the dreams of our fathers VIII…

Posted on Thursday 17 May 2012

So I’ll begin winding up this journey by starting over. The Psychiatric Department ay Washington University in St. Louis in the 1960s stood as the center of Bological Psychiatry in America. They thought psychoanalysis, a dominant paradigm at the time, had no place in psychiatry either as theoretical base or as political force in organized psychiatry. They particularly opposed the inclusion of the Neuroses in the 1968 DSM-II. Shortly after it was published they published an article [Establishment of Diagnostic Validity in Psychiatric Illness: Its Application to Schizophrenia] with these comments [quoted in full this time for a reason]:
One of the reasons that diagnostic classification has fallen into disrepute among some psychiatrists is that diagnostic schemes have been largely based upon a priori principles rather than upon systematic studies. Such systematic studies are necessary, although they may be based upon different approaches. We have found that the approach described here facilitates the development of a valid classification in psychiatry. This paper illustrates its usefulness in schizophrenia.
The Five Phases
1.Clinical Description
In general, the first step is to describe the clinical picture of the disorder. This may be a single striking clinical feature or a combination of clinical features thought to be associated with one another. Race, sex, age at onset, precipitating factors, and other items may be used to define the clinical picture more precisely. The clinical picture thus does not include only symptoms.
2. Laboratory Studies
Included among laboratory studies are chemical, physiological, radiological, and anatomical (biopsy and autopsy) findings. Certain psychological tests, when shown to be reliable and reproducible, may also be considered laboratory studies in this context. Laboratory findings are generally more reliable, precise, and reproducible than are clinical descriptions. When consistent with a defined clinical picture they permit a more refined classification. Without such a defined clinical picture, their value may be considerably reduced. Unfortunately, consistent and reliable laboratory findings have not yet been demonstrated in the more common psychiatric disorders.
3. Delimitation from Other Disorders
Since similar clinical features and laboratory findings may be seen in patients suffering from different disorders (e.g., cough and blood in the sputum in lobar pneumonia, bronchiectasis, and bronchogenic carcinoma), it is necessary to specify exclusion criteria so that patients with other illnesses are not included in the group to be studied. These criteria should also permit exclusion of borderline cases and doubtful cases (an undiagnosed group) so that the index group may be as homogeneous as possible.
4. Follow-Up Study
The purpose of the follow-up study is to determine whether or not the original patients are suffering from some other defined disorder that could account for the original clinical picture. If they are suffering from another such illness, this finding suggests that the original patients did not comprise a homogeneous group and that it is necessary to modify the diagnostic criteria. In the absence of known etiology or pathogenesis, which is true of the more common psychiatric disorders, marked differences in outcome, such as between complete recovery and chronic illness, suggest that the group is not homogeneous. This latter point is not as compelling in suggesting diagnostic heterogeneity as is the finding of a change in diagnosis. The same illness may have a variable prognosis, but until we know more about the fundamental nature of the common psychiatric illnesses marked differences in outcome should be regarded as a challenge to the validity of the original diagnosis.
5. Family Study
Most psychiatric illnesses have been shown to run in families, whether the investigations were designed to study hereditary or environmental causes. Independent of the question of etiology, therefore, the finding of an increased prevalence of the same disorder among the close relatives of the original patients strongly indicates that one is dealing with a valid entity. We hope it is apparent that
As we’ve seen, one on their residents, John Feighner, took it upon himself to construct a taxonomy for psychiatry with their help from the literature based on signs and symptoms which they published [Diagnostic Criteria for Use in Psychiatric Research - full text on-line]. It was a deceptive article requiring a close reading. In an early paragraph, they lodged their complaint about the current system:
In contrast to the American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-II), in which the diagnostic classification is based upon the "best clinical judgement and experience" of a committee and its consultants, this communication will present a diagnostic classification validated primarily by follow-up and family studies. The following criteria for establishing diagnostic validity in psychiatric illness have been described elsewhere and may be divided into five phase.
Then they included the section from their former paper verbatim, literally word-for-word. I’ve never seen that in a published paper. Next came the report of two unpublished studies showing high inter-rater reliability, that apparently used some other version of a diagnostic system and could only have antedated John Feighner’s compilation. Then came what are known as the Feighner Criteria. On the first several readings, I didn’t know that:
  • John Feighner was a psychiatery resident
  • The criteria came from a literature search, not their own patients
  • The criteria were hypothetical and had not been vetted by their 5 phases
  • The five phases of diagnosis were not part of generating the criteria but rather cut and pasted from their earlier article
  • The reliability figures were from somewhere else antedating the criteria [never ever published]
Since I figured those things out by going over and over it boring any reader of this series to tears, I find that others already knew it, but it sure wasn’t apparent to me. I can’t exactly call that lying, but I would be glad to call it conscious deception. It matters because this diagnostic system became the paradigm for an evidence-based phenomenological approach to psychiatric diagnosis – validity certified by their mentioned phases and reliability tested in the field – none of which ever happened.

For Dr. Spitzer, charged with the task of redesigning the DSM-II, the Feighner Criteria were a godsend. They gave him a descriptive system to work with and allies who shared his disaffection with the psychoanalysts and their influence on the DSM-II. In his 1974 meta-analysis using Kappa, he demonstrated the unreliability of the DSM-II system and introduced the Feighner Criteria as a template for the Research Diagnostic Criteria [RDC] being tested in an NIMH study with Dr. Robins, a leader of the St. Louis Group [box scores and kappa…]. In 1978, they published reliability studies for the RDC and the DSM was born [the dreams of our fathers I…]. In 1991, in response to challenges that his criteria in the DSM-III had not followed the phases described in these early papers, Dr. Spitzer admitted that they had not validated the catergories as described by Robins and Guze, but continued to contend that there was no etiological bias towards biology, a point he made again in 2001 [dreams of our fathers II…].

In poring over this, I’ve come to see this process as having two distinct dreams. Everybody involved wanted the psychoanalytic influence gone. John Feighner was an young resident who dreamed of making concrete sense of psychiatric diagnosis using the literature to build a phenomenological template. Robert Spitzer had the same goal – a descriptive DSM-III like the one he created. He says he didn’t have an etiologic focus or bias. So I lump the two of them together. The St. Louis Group at Barnes Hospital had a definite etiologic focus – biology, data, biology. They dreamed of picking up where Kraepelin left off and building not only a neo-Kraepelinian DSM-III, but a neo-Kraepelinian psychiatry:

    1. Psychiatry is a branch of medicine.
    2. Psychiatry should utilize modern scientific methodologies and base its practice on scientific knowledge.
    3. Psychiatry treats people who are sick and who require treatment.
    4. There is a boundary between the normal and the sick.
    5. There are discrete mental illnesses.  They are not myths, and there are many of them.
    6. The focus of psychiatric physicians should be on the biological aspects of illness.
    7. There should be an explicit and intentional concern with diagnosis and classification.
    8. Diagnostic criteria should be codified, and a legitimate and valued area of research should be to validate them.
    9. Statistical techniques should be used to improve reliability and validity.
And so in 1980, the DSM-III expunged the psychoanalytic/psychological bent from the diagnostic system and largely from psychiatry while creating a descriptive system that proposed to cover the full territory of mental illness by being etiologically neutral for anything unproven. But the parallel dream of the St. Louis Group, a full scale medical/biologic system and psychiatry lived on in the white space on the Manual’s pages. Spitzer’s dream was realized. The dreams from St. Louis were launched.
Mickey @ 4:39 pm
Filed under: politics
dreams of our fathers VII…

Posted on Wednesday 16 May 2012

    In the ongoing quest to improve our psychiatric diagnostic system, we are now searching for new approaches to understanding the etiological and pathophysiological mechanisms that can improve the validity of our diagnoses and the consequent power of our preventive and treatment interventions venturing beyond the current DSM paradigm and DSM-IV framework. This thought-provoking volume produced as a partnership between the American Psychiatric Association, the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse represents a far-reaching attempt to stimulate research and discussion in the field in preparation for the eventual start of the DSM-V process, still several years hence. The book:
    • Explores a variety of basic nomenclature issues, including the desirability of rating the quality and quantity of information available to support the different disorders in the DSM in order to indicate the disparity of empirical support across the diagnostic system.
    • Offers a neuroscience research agenda to guide development of a pathophysiologically based classification for DSM-V, which reviews genetic, brain imaging, postmortem, and animal model research and includes strategic insights for a new research agenda.
    • Presents highlights of recent progress in developmental neuroscience, genetics, psychology, psychopathology, and epidemiology, using a bioecological perspective to focus on the first two decades of life, when rapid changes in behavior, emotion and cognition occur…
David Kupfer and Darrel Regier came on the scene in a peculiar relationship to the dreams of their fathers. On the one hand, they espoused the dreams of their St. Louis fathers [Eli Robins and Samual Guze] of putting psychiatry on a firm biological footing ["understanding the etiological and pathophysiological mechanisms that can improve the validity of our diagnoses"]. On the other they fairly consistently said they were going to transcend the dreams of their other fathers [Robert Spitzer, and Allen Frances] of simply improving the reliability of the current descriptive classification ["venturing beyond the current DSM paradigm and DSM-IV framework"]. So they set up a series of research planning conferences – experts…
Where was the scientific corroboration going to come from? the biomarkers that would fulfill the Robins/Guze dream? that would finally make honest men of them? Recall that all of this was occurring starting around 2000 or so. Neuropsychopharmacology was king. There were no black-box warnings on antidepressants. TMAP was running well in Texas. The Human Genome Project was being completed. Some version of the phrase "recent advances in neuroimaging, genomics, proteonomics…" or "the neurobiology of …" filled every meeting and many papers. Slides of the NIMH neuron flashed across most screens. For some reason, money flowed in the research world. The "boss of bosses" still reigned supreme. The large NIMH trials weren’t yet putting a damper on things. The decade of the brain had morphed into the era of Clinical Neuroscience with Tom Insel’s arrival at the NIMH and translational science was all the rage. The climate was just such that their confidence in saying they could move psychiatry into the realm of the solidly biomedical specialties was beyond high – I doubt they even gave it a lot of thought. The music was playing on all the corners. I retired in 2003 and became even further removed from matters psychiatric than I’d been in my cloistered psychotherapy practice. I was living in a cabin in the mountains some 60 miles north of the city in a near rural county, so everything for me is hearsay [and I wasn't even listening very much]. It didn’t make our weekly paper.

I can only guess at why the DSM-5 Task Force was secretive and distanced from their predecessors. I’d bet it had something to do with the specific personalities involved. It usually does, but I don’t know the actual people. There was a tone of secrecy in the air in psychiatry at large and we later learned that there were some fairly dark secrets behind those walls in general. But  it also occurs to me that they were aiming to make some fundamental changes in the DSM [and psychiatry as a whole], messing with Dr. Spitzer’s baby. Likewise, Dr. Frances had resisted diagnostic sprawl, and they were definitely in an annexation frame of mind, rather than urban renewal mode. But whatever their reasons, it looked bad from the outside, like a classic ‘good old boy’ network – up to no good. Even if the were innocent it was a bad move.

And I don’t really know how they got so far behind schedule. It looked like they were so busy dreaming together that they didn’t look at the clock. But my fantasy is that other forces came into play. They’d clearly planned for the grand realization of their St. Louis fathers’ dream – the long desired ‘laboratory studies.’ And they had no alternatives for what to do if they didn’t materialize. And they didn’t materialize. And I doubt they precogged that they would be living in a world of huge, embarrassing lawsuits against the drug companies implicating academic psychiatrists and psychiatric research. I expect they hadn’t banked on Senator Grassley exposing corruption in high places, including the APA president. I doubt they’d considered the ‘empty pipeline’ syndrome earlier, or the flight of the pharmaceutical companies from psychopharmacology, or the intensity of the outcry against overmedication and overmedicalization. The cast of characters are roughly my peers, so they’ve spent their whole careers in the same climate I’ve inhabited [on the other side of the fence]. And I expect they had no reason to know how quickly things can change. Or maybe they’re a bit incompetent. But by the time Dr. Spitzer and Dr. Frances started howling, the DSM-5 Task Force were in deep trouble and had to declare the first of what I hope will be several postponements.

Why did they decide to play their cards with this Revision? That really is the question. They just didn’t yet have the needed "laboratory studies" in hand – not a one. Even if all the negative things hadn’t happened along the way, they would still be in trouble – still coming up empty-handed. Had they come to actually believe their own inflated narratives? Or did they think the world wouldn’t tolerate waiting for something that made "evidence-based" really become evidence based? Was the impact of the overselling of psychiatric medicines already being felt and in need of a boost from hard science? If psychoanalyst Heinz Kohut, the self psychologist, were still alive and called in for a consult, he’d probably say that their collective Archaic Grandiose Self had emerged into consciousness and rendered them reckless and arrogant [and that wouldn't be a half bad way to think]. Another way to say that is "they got too big for their britches." But the point here is not to dissect  the group persona, or even the personae of the individuals, it’s to look at the fate of the dreams of the fathers.

I actually like separating the threads of the DSM story into the dream themes. One is the dream of the St. Louis Group and many others, a dream that psychiatric illness can and will be classified in the same way as medical diseases, based on objective findings – objective biological findings. The other is the dream of resident John Feighner, Robert Spitzer, and Allen Frances that psychiatric patients can be classified based on descriptive symptom complexes and other observation data like family history – and that the classification holds between clinicians [inter-rater reliability] and over time [longitudinal reliability]. In either case, the dream is to use diagnosis for accurate prognostication and effective treatment.

Before putting this post to rest and moving on the my First Annual State of the Dream[s] report, I’d like to remind us all of an aspect of the St. Louis Group’s dream that gets lost in the shuffle, "Delimitation from Other Disorders" [to which I'll add "and Normality"]. This is often referred to as having "clear borders." It’s a big factor in inter-rater reliability.
Mickey @ 8:00 am
Filed under: politics
dreams of our fathers VI…

Posted on Tuesday 15 May 2012

In an earlier series [the future of an illusion V…], I wrote about how the ambiguity of the DSM-III about etiology has been used to create the illusion of a biological basis for mental illness without proving it – claiming to be etiology neutral in the process. In this one, I’m on a similar tack, trying to look at this same question of etiology in relationship to the DSM-5 underway now. In their initial article, Robins and Guze of the St. Louis Group laid out five criteria that they believed constitute the phases defining a psychiatric diagnosis:
Establishment of Diagnostic Validity in Psychiatric Illness: Its Application to Schizophrenia
BY ELI ROBINS. M.D.AND SAMUEL B. GUZE, M.D.
American Journal of Psychiatry. 1970 126[7]:107-111.

Since Bleuler, psychiatrists have recognized that the diagnosis of schizophrenia includes a number of different disorders. We are interested in distinguishing these various disorders as part of our long-standing concern with developing a valid classification for psychiatric illnesses. We believe that a valid classification is an essential step in science. In medicine, and hence in psychiatry, classification is diagnosis. One of the reasons that diagnostic classification has fallen into disrepute among some psychiatrists is that diagnostic schemes have been largely based upon a priori principles rather than upon systematic studies. Such systematic studies are necessary, although they may be based upon different approaches. We have found that the approach described here facilitates the development of a valid classification in psychiatry. This paper illustrates its usefulness in schizophrenia…
Then they list:
  1. Clinical Description
  2. Laboratory Studies
  3. Delimitation from Other Disorders
  4. Follow-up Study
  5. Family Study
As we have seen, in their next paper [1972], they explain the same five phases again though they didn’t use that process to arrive at their well known Feighner Criteria. That pattern has continued to the present [1980-2012], praising the revolution of the DSM-III as being evidence-based as opposed to the case of the 16 years when part of the DSM-II [1968-1980] was based on the psychoanalytic concept of Neurosis, yet not using their revolutionary process to define diagnoses – relying instead on the literature and expert opinion [for the last 32 years of the DSM-III, DSM-IIIR, DSM-IV, and DSM-IVTR]. The claim of being evidence-based invariably references the St. Louis Group and the two original articles [mentioned above].

In the diagnostic system, this etiologic ambiguity is reflected in the peculiar use of the word Disorder. On one hand, it’s used as if it were a synonym for the traditional medical term Disease – a pathological condition defined by nature. On the other hand, a Disorder is a condition defined by man in the periodic ritual we call Revisions. Some Disorders approximate the Diseases of unknown etiology in medicine proper, regularly occurring collections of signs and symptoms, with clear borders, with familial tendencies, with longitudinal stability [a "course"], and with a consensus of a potential biological causality. But those particularly medical-ish Disorders uniformly lack laboratory [biomarker] confirmation. The majority of patients seeking care do not have those particularly medical-ish Disorders. They have the not-so-medical-ish Disorders that are created and maintained by committee – a Revision committee like the DSM-5 Task Force.

I am a psychoanalyst, a psychiatrist, an internist, and a person. In the privacy of my own mind, I use that distinction diagnostically. When I listen to a patient’s story, I find that my mind is thinking in one of those modes, and I reflexively check to make sure I’m not running on autopilot and going down a slippery slope on the way to making a categorical error, the bane of a person with multiple minds – thinking psychiatrically when I should be thinking medically, thinking psychoanalytically when I should be smelling Schizophrenia, diagnosing when I should be comforting. But in public, I don’t talk about that – I’m too bruised. I say this to aver the following – I have no wish for a diagnostic system like the DSM-II from now until the end of time. That’s not why I’m writing. I’m talking about it right now because the contemptuousness of the graphic in the last post is actually a part of the current system. The complaint about the inclusion of Neurosis in 1968 is a valid complaint – removed. If the psychoanalysts were that imperious before 1980, shame be upon them and they should go to time out – they’re gone. But there’s something else. That contempt is maintained as a cover for the arbitrariness of this current system, its lack of evidence base, its speculations, its medical-ness co-opted for reimbursement, and its use in the service of a beast of a pharmaceutical industry that’s had a field day with the DSM-III and its Disorders [the medical-ish and the not-so-medical-ish].

It might not sound like it, but I actually think the St. Louis Group was mostly on the up and up. They may have been too harsh about the motives of the analysts of their time, but somewhat on target about their behavior. As we’ve seen, they fudged way more than a little bit with the Feighner Criteria, implying a science base that doesn’t really seem to have been there. But I do think they genuinely thought psychiatry should be organized along more traditional medical lines, including diagnosis. And I expect they really did dream of a future psychiatry that stuck to the biological aspects of mental illness. I’m not even terribly mad about the end run of allying themselves with Robert Spitzer in the "invisible college." It was time for the pendulum to swing. That Spitzer didn’t seek other, balancing counsel was his mistake, not theirs. The St. Louis Group had a dream, and like all dreams – it was heavily informed by hopes and wishes for the future, not a present reality. They claimed way more than they could deliver without exaggerating, so they exaggerated, even cheated some. How they justified that is not ours to know any more than the exaggeration of the analysts. Maybe it’s just what people do in revolutions. What we do know now is that those exaggerations created a system that is currently a monster in its own right. Rather than the future the St. Louis Group and Robert Spitzer envisioned, we have a powerful subclass of corrupted scientist-entrepreneurs allied with the pharmaceutical industry that have been a malignant presence in psychiatry for so long that in the eyes of many, they define the profession.

At last, I’ve come to the point of this series. The DSM-5 Task Force was different from the ones before. Instead of living in the etiological ambiguity of their predecessors, they came out of the gate claiming that they were going to call the question. They were going to finally actualize the dreams of our fathers and produce a DSM-5 that contained the complete list – all five of the Robins and Guze phases, including laboratory work. Dr. Frances, in his criticism, says they were trying to create a paradigm shift [that the system couldn't support]. I’ve come to think of it in a different way. I think of it as their finally confirming the implied 1980 paradigm shift rather than creating a new one. But the difference might be semantic. Whatever you call it, they were on a different tack, sailing in a new direction into uncharted waters – and they didn’t seem to be a bit nervous about doing it. Looking at it now, it seems foolhardy. But back then, they were playing brass bands and talking like conquering heros. So it’s time to take another step back, this time to the dawn of the new century.
Mickey @ 8:00 am
Filed under: politics
dreams of our fathers V…

Posted on Monday 14 May 2012

The dreams of our fathers from St. Louis are undisguised. They were the mentors of John Feighner, Robert Spitzer, and made up a fourth of the DSM-III Committee. Click on the picture from their web-site above for their story of their contribution to the DSM-III and also look at their current view of the State of Psychiatry. I understand from people who knew them that they were very bright and nice people. I have nothing to add to their narrative…
Mickey @ 5:54 pm
Filed under: politics
interlude…

Posted on Monday 14 May 2012

Mickey @ 3:58 pm
Filed under: politics
dreams of our fathers IV…

Posted on Monday 14 May 2012

My apologies to those of you that already know these things, but I don’t, and blogging has become my late life way of thinking about things I don’t yet know. I take as my justification these overly quoted lines from Eliot:
    We shall not cease from exploration.
    And the end of all our exploring.
    Will be to arrive where we started.
    And know the place for the first time.

In my third year as a resident, I began to develop specific diagnostic criteria for the affective disorders; and in so doing I discussed with Drs. Robins, Sam Guze, and George Winokur the possibility of expanding these criteria to include the major psychiatric disorders. During my fourth year as a chief resident, I subsequently pursued this more vigorously and with my coauthors set up a Tuesday afternoon committee. At that time I reviewed close to 1,000 articles in the then existing literature and distilled this data into proposed criteria for the various disorders that we were working on at the time…
Certainly, it was my idea and initial energy that started this committee to work, but without the astute, competent, and highly informed contributions of the other authors, it would never have been possible to complete the task that was done in 1969-1970…
John Feighner 1989

Psychiatric Residency programs start and end promptly at the end of June/beginning of July. So John Feighner ended his program around June 30, 1970. The article Diagnostic Criteria for Use in Psychiatric Research [full text] was accepted for publication on April 9, 1971, 10 months later, and it opens with:
Diagnostic criteria for 14 psychiatric illnesses [and for secondary depression] along with the validating evidence for these diagnostic categories comes from workers outside our group as well as from those within; it consists of studies of both outpatients and inpatients, of family studies, and of follow-up studies. These criteria are the most efficient currently available; however, it is expected that the criteria be tested and not be considered a final, closed system. It is expected that the criteria will change as various illnesses are studied by different groups. Such criteria provide a framework for comparison of data gathered in different centers, and serve to promote communication between investigators.

This communication presents specific diagnostic criteria for those adult psychiatric illnesses that have been sufficiently validated by precise clinical description, follow-up, and family studies to warrant their use in research as well as in clinical practice. These criteria are not intended as final for any illness. The criteria represent a distillation of our clinical research experience, and of the experiences of others cited in the references.

I’ve apparently been misreading this article. I assumed that the criteria, follow-up, family studies, etc. actually came from the St. Louis Group and Barnes Hospital. I gather they mean that these things came from the literature search, including follow-up, family studies, etc.:
While no psychiatric syndrome has yet been fully validated by a complete series of steps, a great deal of work has been published indicating that substantial validation is possible. This communication is a summary of that work in the form of specific diagnostic criteria. The studies of validation for each illness are cited.
And the discussion of the five phases for diagnostic validity were rhetorical, a conceptual repeat from their earlier paper on Schizophrenia. That leaves this:
In addition, we in this department have carried out a study of inter-rater reliability and validation of reliability with an 18-month follow-up study of 314 psychiatric emergency room patients [to be published] as well as a seven-year follow-up study of 87 psychiatric inpatients [to be published], each of whom was interviewed personally and systematically. There were four different raters in the emergency room study. Agreement ranged from 86% to 95% about diagnosis with diagnostic criteria similar to those outlined in this report. There were two different raters in the inpatient study; reliability between those raters was 92%. In the emergency room study and in the inpatient study, validity, as determined by correctly predicting diagnosis at follow-up by criteria such as those of this report, was 93% and 92%, respectively.
There’s no way either of these follow-up studies could fit into the time frame of Feighner’s creation of these criteria and publication – so they must be pre-existing St. Louis studies. If they were ever published, I can’t find them – nor were they part of Spitzer’s later meta-analysis of reliability. Likewise, the comments "with diagnostic criteria similar to those outlined in this report" and "at follow-up by criteria such as those of this report" would lead me to believe that they related to different criteria sets, antedating Feighner’s compilations. And, as noted in a previous comment, among the criteria in this article, only Schizophrenia includes family history [also from the earlier 1970 paper]. So this article that introduced the concept of diagnosis validated by Clinical Description, Laboratory Studies, Delimitation from Other Disorders, Follow-up Studies, and Family Study was, in fact, a literature review by a resident with assistance from staff containing reliability data derived from pre-existing studies using other criteria and were never published. A rather remarkable story.

Returning to John Feighner’s later narrative [1989] looking back over his residency days:

    Also, with the progressive use of lithium and other more specific pharmacological treatments at that time, it seemed imperative to me that we refine our diagnostic criteria to assist us in selecting specific treatments for specific patients and to improve communication between research centers.
There’s nothing wrong with that statement. Who wouldn’t want such things? precise diagnoses keyed to treatments? diagnoses that could be shared among doctors? even other research centers? But it also expresses a very familiar feeling, one felt by any young physician in early encounters with the world of clinical medicine. I remember it well. It came right after "Help!" And it reminded me of another remembrance of things past in The Dictionary of Disorder, an article about Robert Spitzer:
    Spitzer first came to the university as a resident and student at the Columbia Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, after graduating from N.Y.U. School of Medicine in 1957. He had had a brilliant medical-school career, publishing in professional journals a series of well-received papers about childhood schizophrenia and reading disabilities…

    At Columbia Psychoanalytic, however, Spitzer’s career faltered. Psychoanalysis was too abstract, too theoretical, and somehow his patients rarely seemed to improve. “I was always unsure that I was being helpful, and I was uncomfortable with not knowing what to do with their messiness,” he told me. “I don’t think I was uncomfortable listening and empathizing — I just didn’t know what the hell to do.” Spitzer managed to graduate, and secured a position as an instructor in the psychiatry department [he has held some version of the job ever since], but he is a man of tremendous drive and ambition—also a devoted contrarian—and he found teaching intellectually limiting…

I expect any doctor or mental health clinician reading these comments has similar memories from their training days. I have a cascade of my own. The information from the Basic Sciences is stored by subject, but that’s not how clinical medicine operates. People come with stories that translate into signs and symptoms, then gets retrieved as diseases or conditions – a completely different way of thinking than before. And then there’s the question of what to do in response. It’s a shock. I said cascade because each new setting brings its own version: medical student meeting patients for the first time; intern being the doctor in charge for the first time; practitioner all alone for the first time; then for me, starting over with psychiatry, and later psychoanalysis. No matter how smart I got the time before, I was rendered dumb as a post at the next level. What follows is a desperate attempt to construct a grand map of the new place for orientation. Medical training is structured such that there’s plenty of help around, libraries full of books, but everybody has to go through the internal process nonetheless. The first mapping is to master your own feelings of confusion at being a stranger in a land you though would be familiar but wasn’t. The resulting first mapping is almost by definition reductionistic, but orienting and comforting. It allows one to tolerate the chaos enough to begin to create an atlas of atlases that makes you into a clinician down the road. And it’s never complete, because there’s always a case around the corner that takes you to a page in your mind that’s blank.

So it appears that the dreams of our fathers were dreams well known to many of us from earlier times in our own histories. John Feighner, a psychiatry resident in St. Louis, dreamt of a simple diagnostic system that would tell him which treatment to use for what patient – finding that system in the writings of others. Robert Spitzer, a psychiatrist who had fled the messiness and confusion of clinical psychoanalysis for the precision of Biometrics had a similar dream – a diagnostic system that tidied up the chaos and told him “what the hell to do.” He found his in the work of neophyte John Feighner. While there’s something almost quaint and innocent in this pairing ["out of the mouth of babes..."], one would think that the profession as a whole could use something with more nuance and experiential depth than the first pass, second-hand system of a trainee co-opted by a escaping clinician – in both cases relying on reported rather than personally observed validity.
Mickey @ 2:40 pm
Filed under: politics
dreams of our fathers III…

Posted on Sunday 13 May 2012

In a sense, the real controversy about DSM-III was a controversy about who were the leaders in the profession and whether progress in our field was most likely to come from empirical research studies or from clinical wisdom collected by intensive long-term psychotherapy.
Robert Spitzer 2001

It’s easy to read Spitzer’s quote and allow it to become a Rorschach inkblot – something to contain any number of thoughts, opinions, or interpretations of his true motives. That’s just the way we think about the DSM-III, a conundrum itself, filled with palace intrigue, old resentment, personae jockeying for power, people fighting over money. I can fill that quote up with thoughts of my own, like "That’s a false dichotomy! Those aren’t exclusive categories! How about both empirical research studies and clinical wisdom from long-term psychotherapy!" or "See, he admits the real controversy about DSM-III was a controversy about who were going to be the leaders! It was political!" I can feel ashamed and angry that my analytic predecessors didn’t directly deal with the problem of third party payments and strike a sensible compromise. I can still feel the sting of the invectives that came my way with the DSM-III revolution, and am not too far from still having a tear in the corner of my eye about having to change courses and leave a career path that fit me like a glove. Likewise, I’m a psychiatrist and I was really taken with the careful parsing of the major clinical syndromes, so I mourned the loss of subtlety that came with the DSM-III’s symptom lists and the accompanying structured interviews. All of this to say that this is hardly an area where I can claim to be able to transcend my own subjectivity. The personal impact was too great [but that doesn't mean I have to be quiet, just that I have to be careful].

The quote above actually comes from this paragraph:
…I recall a psychoanalyst and chair of a DSM-III oversight committee who commenting on a draft of DSM-III said, “There is so much more that we know.” By this, he meant that DSM-III did not include all of the knowledge that his fellow clinicians had painstakingly learned about human behavior and motivation from the intensive study of patients in long-term psychotherapy. In a sense, the real controversy about DSM-III was a controversy about who were the leaders in the profession and whether progress in our field was most likely to come from empirical research studies or from clinical wisdom collected by intensive long-term psychotherapy.
I get how Dr. Spitzer took that comment, and why he thought it meant what he says it meant. For all I know, maybe that’s exactly what his oversight chairman had in mind. But reading it now thirty years later, it means a lot more to me than that. It encapsulates my overall complaint about the DSM-III Revision. It "dumbed down" psychiatry – the psychiatry of the time and the specialty at large. Had the comment “There is so much more that we know” come from the mouth of the most biological of psychiatrists, it would’ve been equally valid. So it’s time to go back to where I started and take another look – back to the Feighner Criteria:
The Advent of the “Feighner Criteria”
by John P. Feighner
Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego
and the Feighner Research Institute
July 18, 1989

As a beginning resident in psychiatry at Barnes-Renard Hospital, Washington University Medical School in St. Louis, in 1966, it became painfully clear to me that the state of the art of psychiatric diagnoses was frankly in a mess. Trying to draw conclusions from the scientific literature with regards to virtually any area of the major psychiatric disorders was extremely difficult. Patients that were described in one article as having acute schizophrenia, showing a very positive response to electroconvulsive therapy ECT, seemed quite different from patients described in other articles as having a similar disorder and responding poorly to ECT but positively to neuroleptics. Also, with the progressive use of lithium and other more specific pharmacological treatments at that time, it seemed imperative to me that we refine our diagnostic criteria to assist us in selecting specific treatments for specific patients and to improve communication between research centers.

At that time in the Department of Psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine, there was an enormous amount of epidemiological and natural history studies being done in a variety of psychiatric disorders. In my contacts with numerous people in the department, particularly Dr. Eli Robins and his basic “no nonsense data oriented approach,” it was apparent that something should be done and could be done to better delineate the major psychiatric syndromes. In my third year as a resident, I began to develop specific diagnostic criteria for the affective disorders; and in so doing I discussed with Drs. Robins, Sam Guze, and George Winokur the possibility of expanding these criteria to include the major psychiatric disorders. During my fourth year as a chief resident, I subsequently pursued this more vigorously and with my coauthors set up a Tuesday afternoon committee. At that time I reviewed close to 1,000 articles in the then existing literature and distilled this data into proposed criteria for the various disorders that we were working on at the time. These criteria were refined by the committee’s work, which they subsequently published. It was an exciting time to be in Washington University’s Department of Psychiatry and to work closely with the existing faculty.

One of the things I learned in this process is that, even as a resident, if you have a specific idea and are willing to commit to that idea, much can be accomplished with persistence and hard work. In general I have been very pleased at the overall direction that psychiatric nosology has taken since the advent of our paper, which has generally become known as the “Feighner Criteria.” Certainly, it was my idea and initial energy that started this committee to work, but without the astute, competent, and highly informed contributions of the other authors, it would never have been possible to complete the task that was done in 1969-1970. As an aside, when it came time to take my psychiatric board exam, having reviewed all of the papers necessary to formulate these criteria, it was, as the saying goes, “like a walk in the park.” It was fun and exciting to have had the support of the department and to be provided with the resources of the department to pursue these endeavors. In the training of any clinician, I think it is important to expose all of us to the research process because I think, frankly, it makes more astute clinicians out of us and makes us better able to evaluate scientific progress as it evolves.


[The Sd® and SSCJ indicate that this paper has been cited in over 3,950 publications, making it the most-cited paper ever published in a psychiatric journal.]
Dr. Feighner died in 2006. Here’s a commentary about his subsequent career in psychiatry and psychopharmacology after residency, and a local obituary. I expect some of you already knew this, but I didn’t. Dr. Feighner was a psychiatry resident in a biologically oriented department of psychiatry who found psychiatric diagnosis confusing. So in his third year, he set out to concretize the diagnosis of affective illness with an eye to help him select treatment. In his fourth year, he added all of mental illness. His criteria came from a literature review, informed by his mentors – it’s an overview constructed by a conscientious psychiatry resident. Here’s the full text of the original.

I came across this reference [Feighner's statement] in the middle of writing this post, while I was looking for a copy of the original paper on-line. I had in mind going through the article to see if I could clarify and reference why I thought of it and its DSM-III expansion as "dumbed down", a simplification, maybe even a trivialization of the subtleties of psychiatric illness independent of my own interests and biases. But after I read his description of the way the criteria came into being, my re-reading of the article took on a different coloring. My former job was Residency Training Director, and I would’ve been glad to have this industrious resident. I read the article as mental illness as seen by a good third year resident, a time in training when you’ve mastered being around mental ill people and are finally beginning to have a map of the territory. And I see why I reacted to the DSM-III the way I did. It’s that very view of mental illness at the time when the picture is just coming together as the blueprint for the learning up ahead. It’s enough of an anchor to allow one to begin to tolerate the confusion and ambiguity that characterizes human behavior, mental life, and mental illness – frozen in time, a snapshot of a developmental stage early in a long process.

So I’m going to stop for a bit. I think realizing that the DSM-III came from a literature review project of a psychiatry resident has produced something of a case of cognitive dissonance that needs to work its way around in my mind. I know it was tweaked by his mentors and Dr. Spitzer, then pored over by committees all wrapped up in the politics of psychiatry, but the final product was mighty close to his roots. And his skeleton formed the template for everything else. I don’t know how I thought these criteria came together this morning when I got up, but I know it wasn’t what I think now.
Mickey @ 10:33 pm
Filed under: politics
dreams of our fathers II…

Posted on Sunday 13 May 2012

After the DSM-III and later DSM-IIIR were launched and in play, people began to look back at the origins and ask if the actual Manuals had lived up to their grand design. One obvious area of criticism was the derivation of the criteria. About the process that lead to the Feighner Criteria, they said that they came from the evaluation of actual cases using:

  1. Clinical Description
  2. Laboratory Studies
  3. Delimitation from Other Disorders
  4. Follow-up Study
  5. Family Study
… a claim I would have no reason to doubt, except for:
While no psychiatric syndrome has yet been fully validated by a complete series of steps, a great deal of work has been published indicating that substantial validation is possible. This communication is a summary of that work in the form of specific diagnostic criteria.

In addition, we in this department have carried out a study of interrater reliability and validation of reliability with an 18-month follow-up study of 314 psychiatric emergency room patients (to be published) as well as a seven-year follow-up study of 87 psychiatric inpatients (to be published), each of whom was interviewed personally and systematically. There were four different raters in the emergency room study. Agreement ranged from 86% to 95% about diagnosis with diagnostic criteria similar to those outlined in this report. There were two different raters in the inpatient study ; reliability between those raters was 92%. In the emergency room study and in the inpatient study, validity, as determined by correctly predicting diagnosis at follow-up by criteria such as those of this report, was 93% and 92%, respectively.

And exclusivity was also mostly a wish:
It will be apparent below that certain diagnoses are mutually exclusive (primary affective disorders and schizophrenia), while others may be made in the same patient (antisocial personality disorder with alcoholism or drug dependency ; hysteria or anxiety neurosis with secondary depression). More work will be necessary before the full significance of various diagnostic combinations becomes evident.
So the criteria came from their actual patients, some of whom they followed and checked for inter-rater reliability and diagnostic stability. But later critics noted that the DSM-IIIs didn’t follow even that lead, relying primarily on expert opinion, the very thing they’d complained about in the DSM-I and DSM-II. During the lead-up to the DSM-IV a decade later, Dr. Spitzer responded to some of those criticisms.
An outsider-insider’s views about revising the DSMs
by Spitzer RL.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology. 1991 100[3]:294-296.


…In discussing the development of DSM-III, Widiger et al. noted the increasing role of empirical validation in psychiatry and the five phases for validating a psychiatric diagnosis proposed by Robins and Guze. Their approach led Robins and Guze to recognize only 16 diagnoses that they believed had been validated by follow-up and family studies [Feighner et al., 1972]. Clearly, if the DSM-III Task Force had adopted this strategy, as Widiger et al. implied, it would not have recommended that DSM-III include over 200 categories — most of which were included on the basis of expert clinical judgment [face validity] alone. The Task Force recognized, correctly I believe, that limiting DSM-III to only those categories that had been fully validated by empirical studies would be at the least a serious obstacle to the widespread use of the manual by mental health professionals. The approach that was adopted by the DSM-III Task Force, from Robins and Guze’s recommendations, was the use of specified diagnostic criteria for virtually all of the disorders—the major innovation of DSM-III.

Expert Consensus Versus Empirical Basis: It is understandable that Widiger et al. (1991) emphasized the many ways in which DSM-IV can improve on the process involved in the development of DSM-III and DSM-III-R, such as by systematically reviewing the relevant literature, documenting the rationale for all changes, and conducting many focused field trials. The DSM-IV leadership is to be congratulated for the tremendous effort that is involved in these projects. However, I am troubled by the tendency [intended or not] to play down the major role that expert consensus will have in the final decision-making process for DSM-IV. My own prediction is that when final decisions are made about DSM-IV, they will still be based primarily on expert consensus, rather than on data, as was the case with the DSM-III and DSM-III-R…

Dr. Spitzer gave a straightforward answer. The critics were right. They had primarily relied on expert opinion. And in spite of the DSM-IV Task Force’s attempts to get on a more empirical footing with literature reviews and Field Trials, Dr. Spitzer predicted that the DSM-IV would end up doing the same thing – relying on expert consensus. The part they’d taken from Robins and Guze, or the Feighner Criteria was the use of specified diagnostic criteria. The list, it seems, was dwindling out of the gate:
  1. no a priori principles
  2. descriptive criteria
  3. follow-up
  4. family studies
  5. exclusivity
  6. reliability
  7. undiagnosed psychiatric disorder
Now we come to no a priori principles. We all know that the predominance of psychoanalytic thinking in psychiatry was the problem being dealt with in those days. But critics raised the question about the DSM-III thinking that replaced it. Was it really etiologically neutral? Spitzer responded in this paper a decade later:

Are DSM-III and DSM-II1-R Atheoretical With Regard to Etiology? As is well known, the developers of DSM-III and DSM-IIIR claim that—with only a few exceptions, such as the organic mental disorders and adjustment disorder—the classification does not subscribe to any particular etiologic theories. For example, some investigators who have studied panic disorder believe that the disorder arises from learned avoidance responses to conditioned somatic symptoms of anxiety; other investigators believe the disorder results from a dysregulation of biological systems mediating separation anxiety. However, neither etiologic theory has any effect on the diagnostic criteria for the disorder, which are solely based on the descriptive features of the disorder. Therefore, I am puzzled by Millon’s (1991) statement that "despite assertions to the contrary, recent DSMs are a product of implicit causal or etiologic speculation"…
I accept that Dr. Spitzer believed what he said. However, he was not the only psychiatrist involved. There were others – lots of others. I was actually alive during most of this period. In the sixties, I was a medical student and later Internal Medicine resident in Memphis Tennessee. We all knew that the center of the biological psychiatry world was St. Louis. The reason we knew is that’s what we were told. In medical school, in the sparse behavioral science course, a lecturer drew a US map, and told us that the biological psychiatrists were in programs along the Mississippi River, putting a line around the center of the country that included St. Louis, Memphis, New Orleans. My friend Bill married a psychiatry resident who told us [every time she had too much wine]. Later, as a psychiatry resident in the 1970s, we heard the same thing. We had people in Atlanta trained in St. Louis, young psychiatrists on staff at the VAH mainly, who literally preached about the non-scientific-ness and non-medical-ness of psychoanalysis – talking only of biology and the neo-Kraepelinian creed, which is where I first heard it. They said all of these things, repetitively [with or without beverages]:
    1. Psychiatry is a branch of medicine.
    2. Psychiatry should utilize modern scientific methodologies and base its practice on scientific knowledge.
    3. Psychiatry treats people who are sick and who require treatment.
    4. There is a boundary between the normal and the sick.
    5. There are discrete mental illnesses.  They are not myths, and there are many of them.
    6. The focus of psychiatric physicians should be on the biological aspects of illness.
    7. There should be an explicit and intentional concern with diagnosis and classification.
    8. Diagnostic criteria should be codified, and a legitimate and valued area of research should be to validate them.
    9. Statistical techniques should be used to improve reliability and validity.
During the time when the DSM-IV Revision was coming to a close, the question of a priori principles in the DSM Revolution was still being debated:
On Values in Recent American Psychiatric Classification
by John Z. Sadler, Yosaf F. Huglus and George J. Agich
The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 1994  19:261-277.

The DSM-IV, like its predecessors, will be a major influence on American psychiatry. As a consequence, continuing analysis of its assumptions is essential. Review of the manuals as well as conceptually-oriented literature on DSM-III, DSM-III-R, and DSM-IV reveals that the authors of these classifications have paid little attention to the explicit and implicit value commitments made by the classifications. The response to DSM criticisms and controversy has often been to incorporate more scientific diversity into the classification, instead of careful inquiry and assessment of the principal values that drive the nosologic process. Implications for psychiatric science and future DSM classifications are discussed.
It’s a long and deep article about a lot of things, but it gets around to the a priori principles point along the way:
One reason why value conflict is not seen as such by DSM-IV – and its predecessors, to be sure – is the apparent adherence of the Task Force to a particular view of classification and science. A large literature establishes that medical practice [and scientific practice as well], including classification, necessarily involves value commitments… For a psychiatric classification example, consider the above mentioned dispute over DSM-III/III-R’s descriptive terms. Psychodynamically oriented psychiatrists believe the nosology ignored theoretically important terms essential to their practice [such as "neurosis" and "defense mechanism"]. The syndromatic approach used by DSMIII/ III-R, however, met the descriptive needs of biological psychiatry much better… The implicit value choice made by the authors of DSM-III/III-R was that the biological descriptive approach was more important than the psychodynamic descriptive approach, presumably for a variety of reasons. We doubt that this preference for biological approaches that is implicit in the descriptive, syndromatic approach was consciously intended by the authors of the DSM-III and III-R. Instead, we suspect that this preference and its associated commitments were more the byproduct of a naive view of science and psychiatric nosology as value-free or value-neutral… Although the notion of value-free or value-neutral science has been discredited by a large number of authors, philosophers and scientists… the view nonetheless persists. The reasons for the rejection of value-neutral language are many, but can be summarily stated:
    Values, not cognitions, determine what we select as "important," "crucial," "central," "decisive," or "related." In other words, values lend structure to the field of attention, pre-defining background and foreground, and clustering disparate items into groups. Consequently, "descriptive" statements about psychopathology issue from presupposed value stances that conceal their own deeper sources, compatibilities, and incompatibilities…
It’s a complicated way of saying it, but it’s on point. Dr. Spitzer and his colleagues may not have wanted to make a choice between psychology and biology, but they for sure didn’t want to choose psyhology or psychoanalysis. So they chose the language of the biologists, and by doing so implicitly chose biology. These authors must’ve struck a nerve with Dr. Spitzer, because seven years later, he was still thinking about their article – some two decades after the publication of the DSM-III:
Values and Assumptions in the Development of DSM-III and DSM-III-R:
An Insider’s Perspective and a Belated Response to Sadler, Hulgus, and Agich’s “On Values in Recent American Psychiatric Classification”
by ROBERT L. SPITZER, M.D.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 2001 189:351–359.

…Let us broadly divide etiological perspectives into two major … groupings: according to the biological perspective, the causes of mental disorders will ultimately be shown to be disturbances in biological functioning that are relatively independent of life experience; according to the psychological perspective, the major causes of mental disorders will ultimately be shown to be disturbances in life experiences. The author challenges anyone to show how grouping disorders together on the basis of their shared descriptive features … inherently suggests favoring either perspective.

…I recall a psychoanalyst and chair of a DSM-III oversight committee who commenting on a draft of DSM-III said, “There is so much more that we know.” By this, he meant that DSM-III did not include all of the knowledge that his fellow clinicians had painstakingly learned about human behavior and motivation from the intensive study of patients in long-term psychotherapy. In a sense, the real controversy about DSM-III was a controversy about who were the leaders in the profession and whether progress in our field was most likely to come from empirical research studies or from clinical wisdom collected by intensive long-term psychotherapy. It is hard to see how the controversy would have been conducted at a higher level if the DSM-III committee had made any clearer their value commitments.

Sadler et al. are correct when they assert that basic values, assumptions, and commitments determine how developers of a classification system of mental disorders approach their difficult task. In this paper, we have presented those values, assumptions, and commitments, which were, for the most part, widely known and were contained in the ongoing DSM-III and DSM-IIII-R literature. It is not true that DSM-III and DSM-III-R gave greater emphasis to reliability than to validity, and it is not true that the DSM atheoretical approach with regard to etiology is implicitly biased toward a particular etiological perspective [organic or behavioral].

He stood by his claim of neutrality with the counter that the alternative couldn’t be proven, but added, "In a sense, the real controversy about DSM-III was a controversy about who were the leaders in the profession and whether progress in our field was most likely to come from empirical research studies or from clinical wisdom collected by intensive long-term psychotherapy," which was, of course, the real central question in his mind. So I’ll accept what Dr. Spitzer thinks about his own compromise. But as for Psychiatry as a whole, I buy the implicit choice argument. I was alive then too, and my immediate thought when I got around to reading the DSM-III was, "This is that St. Louis thing." I trust that thought. So from my perspective, revisiting the dream, we now have:
  1. no a priori principles
  2. descriptive criteria
  3. follow-up
  4. family studies
  5. exclusivity
  6. reliability
  7. undiagnosed psychiatric disorder
There were other criticisms, one of which is almost too big to even talk about – Validity. Were the disorders of the DSM-III and its followers valid? I’ll punt that one down the road for the moment…
Mickey @ 8:52 am
Filed under: politics
the dreams of our fathers I…

Posted on Saturday 12 May 2012

The Robins and Guze article that lead to the DSM-III Revolution was accepted for publication in January 1970, not long after the DSM-II came out – highlighting the fact that the conflict between nature and nurture was living and well before its ink dried. While it’s seen as a Manifesto, it’s only a few lines long:
Establishment of Diagnostic Validity in Psychiatric Illness: Its Application to Schizophrenia
BY ELI ROBINS. M.D.AND SAMUEL B. GUZE, M.D.
American Journal of Psychiatry. 1970 126[7]:107-111.

Since Bleuler, psychiatrists have recognized that the diagnosis of schizophrenia includes a number of different disorders. We are interested in distinguishing these various disorders as part of our long-standing concern with developing a valid classification for psychiatric illnesses. We believe that a valid classification is an essential step in science. In medicine, and hence in psychiatry, classification is diagnosis.

One of the reasons that diagnostic classification has fallen into disrepute among some psychiatrists is that diagnostic schemes have been largely based upon a priori principles rather than upon systematic studies. Such systematic studies are necessary, although they may be based upon different approaches. We have found that the approach described here facilitates the development of a valid classification in psychiatry. This paper illustrates its usefulness in schizophrenia…

The essence of their approach [the St.Louis Group] was to move psychiatry to a diagnostic system based on systematic studies rather than expert opinion. In 1972, they followed with a seminal article laying out sixteen psychiatric diagnoses with descriptive criteria that they considered to be research level diagnoses, now known as the Feighner Criteria which stressed descriptive criteria, follow-up, and family studies as the alternative to "best clinical judgement and experience" AKA expert opinions used in the DSM-I and DSM-II:
Diagnostic criteria for use in psychiatric research
by FEIGHNER, J. P., ROBINS, E., GUZE, S. B., WOODRUFF, R. A., WINOKUR, G. & MONOZ, R.
Archives of General Psychiatry. 1972 26:57-63.

This communication presents specific diagnostic criteria for those adult psychiatric illnesses that have been sufficiently validated by precise clinical description, follow-up, and family studies to warrant their use in research as well as in clinical practice. These criteria are not intended as final for any illness. The criteria represent a distillation of our clinical research experience, and of the experiences of others cited in the references. This communication is meant to provide common ground for different research groups so that diagnostic definitions can be emended constructively as further studies are completed. The use of formal diagnostic criteria by a number of groups, regardless of whether their interests are clinical, psychodynamic, pharmacologic, chemical, neuropsychological, or neurophysiological, will result in a solution of the problem of whether patients described by different groups are comparable. This first and crucial taxonomic step should expedite psychiatric investigation.

Diagnosis has functions as important in psychiatry as elsewhere in medicine. Psychiatric diagnoses based on studies of natural history permit prediction of course and outcome, allow planning for both immediate and long-term treatment, and make communication possible between psychiatrists and other physicians, as well as among psychiatrists themselves. Such functions are of obvious importance in research. In contrast to the American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders [DSM-II], in which the diagnostic classification is based upon the "best clinical judgement and experience" of a committee and its consultants, this communication will present a diagnostic classification validated primarily by follow-up and family studies…

Here’s a sampler of the Feighner Criteria [that might look real familiar]:
Primary Affective Disorders.

Depression.
    —For a diagnosis of depression, A through C are required.
    A. Dysphoric mood characterized by symptoms such as the following: depressed, sad, blue, despondent, hopeless, "down in the dumps," irritable, fearful, worried, or discouraged.
    B. At least five of the following criteria are required for "definite" depression; four are required for "probable" depression.
    1. Poor appetite or weight loss (positive if 2 lb a week or 10 lb or more a year when not dieting).
    2. Sleep difficulty (include insomnia or hypersomnia).
    3. Loss of energy, eg, fatigability, tiredness.
    4. Agitation or retardation.
    5. Loss of interest in usual activities, or decrease in sexual drive.
    6. Feelings of self-reproach or guilt (either may be delusional).
    7. Complaints of or actually diminished ability to think or concentrate, such as slow thinking or mixed-up thoughts.
    8. Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide, including thoughts of wishing to be dead.
    C. A psychiatric illness lasting at least one month with no preexisting psychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia, anxiety neurosis, phobic neurosis, obsessive compulsive neurosis, hysteria, alcoholism, drug dependency, antisocial personality, homosexuality and other sexual deviations, mental retardation, or organic brain syndrome. (Patients with life-threatening or incapacitating medical illness preceding and paralleling the depression do not receive the diagnosis of primary depression.)

Mania.
    —For a diagnosis of mania, A through C are required.
    A. Euphoria or irritability.
    B. At least three of the following symptom categories must also be present.
    1. Hyperactivity (includes motor, social, and sexual activity).
    2. Push of speech (pressure to keep talking).
    3. Flight of ideas (racing thoughts).
    4. Grandiosity (may be delusional).
    5. Decreased sleep.
    6. Distractibility.
    C. A psychiatric illness lasting at least two weeks with no preexisting psychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia, anxiety neurosis, phobic neurosis, obsessive compulsive neurosis, hysteria, alcoholism, drug dependency, antisocial personality, homosexuality and other sexual deviations, mental retardation, or organic brain syndrome.

So to no a priori principles, descriptive criteria, follow-up, and family studies, they’ve added mutual exclusivity [see C. in each case]. There’s essentially no comorbidity allowed in these criteria. Robert Spitzer and Statistician Joseph Fleiss added Kappa to the mix two years later – concretely including reliability in the mixture [see box scores and kappa…, self-evident…]:
A Re-analysis of the Reliability of Psychiatric Diagnosis
By ROBERT L. SPITZER and JOSEPH L. FLEISS
British Journal of Psychiatry. 1974 125:341-347.

… With respect to improving the nomenclature, the St.Louis group has offered a system limited to 16 diagnoses for which they believe strong validity evidence exists, and for which specified requirements are provided. Whereas in the standard system the clinician determines to which of the various diagnostic stereotypes his patient is closest, in the St. Louis system the clinician determines whether his patient satisfies explicit criteria. For example, for a diagnosis of the depressive form of primary affective disorder the three requirements are dysphoric mood, a psychiatric illness lasting at least one month with no other pre-existing psychiatric condition,and at least five of the following eight symptoms: poor appetite or weight loss; sleep difficulty; loss of energy; agitation or retardation; loss of interest in usual activities or decrease in sexual drive; feelings of self-reproach or guilt; complaints of or actually diminished ability to think or concentrate; and thoughts of death or suicide.

A consequence of the St. Louis approach is the necessity for an ’undiagnosed psychiatric disorder’ category for those patients who do not meet any of the criteria for the specified diagnoses. In actual use, this category is applied to 20-30 per cent of newly-admitted in-patients. These two approaches, structuring the interview and specifying all diagnostic criteria, are being merged in a series of collaborative studies on the psychobiology of the depressive disorders sponsored by the N.I.M.H. Clinical Research Branch. We are confident that this merging will result not only in improved reliability but in improved validity which is, after all, our ultimate goal.

In this 1974 paper, they did a meta-analysis of previous inter-rater reliability studies using their Kappa for comparisons [see box scores and kappa…]. In talking about the Feighner Criteria, Spitzer mentions one of the consequences of having such a tightly defined system, "In actual use, this category is applied to 20-30 per cent of newly-admitted in-patients" speaking of his own study. There were people left over that didn’t fit anybody’s diagnostic criteria. They were unsullied by using undiagnosed psychiatric disorder, adding yet another item to the list. He mentioned an N.I.M.H. collaborative study on the psychobiology of the depressive disorders, where he next focused his attention. And it expanded outside the boundaries of depressive illness. Like the Feighner Criteria, the N.I.M.H. Research Diagnostic Criteria [RDC] were advertised as research criteria, but they were headed for your town sooner rather than later as the new DSM-III.

One can only be awed by Robert Spitzer’s industry in those years. At the time, I was in analytic training in his building, the New York Psychiatric Institute. I had no idea of the flurry of activity going on upstairs. The building was always too hot, complicating staying alert in those after lunch classes. I now suspect that it was overheated by Spitzer’s energetic activities and endless debates.

This next study was published as the time for the release of the DSM-III neared. The Research Diagnostic Criteria were a refined subset from the earlier Feighner Criteria. It was to be the reliability study for the coming release of the new diagnostic manual.
Research Diagnostic Criteria Rationale and Reliability
by Robert L. Spitzer, MD; Jean Endicott, PhD; and Eli Robins, MD
Archives of General Psychiatry. 1978 35:773-792.

A crucial problem in psychiatry, affecting clinical work as well as research, is the generally low reliability of current psychiatric diagnostic procedures. This article describes the development and initial reliability studies of a set of specific diagnostic criteria for a selected group of functional psychiatric disorders, the Research Diagnostic Criteria [RDC]. The RDC are being widely used to study a variety of research issues, particularly those related to genetics, psychobiology of selected mental disorders, and treatment outcome. The data presented here indicate high reliability for diagnostic judgments made using these criteria…
This is a complex paper. I think it’s the one that justified ‘lumping’ the depressions so I’ll likely be back to it later. But for the moment, it’s a message from a time when men were men, and Kappa was KAPPA:
Little wonder Dr. Spitzer introduced his DSM-III in 1980 to a standing ovation at the APA. In a few short years, he had mustered the forces to create a new diagnostic system backed by a hard science – something new for the likes of Psychiatry. The assemblage was at least clapping for his and his colleagues’ accomplishment, and whether you agree with the product or not, you’ve got to give them credit for building it – a Rosie the Riveter level task extraordinaire. Here are the nuts and bolts for review:
  1. no a priori principles
  2. descriptive criteria
  3. follow-up
  4. family studies
  5. exclusivity
  6. reliability
  7. undiagnosed psychiatric disorder
Mickey @ 8:00 pm
Filed under: politics
it’s about time…

Posted on Saturday 12 May 2012

Diagnosing the D.S.M.
New York Times[op-ed]
By ALLEN FRANCES
May 11, 2012

At its annual meeting this week, the American Psychiatric Association did two wonderful things: it rejected one reckless proposal that would have exposed nonpsychotic children to unnecessary and dangerous antipsychotic medication and another that would have turned the existential worries and sadness of everyday life into an alleged mental disorder. But the association is still proceeding with other suggestions that could potentially expand the boundaries of psychiatry to define as mentally ill tens of millions of people now considered normal. The proposals are part of a major undertaking: revisions to what is often called the “bible of psychiatry” — the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, or D.S.M. The fifth edition of the manual is scheduled for publication next May.

I was heavily involved in the third and fourth editions of the manual but have reluctantly concluded that the association should lose its nearly century-old monopoly on defining mental illness. Times have changed, the role of psychiatric diagnosis has changed, and the association has changed. It is no longer capable of being sole fiduciary of a task that has become so consequential to public health and public policy.  Psychiatric diagnosis was a professional embarrassment and cultural backwater until D.S.M.-3 was published in 1980. Before that, it was heavily influenced by psychoanalysis, psychiatrists could rarely agree on diagnoses and nobody much cared anyway.  D.S.M.-3 stirred great professional and public excitement by providing specific criteria for each disorder. Having everyone work from the same playbook facilitated treatment planning and revolutionized research in psychiatry and neuroscience.

Surprisingly, D.S.M.-3 also caught on with the general public and became a runaway best seller, with more than a million copies sold, many more than were needed for professional use. Psychiatric diagnosis crossed over from the consulting room to the cocktail party. People who previously chatted about the meaning of their latest dreams began to ponder where they best fit among D.S.M.’s intriguing categories. The fourth edition of the manual, released in 1994, tried to contain the diagnostic inflation that followed earlier editions. It succeeded on the adult side, but failed to anticipate or control the faddish over-diagnosis of autism , attention deficit disorders and bipolar disorder in children that has since occurred.

Indeed, the D.S.M. is the victim of its own success and is accorded the authority of a bible in areas well beyond its competence. It has become the arbiter of who is ill and who is not — and often the primary determinant of treatment decisions, insurance eligibility, disability payments and who gets special school services. D.S.M. drives the direction of research and the approval of new drugs. It is widely used (and misused) in the courts.  Until now, the American Psychiatric Association seemed the entity best equipped to monitor the diagnostic system. Unfortunately, this is no longer true. D.S.M.-5 promises to be a disaster — even after the changes approved this week, it will introduce many new and unproven diagnoses that will medicalize normality and result in a glut of unnecessary and harmful drug prescription. The association has been largely deaf to the widespread criticism of D.S.M.-5, stubbornly refusing to subject the proposals to independent scientific review.  Many critics assume unfairly that D.S.M.-5 is shilling for drug companies. This is not true. The mistakes are rather the result of an intellectual conflict of interest; experts always overvalue their pet area and want to expand its purview, until the point that everyday problems come to be mislabeled as mental disorders. Arrogance, secretiveness, passive governance and administrative disorganization have also played a role.

New diagnoses in psychiatry can be far more dangerous than new drugs. We need some equivalent of the Food and Drug Administration to mind the store and control diagnostic exuberance. No existing organization is ready to replace the American Psychiatric Association. The most obvious candidate, the National Institute of Mental Health, is too research-oriented and insensitive to the vicissitudes of clinical practice. A new structure will be needed, probably best placed under the auspices of the Department of Health and Human Services, the Institute of Medicine or the World Health Organization.

All mental-health disciplines need representation — not just psychiatrists but also psychologists, counselors, social workers and nurses. The broader consequences of changes should be vetted by epidemiologists, health economists and public-policy and forensic experts. Primary care doctors prescribe the majority of psychotropic medication, often carelessly, and need to contribute to the diagnostic system if they are to use it correctly. Consumers should play an important role in the review process, and field testing should occur in real life settings, not just academic centers.  Psychiatric diagnosis is simply too important to be left exclusively in the hands of psychiatrists. They will always be an essential part of the mix but should no longer be permitted to call all the shots.

I thought changing my own mind was hard enough. The DSM-III sure put a damper on my plans thirty years ago. But reading all the history, and particularly the climate of the times – something I didn’t get when it was happening, I now see why there was a DSM-III. I still have complaints, but they’re specific rather than global. But my change of heart is miniscule compared to that of Dr. Frances. It’s quite something to have been in on all the other revisions and in charge of the last one, and reach the conclusion in this op-ed. He sure gave it the old college try,  working tirelessly for the last three years to effect needed change from inside psychiatry. My hats off to him for being able to write this op-ed.  He’s an unlikely candidate to lead the charge, or maybe he’s the perfect choice, or both!…
Mickey @ 1:01 am
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