Articles

Characterizing Anxiety Subtypes And The Relationship To Behavioral Phenotyping In Major Depression: Results From The Embarc Study

Trombello, Joseph M.; Pizzagalli, Diego A.; Weissman, Myrna M.; Grannemann, Bruce D.; Cooper, Crystal M.; Greer, Tracy L.; Malchow, Ashley L.; Jha, Manish K.; Carmody, Thomas J.; Kurian, Benji T.; Webb, Christian A.; Dillon, Daniel G.; McGrath, Patrick J.; Bruder, Gerard; Fava, Maurizio; Parsey, Ramin V.; McInnis, Melvin G.; Adams, Phil; Trivedi, Madhukar H.

The current study aimed to characterize the multifaceted nature of anxiety in patients with major depression by evaluating distinct anxiety factors. We then related these derived anxiety factors to performance on a Flanker Task of cognitive control, in order to further validate these factors. Data were collected from 195 patients with nonpsychotic chronic or recurrent major depression or dysthymic disorder. At baseline, participants completed self-report measures of anxiety, depression, and other related symptoms (mania, suicidality) and clinicians administered a structured diagnostic interview and the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, including anxiety/ somatization items. Four discrete factors (State Anxiety, Panic, Neuroticism/Worry, and Restlessness/Agitation) emerged, with high degrees of internal consistency. Discriminant and convergent validity analyses also yielded findings in the expected direction. Furthermore, the neuroticism/worry factor was associated with Flanker Task interference, such that individuals higher on neuroticism/worry responded more incorrectly (yet faster) to incongruent vs. congruent trials whereas individuals higher on the fear/panic factor responded more slowly, with no accuracy effect, to the Flanker Task stimuli. These results parse anxiety into four distinct factors that encompass physiological, psychological, and cognitive components of anxiety. While state anxiety, panic and neuroticism/worry are related to existing measures of anxiety, the Restlessness/Agitation factor appears to be a unique measure of general anxious arousal. Furthermore, two factors were independently validated through the Flanker Task. These results suggest that these anxiety domains have distinct behavioral profiles and could have differential responses to distinct treatments.

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Also Published In

Title
Journal of Psychiatric Research
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2018.04.003

More About This Work

Academic Units
Epidemiology
Psychiatry
Published Here
February 1, 2022