, moving the anticipated release date to May 2013.

“Extending the timeline will allow more time for public review, field trials and revisions,” said APA President Alan Schatzberg, M.D.” The APA is committed to developing a manual that is based on the best science available and useful to clinicians and researchers.”

The extension will also permit the DSM-5 to better link with the U.S. implementation of the ICD-10-CM codes for all Medicare/Medicaid claims reporting, scheduled for October 1, 2013.

Although ICD-10 was published by the WHO in 1990, the “Clinical Modification” version (ICD-10-CM) authorized by the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) is not being implemented in the U.S. until 23 years later.

The ICD-10-CM includes disorder names, logical groupings of disorders and code numbers but not explicit diagnostic criteria. The APA has already worked with CMS and CDC to develop a common structure for the currently in-use DSM-IV and the mental disorders section of the ICD-10-CM.

The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) is published by the WHO for all member countries to classify diseases and medical conditions for international health care, public health, and statistical use. The WHO plans to release its next version of the ICD, the ICD-11, in 2014.

APA will continue to work with the WHO to harmonize the DSM-5 with the mental and behavioral disorders section of the ICD-11. Given the timing of the release of both DSM-5 and ICD-11 in relation to the ICD-10-CM, the APA will also work with the CDC and CMS to propose a structure for the U.S. ICD-10 CM that is reflective of the DSM-5 and ICD-11 harmonization efforts. This will be done prior to the time when the ICD-10-CM revisions are “frozen” for CMS and insurance companies to prepare for the October 1, 2013, adoption.

The Timeline

David Kupfer, M.D., chair of the DSM-5 Task Force, which is in charge of the DSM revision process, noted that draft changes to the DSM will be posted on the DSM-5 Web site in January 2010. Comments will be accepted for two months and reviewed by the relevant DSM-5 Work Groups in each diagnostic category. Field trials for testing proposed changes will be conducted in three phases.

The process for developing the DSM-5 began a decade ago, with an initial research planning conference under the joint sponsorship of the APA and the National Institute of Mental Health.

Additional global research planning conferences, under the auspices of the American Psychiatric Institute for Research and Education (APIRE), the World Health Organization, and three institutes of the National Institutes of Health produced a series of monographs, which helped lay the groundwork for the revisions. The APA’s DSM-5 Task Force and Work Group members were identified in 2007; they are tasked with reviewing scientific advances and research to develop draft diagnostic criteria in diagnostic categories of psychiatric disorders. Information about the revision process is available online at http://www.DSM5.org .

The American Psychiatric Association is a national medical specialty society whose physician members specialize in the diagnosis, treatment, prevention and research of mental illnesses, including substance use disorders. Visit the APA at http://www.psych.org and http://www.healthyminds.org .

Monitoring the progress of the DSM and ICD revision processes

Dx Revision Watch: Monitoring the progress of the DSM and ICD revision processes

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Before using this site please read the Disclaimer Notes

Dx Revision Watch | Monitoring the development of DSM-5, ICD-11, ICD-10-CM

Why another site?

The concept for this site developed out of research and awareness raising undertaken throughout 2009 around the forthcoming revisions of two important international disease classification systems:

The American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)

The World Health Organization’s International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD)

How will this site work?

The site will distil information and commentary already published on a companion site around the two revision processes and present this material in a more accessible format. Key information and resources will be added to the Tab Pages as more information becomes available. Updates and new material will be posted on the “Main Page”, which displays the ten most recent postings. Previous posts can be accessed from the monthly archives or from the Post index.

 

Two new international classification systems by 2015

The next edition of the APA’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders will be DSM-V (DSM-5). The revision of the current version, DSM-IV, began in 1999. DSM-5 is now expected to be published in May 2013 – a year later than had previously been planned.

The revision of the current version of the WHO’s International Statistical Classification of Diseases, ICD-10, and the development of the structure for ICD-11 began in 2007. The WHO anticipates that ICD-11 will be completed by 2015 although targets for population of content for the Alpha Draft have slipped.

Assuming the timelines stay on target, DSM-5 will be published at least two years in advance of ICD-11.

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)

Commonly referred to as the “Psychiatrist’s Bible”, DSM is used by clinicians in the mental health field for diagnosing mental disorders. It is used by medical insurance companies for reimbursement, in medical practices, clinics and hospitals, by social services agencies, governments, policy makers, courts, forensics, prisons, drug regulation agencies, pharmaceutical companies and researchers.

Diagnostic criteria defined within DSM determine what is considered a mental health disorder and what is not, what medical treatments individuals receive and which treatments health insurers will authorise funding for. The inclusion of a disorder within DSM has revenue implications for pharmaceutical companies seeking licences for new drugs or to expand markets and applications for existing products.

DSM is the primary diagnostic system in the US and is used to a varying extent in other countries. In the UK and some European countries, Chapter V, the Mental and Behavioural Disorders chapter of ICD-10, is also used for diagnosing mental health disorders.

The next edition of DSM will shape international research and influence literature in the fields of psychiatry and psychosomatics for many years to come.

The revision of DSM-IV is being undertaken by a 27 member Task Force and 16 Work Groups. These groups also draw on external advisors who are not being identified. It’s been a controversial process. Some of the most vocal critics have been those who served on Task Force committees for previous revisions, publishing criticism around lack of transparency, potential conflicts of interest from Task Force and Work Group members’ financial links with pharmaceutical companies, lack of dialogue with stakeholder groups, lack of diversity in the make up of the Work Groups, the sketchy and infrequent reports issued by the various Work Groups on their progress.

International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD)

The International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD) is the international standard diagnostic classification of diseases for use in epidemiology, health management and clinical practice. It is used to classify diseases and other health problems recorded on many types of health and other records, including death certificates and insurance. These records also provide the basis for the compilation of national mortality and morbidity statistics by WHO Member States.

ICD-11 is being revised through a Steering Group and a number of Topic Advisory Groups (TAGs), under Managing Editors, with responsibility for recruiting external peer reviewers and experts for reviewing proposals and advising on content. The WHO is promoting the development of ICD-11 as an open and transparent process.

Drafting is being carried out via a collaborative authoring platform – the iCAT, with a second, publicly viewable platform known as the Alpha Browser. Key documentation, style guides, models for the population of content and information on the structure of ICD-11 is being posted on a dedicated, public domain website.

According to the ICD-11 Timeline, the Beta draft is currently scheduled for release in May 2012.

When are the first drafts of DSM-5 and ICD-11 due?

The APA published its first draft proposals for DSM-5 diagnostic categories on a new website, on February 10, 2010.

APA webpages for DSM-5 development: DSM-5 Development

Information on DSM-5 draft criteria for the Somatic Symptom Disorders as they stood at February 2010 was published on this page:

DSM-5 draft and stakeholder feedback process

The first public review ran from February 10 to April, 20, 2010

The second public review ran from May 4 to July 15, 2011

The third public review is expected to be released in May 2012, at the latest

The ICD-11 Alpha Draft is currently timelined for May 2010.

The “harmonization” of DSM-5 and ICD-11

The APA participates with the WHO in the International Advisory Group for the Revision of ICD-10 Mental and Behavioural Disorders and the DSM-ICD Harmonization Coordination Group.

There is already a degree of correspondence between DSM-IV categories and Chapter V of ICD-10. For the next editions, the APA and the WHO have committed as far as possible:

To facilitate the achievement of the highest possible extent of uniformity and harmonization between ICD-11 mental and behavioural disorders and DSM-V disorders and their diagnostic criteria.

with the objective that

The WHO and APA should make all attempts to ensure that in their core versions, the category names, glossary descriptions and criteria are identical for ICD and DSM.

The WHO acknowledges that there may be areas where congruency may not be achievable.

Will ICD-11 be implemented worldwide from 2015?

No. Several countries have developed their own “Clinical Modifications (CM)” of ICD. Canada, for example, uses an adaptation called ICD-10-CA, with a version published for 2009. Germany uses a version called ICD-10-GM. Australia and Thailand also use country specific adaptations of ICD-10.

The US currently uses a CM version of ICD-9 (long since retired by the WHO and replaced with ICD-10). But instead of moving onto ICD-11, once this is completed, the US will be implementing a Clinical Modification of ICD-10 called ICD-10-CM, on October 1, 2013.

There are disparities between some of the proposed codings for the forthcoming US Clinical Modification, ICD-10-CM and those in ICD-10: for example, chapter placement and codings for Postviral fatigue syndrome, (Benign) myalgic encephalomyelitis and Chronic fatigue syndrome in ICD-10 differs from the current proposals for ICD-10-CM.

Are the two revisions on schedule?

The original dissemination date for ICD-11 had been 2012, with the timelines for revision of both systems running more or less in parallel. The dissemination date for ICD-11 was later extended to 2014, then 2015, but work on the Alpha Draft is behind schedule.

The timeline for DSM-5 has also slipped. APA originally planned to publish DSM-5 in May 2012. But in a press release issued on 10 December 2009, APA announced that it was postponing publication for a further year, until May 2013, “to allow more time for public review, field trials and revisions.”

The press release also stated:

The extension will also permit the DSM-5 to better link with the U.S. implementation of the ICD-10-CM codes for all Medicare/Medicaid claims reporting, scheduled for October 1, 2013.

The ICD-10-CM includes disorder names, logical groupings of disorders and code numbers but not explicit diagnostic criteria. The APA has already worked with CMS and CDC to develop a common structure for the currently in-use DSM-IV and the mental disorders section of the ICD-10-CM.

APA will continue to work with the WHO to harmonize the DSM-5 with the mental and behavioral disorders section of the ICD-11. Given the timing of the release of both DSM-5 and ICD-11 in relation to the ICD-10-CM, the APA will also work with the CDC and CMS to propose a structure for the U.S. ICD-10 CM that is reflective of the DSM-5 and ICD-11 harmonization efforts. This will be done prior to the time when the ICD-10-CM revisions are “frozen” for CMS and insurance companies to prepare for the October 1, 2013, adoption.

With the three systems: DSM-5 (ETA now May 2013), ICD-10-CM (subject to a partial code freeze on October 1, 2010 until 2014), with an ETA for implementation on October 1, 2013) and ICD-11 (dissemination in 2015+ but Alpha behind schedule) set to become more closely aligned, the proposed structure of ICD-11 may have implications for US patient populations, even though the US might not anticipate moving on to ICD-11 (or a CM of ICD-11) for many years (one source estimates 2018+).

What will be the focus for this site?

Monitoring the progress of the revision of ICD-10 Chapter VI: Diseases of the nervous system (the Neurological chapter) with specific reference to the classifications coded in ICD-10 Volume 1: The Tabular list at G93.3: Postviral fatigue syndrome; (Benign) myalgic encephalomyelitis, and indexed in Volume 3: The Alphabetical Index at G93.3: Chronic fatigue syndrome.

Monitoring the population of content to be included in ICD-11 for these three entities.

Monitoring the progress of the revision of the DSM category section currently called Somatoform Disorders being undertaken by the DSM-5 Somatic Symptom Disorders Work Group.

Monitoring the progress of the revision of the corresponding Somatoform Disorders section in ICD-10 Chapter 5 (Mental and Behavioural Disorders) with specific reference to the categories currently classified under Somatoform Disorders at F45 – F48.0.

Monitoring any “harmonization” of the corresponding category sections in DSM-5 and ICD-11 currently called Somatoform Disorders.

 

Issues for ICD-11

Content in ICD-11 will be populated for thirteen parameters, in accordance with the ICD-11 Content Model Style Guide. There is the potential for considerably more content to be included for diseases, disorders and syndromes in ICD-11 than appears in ICD-10, including Definition, Inclusions and Causal Mechanisms.

It is not known how much additional information might be included in ICD-11 for the three terms currently classified at, or indexed to, G93.3. Content will need to be monitored, as it is generated, as will any changes to the hierarchy between these three terms, as will specification of the relationships between the three terms.

Issues for DSM-5

Chronic fatigue syndrome is not categorized within DSM-IV and neither is Neurasthenia. In ICD-10, Neurasthenia is classified in Chapter V at F48.0 (for the forthcoming ICD-10-CM, in Chapter 5 at F48.8).

Professionals in the field, interest groups and the media have been voicing concerns for several years that the introduction of new disorders and the lowering of thresholds for existing criteria for some categories would bring many more patients under a mental health diagnosis.

But if the most recently published proposals by the Somatic Symptom Disorders Work Group were to be approved there may be medical, social and economic implications to the detriment of all patient populations – but especially those bundled by many psychiatrists under the so-called Functional Somatic Syndromes (FSS) and Medically Unexplained Syndromes (MUS) umbrellas, under which they include ME, CFS, FM, IBS, CI, CS, chronic Lyme disease, GWS and some others disorders and conditions.

In a presentation to The Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine, in November 2009, Somatic Symptom Disorders Work Group Chair, Joel E Dimsdale, reported that the group was considering a proposal for a new category (then, tentatively entitled, “Somatic Symptom Disorder”) to replace the DSM-IV Somatoform and related disorders which would include somatoform disorders (somatization disorder, hypochondriasis, pain disorder, and undifferentiated somatoform disorder), factitious disorders, and psychological factors affecting medical condition. The group was exploring the potential for de-emphasizing “medically unexplained symptoms”, as the term was considered “divisive”, fostered “mind-body dualism” and contributed to “doctor-patient antagonism.”

See Post #8, January 12, 2010: APM 2009 Annual Meeting Workshop: DSM-V for Psychosomatic Medicine: Current Progress and Controversies

Image source: Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine, Nevada, November ‘09 Annual Meeting slide presentation, Francis Creed, MD, FRCP: Can We Now Explain Medically Unexplained Symptoms?

In the June 2009 Journal of Psychosomatic Research Editorial “The proposed diagnosis of somatic symptom disorders in DSM-V to replace somatoform disorders in DSM-IV – a preliminary report”, which expanded on the brief April 2009 Work Group progress report published on the APA’s website, Work Group Chair, Joel E Dimsdale, and fellow Work Group member, Francis Creed, reported that by doing away with the “controversial concept of medically unexplained”, their proposed classification might diminish the “dichotomy, inherent in the ‘Somatoform’ section of DSM-IV, between disorders based on medically unexplained symptoms and patients with organic disease.”

The conceptual framework the Work Group were proposing, at that point:

“…will allow a diagnosis of somatic symptom disorder in addition to a general medical condition, whether the latter is a well-recognized organic disease or a functional somatic syndrome such as irritable bowel syndrome or chronic fatigue syndrome.”

The most recent version of the Somatic Symptom Disorders Disorders description proposals document states:

“These disorders typically present first in non-psychiatric settings and somatic symptom disorders can accompany diverse general medical as well as psychiatric diagnoses. Having somatic symptoms of unclear etiology is not in itself sufficient to make this diagnosis. Some patients, for instance with irritable bowel syndrome or fibromyalgia would not necessarily qualify for a somatic symptom disorder diagnosis. Conversely, having somatic symptoms of an established disorder (e.g. diabetes) does not exclude these diagnoses if the criteria are otherwise met.

Javier Escobar, MD, Director of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ) – Robert Wood Johnson Medical School (RWJMS) Medically Unexplained Physical Symptoms (MUPS) Research Center, which has been supported with over $4M in funding by the US National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), is a member of the DSM-5 Task Force. Dr Escobar serves as a Task Force liaison to the Somatic Symptom Disorders Work Group and is said to work closely with this group.

In the August 2008 Special Report for Psychiatric Times: Unexplained Physical Symptoms What’s a Psychiatrist to Do?” co-authors, Escobar and Marin wrote:

“…Perhaps as a corollary of turf issues, general medicine and medical specialties started carving these syndromes with their own tools. The resulting list of ‘medicalized’, specialty-driven labels that continues to expand includes fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndome, multiple chemical sensitivity, and many others.

“…These labels fall under the general category of functional somatic syndromes and seem more acceptable to patients because they may be perceived as less stigmatizing than psychiatric ones. However, using DSM criteria, virtually all these functional syndromes would fall into the somatoform disorders category given their phenomenology, unknown physical causes, absence of reliable markers, and the frequent coexistence of somatic and psychiatric symptoms.”

In Table 1, under the heading “Functional Somatic Syndromes (FSS)” Escobar and Marin list:

Irritable bowel syndrome, Chronic fatigue syndrome, Fibromyalgia, Multiple chemical sensitivity, Nonspecific chest pain, Premenstrual disorder, Non-ulcer dyspepsia, Repetitive strain injury, Tension headache, Temporomandibular joint disorder, Atypical facial pain, Hyperventilation syndrome, Globus syndrome, Sick building syndrome, Chronic pelvic pain, Chronic whiplash syndrome, Chronic Lyme disease, Silicone breast implant effects, Candidiasis hypersensivity, Food allergy, Gulf War syndrome, Mitral valve prolapse, Hypoglycemia, Chronic low back pain, Dizziness, Interstitial cystitis, Tinnitus, Pseudoseizures, Insomnia, Systemic yeast infection, Total allergy syndrome

The Somatic Symptom Disorders Work Group proposes redefining the categories in the Somatoform Disorders section of DSM-IV to legitimize the application of an additional “bolt-on” diagnosis of a “somatic symptom disorder” for all medical diseases, whether “established general medical conditions or disorders”, like diabetes or angina, or conditions presenting with “somatic symptoms of unclear etiology”, if the criteria are otherwise met.

The criteria as they currently stand are vague, highly subjective and difficult to measure. ME, CFS, FM, IBS, CI, CS, chronic Lyme disease and Gulf War illness may be particularly vulnerable to being caught by these criteria.

These radical proposals for rebranding the Somatoform Disorders categories as Somatic Symptom Disorders and combining a number of existing, little-used categories under the proposed portmanteau term, Complex Somatic Symptom Disorder (CSSD), and the more recently proposed, Simple Somatic Symptom Disorder (SSSD), have the potential for bringing many thousands more patients under a mental health banner.

The potential for expanding markets for psychiatric services, antidepressants and behavioural therapies, like CBT, for the “modification of dysfunctional and maladaptive beliefs about symptoms and disease, and behavioral techniques to alter illness and sick role behaviors” for all patients with somatic symptoms, if the clinician considers that the patient’s response (or in the case of a child, a parent’s response) to bodily symptoms and concerns about health are “excessive”, or the perception of their level of disability “disproportionate”, or their coping styles, “maladaptive.”

Application of these vague, highly subjective and difficult to measure criteria may have considerable implications for the diagnoses assigned to patients, the provision of social care, the payment of employment, medical and disability insurance and the length of time for which insurers are prepared to pay out.

The misapplication of a diagnosis of Complex Somatic Symptom Disorder (CSSD), may limit the types of treatment, medical investigations and testing that clinicians are prepared to consider and for which insurers are prepared to fund.

These proposals could potentially result in misdiagnosis of a mental health disorder, misapplication of an additional “bolt-on” diagnosis of a mental health disorder, missed diagnoses through failure to investigate new or worsening symptoms, or in iatrogenic disease from psychotropic drugs.

Families caring for children and young people with any long-term illness may be at increased risk of wrongful accusation of “over-involvement” or “excessive” concern for a child’s symptomatology or of encouraging maintenance of “sick role behaviour” in an ill child or adolescent.

Acording to Task Force Chair, Dr. David Kupfer, MD, the specific diagnostic categories that received the most feedback during the second public review and feedback exercise were sexual and gender identity disorders, followed closely by somatic symptom disorders and anxiety disorders.

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