𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

A comparison of GMS-A/AGECAT, DSM-III-R for dementia and depression, including subthreshold depression (SD)—results from the Berlin Aging Study (BASE)

✍ Scribed by R. T. Schaub; M. Linden; J. R. M. Copeland


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
87 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

Empirical evaluation of the agreement between different diagnostic approaches is crucial for the understanding of epidemiological results in geriatric psychiatry.

Objectives

In this paper, we analyse differences between widely used diagnostic approaches of dementia and depression and offer evidence that diagnostic thresholds vary substantially on quantitative dimensions, but that conceptual and other differences between approaches must also been taken into account.

Methods

In an epidemiological study of n = 516 persons, aged 70–103 years, we compared psychiatric diagnoses of dementia and depression obtained by GMS‐A/HAS‐AGECAT, DSM‐III‐R and clinician's diagnoses of subthreshold depression (SD).

Results

For depression, cumulative prevalence of clinician's diagnosis (including SD, GMS‐A/HAS‐AGECAT and DSM‐III‐R defined forms) was highest, followed by GMS‐A/HAS‐AGECAT‐diagnosis and DSM‐III‐R, while for dementia DSM‐III‐R was followed by GMS‐A/HAS‐AGECAT. Overall agreement between DSM‐III‐R and GMS‐A/HAS‐AGECAT was moderate. Adapting thresholds for AGECAT resulted in slightly better diagnostic efficiency. Diagnostic disagreement was found predominantly for cases with intermediate symptom severity, supporting the hypothesis of differing thresholds between DSM‐III‐R and GMS‐A/HAS‐AGECAT, while cases with lower or higher symptom severity were similarily seen as cases or non‐cases.

Conclusion

Disagreement is not only caused by conceptual differences, but also different thresholds of diagnostic algorithms. Adaptation of threshold levels should be feasible, depending on the purpose of the analysis. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.