New paper by Wolfe et al on reliability and validity of SSD diagnosis in patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis and Fibromyalgia

Post #295 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-3LP

This post is an update to Post #284, November 17, 2013, titled:

Correspondence In Press in response to Dimsdale et al paper: Somatic Symptom Disorder: An important change in DSM

In December 2013, Journal of Psychosomatic Research published four letters in response to the Dimsdale el al paper including concerns from Winfried Häuser and Frederick Wolfe for the reliability and validity of DSM-5’s new Somatic symptom disorder:  The somatic symptom disorder in DSM 5 risks mislabelling people with major medical diseases as mentally ill.

A new paper has been published by PLOS One on February 14, 2014:

Symptoms, the Nature of Fibromyalgia, and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 5 (DSM-5) Defined Mental Illness in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis and Fibromyalgia Frederick Wolfe, Brian T. Walitt, Robert S. Katz, Winfried Häuser

The paper is published under Open Access and includes the full SSD criteria in Table S1

The paper’s references include the following commentaries and an article by science writer, Michael Gross:

Frances A, Chapman S (2013) DSM-5 somatic symptom disorder mislabels medical illness as mental disorder. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 47: 483–484. doi: 10.1177/0004867413484525 [PMID 23653063]

Frances A (2013) The new somatic symptom disorder in DSM-5 risks mislabeling many people as mentally ill. BMJ: British Medical Journal 346. doi: 10.1136/bmj.f1580 [PMID 23511949]

Gross M (2013) Has the manual gone mental? Current biology 23: R295–R298. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.04.009 Full text

Full paper, Tables and Figures in text or PDF format:

Symptoms, the Nature of Fibromyalgia, and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 5 (DSM-5) Defined Mental Illness in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis and Fibromyalgia Frederick Wolfe, Brian T. Walitt, Robert S. Katz, Winfried Häuser

Text version

PDF version

Abstract

Purpose

To describe and evaluate somatic symptoms in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and fibromyalgia, determine the relation between somatization syndromes and fibromyalgia, and evaluate symptom data in light of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5 (DSM-5) criteria for somatic symptom disorder.

Methods

We administered the Patient Health Questionnaire-15 (PHQ-15), a measure of somatic symptom severity to 6,233 persons with fibromyalgia, RA, and osteoarthritis. PHQ-15 scores of 5, 10, and 15 represent low, medium, and high somatic symptom severity cut-points. A likely somatization syndrome was diagnosed when PHQ-15 score was ≥10. The intensity of fibromyalgia diagnostic symptoms was measured by the polysymptomatic distress (PSD) scale.

Results

26.4% of RA patients and 88.9% with fibromyalgia had PHQ-15 scores ≥10 compared with 9.3% in the general population. With each step-wise increase in PHQ-15 category, more abnormal mental and physical health status scores were observed. RA patients satisfying fibromyalgia criteria increased from 1.2% in the PHQ-15 low category to 88.9% in the high category. The sensitivity and specificity of PHQ-15≥10 for fibromyalgia diagnosis was 80.9% and 80.0% (correctly classified = 80.3%) compared with 84.3% and 93.7% (correctly classified = 91.7%) for the PSD scale. 51.4% of fibromyalgia patients and 14.8% with RA had fatigue, sleep or cognitive problems that were severe, continuous, and life-disturbing; and almost all fibromyalgia patients had severe impairments of function and quality of life.

Conclusions

All patients with fibromyalgia will satisfy the DSM-5 “A” criterion for distressing somatic symptoms, and most would seem to satisfy DSM-5 “B” criterion because symptom impact is life-disturbing or associated with substantial impairment of function and quality of life. But the “B” designation requires special knowledge that symptoms are “disproportionate” or “excessive,” something that is uncertain and controversial. The reliability and validity of DSM-5 criteria in this population is likely to be low.

 

Final post on Dx Revision Watch

Post #294 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-3L2

This will be the final post on Dx Revision Watch.

As from today, I am stepping back from advocacy work and from monitoring and reporting via this site.

Dx Revision Watch will remain online for the foreseeable future as a resource. Other than updating some existing posts, no new postings or reports will be added.

Before using this site or republishing content please read the Disclaimer Notes

Suzy Chapman
Dx Revision Watch

“He that reads and grows no wiser seldom suspects his own deficiency, but complains of hard words and obscure sentences, and asks why books are written which cannot be understood.”  Samuel Johnson

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Omissions in commentary: “Diagnostic Ethics: Harms vs Benefits of Somatic Symptom Disorder”

Post #287 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-3Ch

On December 16, Allen Frances, MD, who led the task force responsible for the development of DSM-IV, published a new commentary at Huffington Post titled: Diagnostic Ethics: Harms vs Benefits of Somatic Symptom Disorder.

This commentary is also published at Saving Normal (hosted by Psychology Today) under the title: Diagnostic Ethics: Harms/Benefits- Somatic Symptom Disorder: Advice to ICD 11-don’t repeat DSM 5 mistakes.

There are a two important oversights in this commentary around ICD and DSM-5’s controversial new diagnostic category, Somatic Symptom Disorder (SSD).

Dr Frances writes:

“…The DSM-5 damage is done and will not be quickly undone. The arena now shifts to the International Classification of Diseases 11 which is currently being prepared by the World Health Organization and is due to be published in 2016. The open question is whether ICD 11 will mindlessly repeat the mistakes of DSM-5 or will it correct them?”

But Dr Frances omits to inform his readers that in September, a proposal was snuck into the Diagnosis Agenda for the fall meeting of the NCHS/CMS ICD-9-CM Coordination and Management Committee to insert Somatic Symptom Disorder as an inclusion term into the U.S.’s forthcoming ICD-10-CM*.

*ICD-10-CM has been adapted by NCHS from the WHO’s ICD-10 and will replace ICD-9-CM as the U.S.’s official mandated code set, following implementation on October 1, 2014.

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A foot in the door of ICD

APA has been lobbying CDC, NCHS and CMS to include new DSM-5 terms in the ICD-10-CM.

If NCHS rubber stamps the addition of Somatic Symptom Disorder as an official codable diagnostic term within ICD-10-CM, it could leverage the future replacement of several existing ICD-10-CM Somatoform disorders categories with this new, poorly validated, single diagnostic construct, bringing ICD-10-CM in line with DSM-5.

There are implications for ICD-11, too.

Once SSD is inserted into ICD-10-CM, the presence of this term within the U.S. adaptation of ICD-10 may make it easier for ICD-11 Revision Steering Group to justify the replacement of several existing ICD-10 Somatoform disorders categories with a single, new ICD construct contrived to incorporate SSD-like characteristics and facilitate harmonization between ICD-11 and DSM-5 disorder terms and diagnostic criteria.

Yet Dr Frances, so vocal since December 2012 on the perils of the new Somatic Symptom Disorder construct, has written nothing publicly about this move to insinuate the SSD term into ICD-10-CM and curiously, makes no mention of this important U.S. development in his latest commentary.

Emerging proposals for the Beta draft of ICD-11 do indeed demand close scrutiny. But U.S. professionals and patient groups need to be warned that insertion of Somatic Symptom Disorder into the forthcoming ICD-10-CM is currently under consideration by NCHS and to consider whether they are content to let this barrel through right under their noses and if not, and crucially, what courses of political action might be pursued to oppose this development.

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Only half the story

A second omission: Dr Frances’ commentary references the deliberations of the WHO Expert Working Group on Somatic Distress and Dissociative Disorders (a 17 member group chaired by O Gureje) which published a paper, in late 2012, reviewing the classification of the somatoform disorders, as currently defined, and discussing the group’s emerging proposals for ICD-11 [1].

But as Dr Frances is aware, this is not the only working group that is making recommendations for the revision of ICD-10’s Somatoform disorders.

The WHO Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse has appointed a Primary Care Consultation group (PCCG) to lead the development of the revision of the mental and behavioural disorders for the ICD-11 primary care classification (known as the ICD-11-PHC), which is an abridged version of the core ICD classification.

The PCCG reports to the International Advisory Group for the Revision of ICD-10 Mental and Behavioural Disorders and comprises a 12 member group of primary care professionals and mental health specialists representing both developed and low and middle-income countries.

The group is chaired by Prof, Sir David Goldberg, professor emeritus at the Institute of Psychiatry, London (a WHO Collaborating Centre), who has a long association with WHO, Geneva, and with the development of primary care editions of ICD.

The PCCG members are: SWC Chan, AC Dowell, S Fortes, L Gask, D Goldberg (Chair), KS Jacob, M Klinkman (Vice Chair), TP Lam, JK Mbatia, FA Minhas, G Reed, and M Rosendal.

(Dr Reed is Senior Project Officer for the International Advisory Group for the Revision of ICD-10 Mental and Behavioural Disorders; Dr Klinkman is Chair, WONCA International Classification Committee; Dr Rosendal is a member of WONCA International Classification Committee.)

The PCCG has been charged with developing and field testing the full set of disorders for inclusion in ICD-11-PHC, in preparation for worldwide adoption. It is anticipated that for the next edition, 28 mental disorder categories commonly managed within primary care will be included.

For all new and revised disorders included in the next ICD Primary Care version there will need to be an equivalent disorder in the ICD-11 core classification and the two versions are being developed simultaneously.

The group will be field testing the replacement for ICD-10-PHC’s F45 Unexplained somatic symptoms over the next couple of years and multi-centre focus groups have already reviewed the PCCG‘s proposals [2].

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The PCCG’s alternative construct – a BDS/SSD mash-up

As set out in several previous Dx Revision Watch posts, according to its own 2012 paper, the Primary Care Consultation Group has proposed a new disorder category, tentatively named, in 2012, as “Bodily stress syndrome” (BSS) which differed in both name and construct to the emerging proposals of the WHO Expert Working Group on Somatic Distress and Dissociative Disorders.

So we have two working groups advising ICD-11 and two sets of proposals.

The defining characteristics of the PCCG’s proposed new disorder, Bodily stress syndrome (as set out in its 2012 paper), draw heavily on the characteristics, criteria and illness model for Per Fink et al’s Bodily Distress Syndrome – a divergent construct to SSD – onto which the PCCG has tacked a tokenistic nod towards selected of the psychobehavioural features that define DSM-5’s Somatic symptom disorder.

Whereas in late 2012, the emerging construct of the other working group advising on the revision of ICD-10’s Somatoform disorders, the WHO Expert Working Group on Somatic Distress and Dissociative Disorders, was much closer to a “pure” SSD construct.

Neither proposed construct may survive the ICD-11 field trials or ICD-11 Revision Steering Group approval.

Fink and colleagues (one of whom, M Rosendal, sits on the Primary Care Consultation Group) are determined to see their Bodily Distress Syndrome construct adopted by primary care clinicians, incorporated into new management guidelines and integrated into the revisions of several European classification systems.

Their aim is to replace ICD-10’s F45 somatoform disorders, pain disorder, neurasthenia (ICD-10 F48), and the so-called “functional somatic syndromes”: Fibromyalgia (ICD-10 M79.7), IBS (ICD-10 K58) and CFS (indexed to ICD-10 G93.3), with their own single, unifying “Bodily Distress Syndrome” diagnosis, a disorder construct that is already in use in research and clinical settings in Denmark.

It remains unknown whether the two groups making recommendations for the revision of ICD-10’s Somatoform disorders have since reached consensus over what disorder name, definition and criteria WHO intends to submit to international field testing over the next year or two.

It’s not yet clear whether this proposed new BDD/BSS/WHATEVER diagnosis for the ICD-11 primary care and core version construct will have greater congruency with DSM-5’s SSD, or with Fink et al’s already operationalized BDS, or would combine elements from both; nor is it known which patient populations the new ICD construct is intended to include and exclude.

(In its 2012 proposed criteria, the PCCG does not specify FM, IBS, CFS or ME as Exclusion terms or Differential diagnoses to its BSS diagnosis.)

If WHO Revision favours the field testing and progression of an SSD-like construct for ICD-11 there will be considerable implications for all patient populations with persistent diagnosed bodily symptoms or with persistent bodily symptoms for which a cause has yet to be established.

If WHO Revision favours the progression of a Fink et al BDS-like construct and illness model, such a construct would shaft patients with FM, IBS and CFS and some other so-called “functional somatic syndromes.”

But Dr Frances says nothing at all in his commentary about the deliberations of the Primary Care Consultation Group despite the potential impact the adoption of a Fink et al BDS-like disorder construct would have on the specific FM, IBS, CFS and ME classifications that are currently assigned discrete codes outside the mental disorder chapter of ICD-10.

In sum:

The proposal to insert SSD into the U.S.’s forthcoming ICD-10-CM needs sunlight, continued monitoring and opposition at the political level by professionals and advocacy groups. Exclusive focus on emerging proposals for ICD-11 obscures the September 2013 NCHS/CMS proposals for ICD-10-CM.

The deliberations of both working groups that are making recommendations for the revision of the Somatoform Disorders for the ICD-11 core and primary care versions demand equal scrutiny, monitoring and input by professional and advocacy organization stakeholders.

It is disconcerting that whilst several paragraphs in Dr Frances’ commentary are squandered on apologia for those who sit on expert working groups, these two crucial issues have been sidelined.

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References

1. Creed F, Gureje O. Emerging themes in the revision of the classification of somatoform disorders. Int Rev Psychiatry. 2012 Dec;24(6):556-67. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23244611 [Full text behind paywall]

2. Lam TP, Goldberg DP, Dowell AC, Fortes S, Mbatia JK, Minhas FA, Klinkman MS: Proposed new diagnoses of anxious depression and bodily stress syndrome in ICD-11-PHC: an international focus group study. Fam Pract 2012 Jul 28. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22843638 [Full text behind paywall]

3. Further reading: BDS, BDDs, BSS, BDD and ICD-11, unscrambled

4. ICD-9-CM/PCS Coordination and Maintenance Committee Meeting September 18-19, 2013:
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/icd/icd9cm_maintenance.htm

September meeting Diagnostic Agenda/Proposals document [PDF – 342 KB]:
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd/icd_topic_packet_sept_181913.pdf

Compiled by Suzy Chapman for Dx Revision Watch

ICD-11 December Round up #1

Post #286 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-3AJ

“The current ICD Revision Process timeline foresees that the ICD is submitted to the WHA in 2015 May and could then be implemented…experience obtained thus far, however, suggests that this timeframe will be extremely tight for paying due diligence to the work especially in terms of: appropriate consultations with expert groups; communication and dissemination with stakeholders; and sufficient time for field testing in multiple countries and settings, and carrying out the resulting edits.”   B Üstün, September 2013

In this September posting, I reported that a further extension to the ICD-11 timeline is under consideration.

This document and this slide presentation (Slides 29 thru 35) indicate that ICD-11 Revision is failing to meet development targets.

In a review of progress made, current status and timelines (document Pages 5 thru 10), Dr Bedirhan Üstün, Coordinator, Classification, Terminology and Standards, World Health Organization, sets out the options for postponement and discusses whether submission of ICD-11 for World Health Assembly approval should be delayed until 2016, or possibly 2017.

I will update as further information on any decision to extend the timeline emerges.

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Round up of ICD-11 related materials:

Slide presentation: PDF format, mostly in German

58. GMDS-Jahrestagung, Lübeck, 1.-5.9.2013: Symposium, Medizinische, Klassificationen und Termiologien Vortrag Üstün und Jakob, 5.9.2013

ICD-11 Übersicht Üstün und Jakob

Slide presentation: Slideshare format, in English

Regional Conference of the International Society for Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology (ISAPP)

Diagnostic Classifications in the 21st Century: how can we capture developmental details Bedirhan Üstün, Coordinator, World Health Organization, November 24, 2013

Multisystem diseases and terms with multiple parents:

In 2010, ICD-11 Revision posted this Discussion Document: Multisystem Disorders, Aymé, Chalmers, Chute, Jakob.

The text sets out the feasibility, rationale for and possible scope of a new multisystem disorders chapter for ICD-11 for diseases that might belong to or affect multiple body systems.

A more recent working document (WHO ICD Revision Information Note, R Chalmers, MS docx editing format, dated 29 January 2013) updates the discussion and concludes that a majority of ICD Revision Topic Advisory Groups and experts did not agree with the recommendation to create a new Multisystem Disease Chapter for ICD-11 and that other options for accommodating diseases which straddle multiple chapters were being considered.

According to ICD-11 Beta drafting platform, the ICD-11 Foundation Component will allow for a single concept to be represented in a Multisystem Disease linearization and appear in more than one logically appropriate location. In the linearizations (e.g. Morbidity), a single concept has a single preferred location and references [to the term] from elsewhere [within the same chapter or within a different chapter] are greyed out but link to the preferred location.

For example, skin tumour is both a skin disease and a neoplasm and for ICD-11 is located under two chapters. Other diseases that are proposed to be assigned multiple parents include some eye diseases resulting from diabetes; tuberculosis meningitis (as both an infectious and a nervous system disease) and Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), currently proposed to be dual coded under Chapter 15 Diseases of the genitourinary system under parent term, Premenstrual tension syndrome but also listed under Chapter 5 Mental and behavioural disorders under Depressive disorders.

While previous versions of ICD did not support multiple inheritance, there are already over 450 terms with multiple parents within ICD-11.

Editorial commentary, ICD-11 Neurological disorders:

J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry doi:10.1136/jnnp-2013-307093

The classification of neurological disorders in the 11th revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11)

Sanjeev Rajakulendran¹, Tarun Dua², Melissa Harper², Raad Shakir¹

1 Imperial College NHS Healthcare Trust, Charing Cross Hospital, London, UK; 2 Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland

Published Online First 18 November 2013 [Full text behind paywall]

Abstract: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24249782

Single page extract as image: http://jnnp.bmj.com/content/early/2013/11/18/jnnp-2013-307093.extract

(If a single page text file fails to load at the above link, try pasting the editorial title into a search engine and access the page from the search engine link.)

Primary Care version of ICD-11 (ICD-11-PHC):

The ICD-10-PHC is an abridged version of the ICD-10 core classification for use in primary care and low resource settings. A new edition (ICD-11-PHC) is being developed simultaneously with the core ICD-11.

For all new and revised disorders included in the ICD-11 Primary Care version there will need to be an equivalent disorder in the ICD-11 core classification.

The Mental and behavioural disorders section of ICD-11-PHC is expected to list 28 mental and behavioural disorders most commonly managed within primary care settings, as opposed to over 400 disorders in Chapter 5 of the core version.

The following ICD-10-PHC disorders are proposed to be dropped for ICD-11-PHC:

F40 Phobic disorders; F42.2 Mixed anxiety and depression; F43 Adjustment disorder;
F45 Unexplained somatic symptoms; F48 Neurasthenia; Z63 Bereavement, Source [4].

A list of the 28 proposed disorders for ICD-11-PHC, as they stood in 2012*, can be found on Page 51 of Source [5].

*This list may have undergone revision since the source published.

A new disorder term “Anxious depression” is proposed to be field tested for inclusion in ICD-11-PHC and is discussed in this recent paper by Prof, Sir David Goldberg, who chairs the Primary Care Consultation Group (PCCG) charged with the development of the primary care classification of mental and behavioural disorders for ICD-11:

Abstract: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/da.22206/abstract

Depression and Anxiety

DOI: 10.1002/da.22206

Review ANXIOUS FORMS OF DEPRESSION

David P. Goldberg

Article first published online: 27 NOV 2013 [Full text behind paywall]

There are further commentaries on the proposed new diagnoses of “anxious depression” and “bodily stress syndrome” in this 2012 paper:

Lam TP, Goldberg DP, Dowell AC, Fortes S, Mbatia JK, Minhas FA, Klinkman MS: Proposed new diagnoses of anxious depression and bodily stress syndrome in ICD-11-PHC: an international focus group study. Fam Pract 2012 Jul 28. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22843638 [Full text behind paywall]

According to this earlier paper, the Primary Care Consultation Group (PCCG) was still refining a construct and criteria for its proposed new disorder category, which the group had tentatively named as “Bodily stress syndrome” (BSS).

BSS would replace ICD-10-PHC’s Unexplained somatic symptoms and Neurasthenia categories and would be located under a new disorder group section heading called “Body distress disorders,” under which would sit three other discrete disorders. See Page 51 of Source [5].

The characteristics of new disorder 15: Bodily stress syndrome (as they appeared in the paper) might be described as a mash-up between selected of the psychobehavioural characteristics that define DSM-5’s new Somatic symptom disorder (SSD) and selected of the characteristics and criteria for Fink et al’s Bodily Distress Syndrome – rather than a mirror or near mirror of one or the other.

In order to facilitate harmonization between ICD-11 and DSM-5 mental and behavioural disorders, we might envisage pressure on the group to align with or accommodate DSM-5’s new Somatic symptom disorder within any framework proposed to replace the existing ICD Somatoform disorders.

But DSM-5’s SSD and Fink et al’s BDS are acknowledged by Creed, Henningsen and Fink as divergent constructs, so this presents the groups advising ICD Revision with a dilemma if they are also being influenced to recommend a BDS-like construct.

You can compare how these two constructs differ and appreciate why it may be proving difficult to convince ICD Revision of the utility of the PCCG’s BSS construct (and the potential for confusion where different constructs bear very similar names) in my table at the end of Page 1 of this Dx Revision Watch post:

BDS, BDDs, BSS, BDD and ICD-11, unscrambled

Marianne Rosendal (member of the ICD-11 Primary Care Consultation Group; member of WONCA International Classification Committee), Fink and colleagues are eager to see their Bodily distress syndrome construct adopted by primary care clinicians and incorporated into management guidelines and revisions of European classification systems to replace ICD-10’s F45 somatoform disorders, pain disorder, neurasthenia (ICD-10 F48), and the so-called “functional somatic syndromes,”  Fibromyalgia (ICD-10 M79.7), IBS (ICD-10 K58) and CFS (indexed to ICD-10 G93.3). See graphics at end of post.

While Fink et al’s BDS construct seeks to capture somatoform disorders, pain disorder, neurasthenia and the so-called functional somatic syndromes under a single, unifying diagnosis, it is unclear from the 2012 Lam et al paper whether and how the so-called functional somatic syndromes are intended to fit into the Primary Care Consultation Group’s proposed ICD-11 framework.

While the paper does list some exclusions and differential diagnoses, it lists no specific exclusions or differential diagnoses for FM, IBS or CFS and it is silent on the matter of which of the so-called functional somatic syndromes the group’s proposed new BSS diagnosis might be intended to be inclusive of, or might intentionally or unintentionally capture.

Nor is it discussed within the paper what the implications would be for the future classification and chapter location of several currently discretely coded ICD-10 entities, if Bodily stress syndrome (or whatever new term might eventually be agreed upon) were intended to capture all or selected of FM, IBS, CFS and (B)ME – the sensitivities associated with any such proposal would not be lost on Prof Goldberg which possibly accounts for the lacunae in this paper.

Lack of consensus between the two groups advising ICD-11:

The second working group advising ICD-11 on the revision of ICD-10’s Somatoform disorders is the WHO Expert Working Group on Somatic Distress and Dissociative Disorders (S3DWG).

In late 2012, their emerging construct (also published behind a paywall) had considerably more in common with DSM-5’s SSD construct than with Fink et al’s BDS (see: BDS, BDDs, BSS, BDD and ICD-11, unscrambled).

But the S3DWG’s construct Bodily distress disorder (BDD) and Severe bodily distress disorder are yet to be defined and characterised in the public version of the ICD-11 Beta draft.

It remains unknown whether the two groups making recommendations for the revision of ICD-10’s Somatoform disorders have reached consensus over what definition and criteria WHO intends to field trial over the next year or two and what this proposed new diagnosis should be called; whether their proposed BDD/BSS/WHATEVER construct will have greater congruency with DSM-5’s SSD or with Fink et al’s BDS, or what patient populations this new ICD construct is intended to include and exclude.

The absence of information on proposals within the Beta draft, itself, and the lack of working group progress reports placed in the public domain presents considerable barriers for stakeholder comment on the intentions of these two groups and renders threadbare ICD-11’s claims to be an “open” and “transparent” and “inclusive” collaborative process.

Two further papers relating to “Medically unexplained symptoms,” “Bodily distress syndrome” and “Somatoform disorders”:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0163834313002533

General Hospital Psychiatry

Psychiatric–Medical Comorbidity

Is physical disease missed in patients with medically unexplained symptoms? A long-term follow-up of 120 patients diagnosed with bodily distress syndrome

Elisabeth Lundsgaard Skovenborg, B.Sc., Andreas Schröder, M.D., Ph.D.

The Research Clinic for Functional Disorders and Psychosomatics, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark

Available online 22 October 2013 In Press, Corrected Proof [Full text behind paywall]

http://www.systematicreviewsjournal.com/content/2/1/99

Systematic Reviews 2013, 2:99 doi:10.1186/2046-4053-2-99

Barriers to the diagnosis of somatoform disorders in primary care: protocol for a systematic review of the current status

Alexandra M Murray¹²*, Anne Toussaint¹², Astrid Althaus¹² and Bernd Löwe¹²

1 Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany

2 University Hospital of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Schön Clinic Hamburg-Eilbek, Hamburg, Germany

Published: 8 November 2013

[Open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License]

Finally, brief summaries of selected of the workshops held at the European Association for Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry and Psychosomatics (EACLPP) 2012 Conference, including workshops on “functional disorders and syndromes” and “Bodily distress,” one of which included:

http://www.eaclpp-ecpr2012.dk/Home/DownloadWorkshop

“…brief presentations which describe the present state of the proposed changes to Primary care classifications (ICPC and ICD for primary care) (MR) and DSM-V and ICD-11 (FC).”

where presenter “MR” is Marianne Rosendal; “FC” is Francis Creed, member of the ICD-11 Expert Working Group on Somatic Distress and Dissociative Disorders (S3DWG).

Note: ICPC-2 used in primary care is also under revision.

Foreslået ny klassifikation (Suggested new classification, Fink et al): 

Source Figur 1: http://www.ugeskriftet.dk/LF/UFL/2010/24/pdf/VP02100057.pdf

Danish Journal paper Fink P

Fink: Proposed New Classification

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References

1. WHO considers further extension to ICD-11 development timeline

2. Committee for the Coordination of Statistical Activities, Twenty-second Session 4-6 September 2013, Items for discussion and decision: Item 8 of the provisional agenda, 3 September 2013 Full document in PDF format

3. Slide presentation: ICD Revision: Where are we? What remains to be done? Shall we have ICD WHA submission in 2015 or later? Bedirhan Ustun, World Health Organization Classifications, Terminologies, Standards, ICD Revision: Quality Safety Meeting 2013, September 9-10, 2013 http://www.slideshare.net/ustunb/icd-2013-qs-tag-26027668

4. Goldberg, D. Guest editorial. A revised mental health classification for use in general medical settings: the ICD11–PHC 1. International Psychiatry, Page 1, February 2011. http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/IPv8n1.pdf

5. Goldberg DP. Comparison Between ICD and DSM Diagnostic Systems for Mental Disorders. In: Sorel E, (Ed.) 21st Century Global Mental Health. Jones & Bartlett Learning, 2012: 37-53. Free PDF, Sample Chapter Two: http://samples.jbpub.com/9781449627874/Chapter2.pdf

Compiled by Suzy Chapman for Dx Revision Watch

DSM-5 November Round up #1

Post #285 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-3zQ

Recent documents issued by the American Psychiatric Association at DSM-5 Development

Coding Changes Update: Important Coding and Criteria Updates: UPDATED 11/22/13

APA Statement issued 10.31.13: Statement on DSM-5 Text Error Pedophilic disorder text error to be corrected

Text Corrections: DSM-5 Paraphilic Disorders 10/31/13

Criteria Update: Updates to DSM-5 Adjustment Disorders: 10/15/13

Coding Changes Update: Neurocognitive Disorders Coding Updates: UPDATED 10/18/13

Psychiatric News Article: ICD Codes for Some DSM-5 Diagnoses Updated, Mark Moran, 10/7/13

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Commentary, Dx Summit

Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome Was Not Actually Removed from DSM-5

by Sarah Kamens

Note from Dx Revision Watch: Here is another codable diagnosis slipped in by APA before going to press. Between closure of the third DSM-5 draft review and publication of the final code sets a “Brief somatic symptom disorder,” where duration of symptoms is less than 6 months, was added under new category, “Other specified Somatic Symptom and Related Disorder” cross-walked to ICD 300.89 (F45.8) [DSM-5, Page 327]. This “Other specified” category can be used for symptom presentations that do not meet the full criteria for any of the disorders in the Somatic symptom and related disorders diagnostic class.
This means that as little as a single, distressing physical symptom + just one psychobehavioural symptom from the Somatic symptom disorder “B type” criteria, with less than 6 months chronicity would meet criteria for a codable mental disorder. A “Brief illness anxiety disorder” diagnosis of less than 6 months duration has also been inserted under this code – neither of which were in the third draft.

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Commentary from Christopher Lane, Ph.D., at Side Effects, Psychology Today:

The OECD Warns on Antidepressant Overprescribing Antidepressant consumption not matched by an increase in global diagnoses

Christopher Lane | November 22, 2013

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Commentary by Athena Bryan for Brown Political Review:

A Tale of Two Codices: the DSM, ICD and Definition of Mental Illness in America

Athena Bryan | November 21, 2013

Note from Dx Revision Watch: I have added a comment to this article, noting that APA has proposed the following new DSM-5 disorders for inclusion in the forthcoming U.S. specific ICD-10-CM via the September 18-19, 2013 meeting of the ICD-9-CM Coordination and Maintenance Committee: Binge eating disorder (BED); Disruptive mood dysregulation disorder (DMDD); Social (pragmatic) communication disorder; Hoarding disorder; Excoriation (skin picking) disorder; Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD); that DSM-5′s new constructs, Somatic symptom disorder (SSD) and Illness anxiety disorder were also proposed for insertion into the ICD-10-CM Tabular List and Index; that the ICD-10-CM is a “clinical modification” of WHO’s ICD-10 and is scheduled for U.S. implementation in October 2014; that its development from the ICD-10 has been the responsibility of NCHS.

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Three DSM-5 Somatic symptom disorder related items:

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Editorial British Journal of Psychiatry:

Editorial: Michael Sharpe, DSM-5 Somatic symptom disorder Work Group member BJP November 2013 203:320-321; doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.112.122523:

Editorial: Somatic symptoms: beyond ‘medically unexplained’

Abstract:

Somatic symptoms may be classified as either ‘medically explained’ or ‘medically unexplained’ – the former being considered medical and the latter psychiatric. In healthcare systems focused on disease, this distinction has pragmatic value. However, new scientific evidence and psychiatric classification urge a more integrated approach with important implications for psychiatry.

Note from Dx Revision Watch: Unless NCHS rejects the proposal submitted at the September 18-19, 2013 meeting of the ICD-9-CM Coordination and Maintenance Committee, Somatic symptom disorder is destined for insertion into the ICD-10-CM Tabular List under F45 Somatoform Disorders as an inclusion term to F45.1 Undifferentiated somatoform disorder and for adding to the Alphabetic Index. See http://wp.me/pKrrB-3×1.

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Slide presentation: Francis Creed, University of Manchester, UK:

Can we now explain medically unexplained symptoms?

Francis Creed | Exeter, June 13, 2013 | PDF format

or open PDF [1.5MB] here Creed June 2013 slide presentation

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Book chapter: Polypharmacy in Psychiatry Practice, Volume I: Multiple Medication Use Strategies:

Polypharmacy in Psychiatry Practice, Volume I: Multiple Medication Use Strategies, Ritsner, Michael S (Ed.) 2013, XVII, 287 p ISBN: 978-94-007-5804-9 (Print) 978-94-007-5805-6 (Online)

Chapter 11: Multiple Medication Use in Somatic Symptom Disorders: From Augmentation to Diminution Strategies  

Most of Chapter 11, Pages 243-254 (pp 247-249 omitted) can be previewed on Google Books here

Objectors to insertion of DSM-5’s Somatic symptom disorder into ICD-10-CM

Post #283 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-3y8

Michael Munoz, Executive Director, Rocky Mountain CFS/ME & FM Association has organized a joint letter of objection signed by 13 U.S. patient organizations and advocates for submission to NCHS. It can be read here:

http://www.rmcfa.org/index.html > http://www.rm-cfs-fms.citymaker.com/f/NCHS.pdf

or download PDF here: Joint response to NCHS 11.15.13

This joint submission had been signed by the following organizations and advocates:

Michael Munoz, Executive Director, Rocky Mountain CFS/ME & FM Association
Lori Chapo-Kroger, RN, President & CEO, PANDORA Org
Charmian Proskauer, President, Massachusetts CFIDS/ME & FM Association
Tamara Staples, President & Co-Founder, Fibromyalgia – ME/CFS Support Center, Inc.
Donna Pearson, Vice President, Massachusetts CFIDS/ME & FM Association
Jean Harrison, President and Founder, MAME – Mothers Against Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
Denise Lopez-Majano, Founder, Speak Up About ME
Rik Carlson, President, Immunedysfunction.org
Jennifer M. Spotila, JD., Occupy CFS blog, Patient Advocate
Billie Moore, Patient Advocate
Charlotte von Salis, JD, Patient Advocate
Mary Schweitzer, Ph.D., Patient Advocate
Mary Dimmock, Patient Advocate

I’d like to thank all those who have submitted objections to NCHS in opposition to the September 2013 C & M Committee meeting proposal to insert Somatic symptom disorder as an inclusion term in ICD-10-CM.

My submission can be read here PDF: Submission NCHS

Some additional organizations and individuals have advised me of their own submissions. If you have submitted a response on behalf of your organization or as a patient, advocate or professional and you would like your name or your organization’s name added to the list of responders below please shoot me an email or contact me via the Contact form with a link to your submission (if it has been placed in the public domain) and a couple of lines of credentials or stakeholder interest, if desired.

Bridget Mildon, Patient advocate and Founder of FND Hope, Inc. FND Hope is the only state registered non profit patient advocacy organization specifically for those assigned a diagnosed of Functional Neurological Disorder. Bridget was misdiagnosed with FND and continues to advocate for those with a FND diagnosis to receive appropriate patient care fndhope.org Submission
Mark Thompson, patient. Submission
Diane O’Leary, Ph.D. is a philosopher focused on the rights of medical patients denied medical care because of mistaken somatoform diagnoses. She is author of the book, Patient, Executive Director of the Sneddon’s Foundation, and author of numerous web and print entries on Sneddon’s Syndrome, a highly threatening cerebrovascular disease generally mistaken for somatoform disorders. Dr. O’Leary is author of “Peculiar Silence: The Problem of Error in Diagnosis of SSD” (a reply piece at BMJ). Dr O’Leary has coauthored several blogs, published and forthcoming, with Prof. Allen Frances at Huffington Post, Psychology Today and Psychiatric Times. New work is forthcoming for the National Organization for Rare Disorders and Ben’s Friends. An audio interview with Dr. O’Leary is available here. PDF Submission also Submission [On LinkedIn]
Suzy Chapman, DipAD, UK carer/advocate for young adult with long-term illness. Owner of website Dx Revision Watch, Monitoring the revision of DSM-5 and ICD-11. Co-author of journal papers and commentaries on the Somatic symptom disorder construct (with Professor Allen Frances). PDF Submission
Richard A. Lawhern, Ph.D. is an 18-year patient advocate. He writes content and moderates for “Living With TN,” a social networking site that supports nearly 5,000 chronic face pain patients in 117 countries – many of whom have been substantively harmed by mis-application of psychosomatic diagnoses. Submission
Angela Kennedy, M.A. (also retired R.G.N.), social science lecturer and researcher. Author of the book Authors of our own misfortune?: The problems with psychogenic explanations for physical illnesses (2012) Village Digital Press. Carer and parent of disabled woman who became ill at 12 years of age.
Gail Kansky, President, National CFIDS Foundation, Inc. Needham, MA http://www.ncf-net.org Submission
Jack Carney, Ph.D., DSW, Brooklyn, NY, Committee to Boycott the DSM-5, contributor to Mad in America. A social worker, Dr Carney writes on the contradictions and hypocrisies of the public mental health system and promotes and applauds acts of resistance to it.
Jennifer Brauer, BA, Women’s Studies, University of Massachusetts. Former certified paramedic, Emergency Medical Technician BLS, Bureau of The Emergency Medical Services, NY City Fire Dept. (1996-2005).
Samuel Wales, author, The Kafka Pandemic