An update from the WPA Section on Anxiety and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders

IF 73.3 1区 医学 Q1 Medicine World Psychiatry Pub Date : 2024-09-16 DOI:10.1002/wps.21255
Naomi A. Fineberg, Dan J. Stein, Katharina Domschke, Eric Hollander, Susanne Walitza, Michael Van Ameringen, Bernardo Dell'Osso, Joseph Zohar
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It organizes activities at WPA meetings, produces scientific publications and develops guidance on relevant topics, in collaboration with key stakeholder groups such as the World Health Organization (WHO), the International College of Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders (ICOCS) (www.icocs.org), the Anxiety Disorders and Obsessive-Compulsive Research Networks of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) (www.ecnp.eu), and the European Network for Problematic Usage of the Internet (www.internetandme.eu). Here we review some of the Section's recent initiatives and its ambitions for the next five years.</p>\n<p>The ICD-11 has refined and expanded the classification of anxiety disorders, and created two new groupings, one for Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders and another for Disorders due to Addictive Behaviours, including several new diagnoses.</p>\n<p>The ICD-11 grouping of Anxiety or Fear-Related Disorders differentiates fear-related disorders (i.e., phobias related to discrete aversive situations) from anxiety disorders related to a sustained expectation that diffuse aversive events will occur. Separation anxiety disorder and selective mutism have been moved into this grouping.</p>\n<p>Obsessive-compulsive and related disorders often present late for treatment, resulting in poor clinical outcomes. To improve recognition and diagnosis, some members of our Section worked with the WHO to reclassify disparate diagnoses into a single Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders grouping. A seminal field study demonstrated that health care practitioners make more accurate diagnoses of these disorders using the ICD-11 vs. ICD-10<span><sup>1</sup></span>. Moreover, this new classification has advanced research heuristics establishing compulsivity as a transdiagnostic neuropsychological domain.</p>\n<p>Another new ICD-11 grouping was created for Disorders due to Addictive Behaviours. This includes two new disorders – gaming disorder and gambling disorder (on- or off-line) – and a residual category for possible diagnosis of other forms of problematic behaviour with addictive, impulsive and/or compulsive features, including buying or shopping, pornography use, social media use, cyberchondria, digital hoarding, and online streaming.</p>\n<p>Evidence of overlap between compulsive and addictive mechanisms and disorders has led to the establishment of the European Network for Problematic Usage of the Internet, bringing together experts in compulsivity, impulsivity and addiction. Seminal consensus papers on diagnosis, underpinning mechanisms, and assessment were published<span><sup>2</sup></span>, culminating in a festival of science and arts, a string of educational webinars, a textbook published in the WPA Global Mental Health in Practice Series<span><sup>3</sup></span>, and a popular e-book, <i>Learning to Deal with Problematic Usage of the Internet</i>, translated into five languages and downloaded freely hundreds of times (www.icocs.org).</p>\n<p>Interest in anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders and in problematic Internet use was sharpened into focus by the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath. For those with the above disorders, dangers of infection inherent during the pandemic directly impacted clinical care by increasing social avoidance and preventing engagement in critical therapeutic activities. Inflexible thinking and obsessive health concerns led to public health challenges such as vaccine hesitancy and difficulties emerging from COVID-19 lockdown.</p>\n<p>Increased use of digital communication initiated by the pandemic brought many benefits but also new challenges and risks for individuals and civil society. These included problems in balancing time spent on- and off-line, dissemination of abuse and misinformation, and societal fragmentation. Problematic Internet use, an umbrella category representing various forms of maladaptive Internet use involving loss of control or hazardous use patterns, has far-reaching harmful consequences for health and well-being in the individual and society<span><sup>2, 4</sup></span>. Adolescents whose cognitive control is not yet developed and those with certain mental health issues are disproportionately affected by this condition, which can be conceptualized as a marker of disrupted self-management. Critically, during the COVID-19 pandemic, global rates of problematic Internet use increased, reaching 7.9% in a meta-analysis and over 30% in some low- and middle-income countries<span><sup>5</sup></span>.</p>\n<p>In response to the above scenario, members of our Section published open-access consensus guidance for treating anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders and for preventing problematic Internet use during and after the pandemic<span><sup>6, 7</sup></span>.</p>\n<p>Responding to the “hidden pandemic” of problematic Internet use, Section members expanded the relevant European Network into a 5-year research programme, Boosting Societal Adaptation and Mental Health in a Rapidly Digitalizing, Post-Pandemic Europe (BootStRaP). This includes partners in &gt;20 countries and a global advisory panel. It aims to reduce the harmful effects of digitalization on mental health by creating an evidence-based suite of digital behavioural health interventions addressing vulnerability to problematic Internet use in young people, whose effectiveness will be tested in a series of randomized controlled trials. The project will also develop a health and social policy toolkit, and standards to promote digital human rights and safeguard vulnerable groups from exploitation.</p>\n<p>Advances in the neurobiology and treatment of the Anxiety or Fear-Related Disorders and Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders has resulted in an expanding armamentarium of interventions, reaching beyond traditional models to include techniques such as neuromodulation, immunotherapy and neurosurgery. Section members contributed to a revision of the World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry treatment guidelines<span><sup>8, 9</sup></span>. Another collaboration with the Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments and the ICOCS is developing a user-friendly set of international guidelines for obsessive-compulsive disorder for release in 2024.</p>\n<p>Addressing a critical knowledge gap, Section members were among a group of experts applying a Delphi method-based consensus approach to produce internationally agreed, consistent and clinically useful criteria for treatment-resistant anxiety disorders, to support future trial design and advance evidence-based stepped-care treatment algorithms<span><sup>10</sup></span>. Following this initiative, Section members, in collaboration with the ECNP Obsessive-Compulsive Research Network and the ICOCS, will use a similar approach to develop clinically useful criteria for treatment-resistant obsessive-compulsive and related disorders.</p>\n<p>Given the global burden of problematic Internet use, its impact on youth, and the need for large-scale public health approaches to address it, Section members have embarked on a Lancet Psychiatry Commission with broad international representation that will focus on particularly vulnerable populations to provide globally relevant recommendations for health and social policy changes.</p>\n<p>Contemporary challenges in mental health demand cutting-edge solutions. Theoretical frameworks that take an integrative and transdiagnostic approach, and practical initiatives that are inclusive and have transcultural impact, are needed.</p>\n<p>The WPA Section on Anxiety and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders has embraced the responsibility of contributing to such frameworks and initiatives, focusing on disorders that collectively impact a large proportion of the population. Given the high prevalences and limited resources, there is a pressing need for novel technologies in prevention, diagnosis and treatment.</p>\n<p>Our Section has considerable potential to empower clinicians, mental health providers and researchers to advance the field. Colleagues who share our vision and interest are warmly invited to join us and contribute to our shared goals.</p>","PeriodicalId":23858,"journal":{"name":"World Psychiatry","volume":"10 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":73.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"World Psychiatry","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/wps.21255","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Medicine","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

The WPA Section on Anxiety and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders focuses its activities on a broad range of common and burdensome psychiatric conditions encompassing anxiety and fear-related disorders, obsessive-compulsive and related disorders, and behavioural addiction disorders, including problematic Internet use. This is an exciting area of developing clinical practice, as anxiety and obsessive-compulsive symptoms are increasingly played out in the digital environment.

The Section provides a forum for clinician scientists and academics to exchange experiences and research advances. It organizes activities at WPA meetings, produces scientific publications and develops guidance on relevant topics, in collaboration with key stakeholder groups such as the World Health Organization (WHO), the International College of Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders (ICOCS) (www.icocs.org), the Anxiety Disorders and Obsessive-Compulsive Research Networks of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) (www.ecnp.eu), and the European Network for Problematic Usage of the Internet (www.internetandme.eu). Here we review some of the Section's recent initiatives and its ambitions for the next five years.

The ICD-11 has refined and expanded the classification of anxiety disorders, and created two new groupings, one for Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders and another for Disorders due to Addictive Behaviours, including several new diagnoses.

The ICD-11 grouping of Anxiety or Fear-Related Disorders differentiates fear-related disorders (i.e., phobias related to discrete aversive situations) from anxiety disorders related to a sustained expectation that diffuse aversive events will occur. Separation anxiety disorder and selective mutism have been moved into this grouping.

Obsessive-compulsive and related disorders often present late for treatment, resulting in poor clinical outcomes. To improve recognition and diagnosis, some members of our Section worked with the WHO to reclassify disparate diagnoses into a single Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders grouping. A seminal field study demonstrated that health care practitioners make more accurate diagnoses of these disorders using the ICD-11 vs. ICD-101. Moreover, this new classification has advanced research heuristics establishing compulsivity as a transdiagnostic neuropsychological domain.

Another new ICD-11 grouping was created for Disorders due to Addictive Behaviours. This includes two new disorders – gaming disorder and gambling disorder (on- or off-line) – and a residual category for possible diagnosis of other forms of problematic behaviour with addictive, impulsive and/or compulsive features, including buying or shopping, pornography use, social media use, cyberchondria, digital hoarding, and online streaming.

Evidence of overlap between compulsive and addictive mechanisms and disorders has led to the establishment of the European Network for Problematic Usage of the Internet, bringing together experts in compulsivity, impulsivity and addiction. Seminal consensus papers on diagnosis, underpinning mechanisms, and assessment were published2, culminating in a festival of science and arts, a string of educational webinars, a textbook published in the WPA Global Mental Health in Practice Series3, and a popular e-book, Learning to Deal with Problematic Usage of the Internet, translated into five languages and downloaded freely hundreds of times (www.icocs.org).

Interest in anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders and in problematic Internet use was sharpened into focus by the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath. For those with the above disorders, dangers of infection inherent during the pandemic directly impacted clinical care by increasing social avoidance and preventing engagement in critical therapeutic activities. Inflexible thinking and obsessive health concerns led to public health challenges such as vaccine hesitancy and difficulties emerging from COVID-19 lockdown.

Increased use of digital communication initiated by the pandemic brought many benefits but also new challenges and risks for individuals and civil society. These included problems in balancing time spent on- and off-line, dissemination of abuse and misinformation, and societal fragmentation. Problematic Internet use, an umbrella category representing various forms of maladaptive Internet use involving loss of control or hazardous use patterns, has far-reaching harmful consequences for health and well-being in the individual and society2, 4. Adolescents whose cognitive control is not yet developed and those with certain mental health issues are disproportionately affected by this condition, which can be conceptualized as a marker of disrupted self-management. Critically, during the COVID-19 pandemic, global rates of problematic Internet use increased, reaching 7.9% in a meta-analysis and over 30% in some low- and middle-income countries5.

In response to the above scenario, members of our Section published open-access consensus guidance for treating anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders and for preventing problematic Internet use during and after the pandemic6, 7.

Responding to the “hidden pandemic” of problematic Internet use, Section members expanded the relevant European Network into a 5-year research programme, Boosting Societal Adaptation and Mental Health in a Rapidly Digitalizing, Post-Pandemic Europe (BootStRaP). This includes partners in >20 countries and a global advisory panel. It aims to reduce the harmful effects of digitalization on mental health by creating an evidence-based suite of digital behavioural health interventions addressing vulnerability to problematic Internet use in young people, whose effectiveness will be tested in a series of randomized controlled trials. The project will also develop a health and social policy toolkit, and standards to promote digital human rights and safeguard vulnerable groups from exploitation.

Advances in the neurobiology and treatment of the Anxiety or Fear-Related Disorders and Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders has resulted in an expanding armamentarium of interventions, reaching beyond traditional models to include techniques such as neuromodulation, immunotherapy and neurosurgery. Section members contributed to a revision of the World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry treatment guidelines8, 9. Another collaboration with the Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments and the ICOCS is developing a user-friendly set of international guidelines for obsessive-compulsive disorder for release in 2024.

Addressing a critical knowledge gap, Section members were among a group of experts applying a Delphi method-based consensus approach to produce internationally agreed, consistent and clinically useful criteria for treatment-resistant anxiety disorders, to support future trial design and advance evidence-based stepped-care treatment algorithms10. Following this initiative, Section members, in collaboration with the ECNP Obsessive-Compulsive Research Network and the ICOCS, will use a similar approach to develop clinically useful criteria for treatment-resistant obsessive-compulsive and related disorders.

Given the global burden of problematic Internet use, its impact on youth, and the need for large-scale public health approaches to address it, Section members have embarked on a Lancet Psychiatry Commission with broad international representation that will focus on particularly vulnerable populations to provide globally relevant recommendations for health and social policy changes.

Contemporary challenges in mental health demand cutting-edge solutions. Theoretical frameworks that take an integrative and transdiagnostic approach, and practical initiatives that are inclusive and have transcultural impact, are needed.

The WPA Section on Anxiety and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders has embraced the responsibility of contributing to such frameworks and initiatives, focusing on disorders that collectively impact a large proportion of the population. Given the high prevalences and limited resources, there is a pressing need for novel technologies in prevention, diagnosis and treatment.

Our Section has considerable potential to empower clinicians, mental health providers and researchers to advance the field. Colleagues who share our vision and interest are warmly invited to join us and contribute to our shared goals.

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世界心理学会焦虑症和强迫症分会提供的最新信息
世界精神病学协会焦虑症和强迫症分会的活动重点是广泛的常见和负担沉重的精神疾病,包括焦虑和恐惧相关疾病、强迫症和相关疾病,以及行为成瘾疾病,包括有问题的互联网使用。该分会为临床科学家和学者提供了一个交流经验和研究进展的论坛。它与世界卫生组织 (WHO)、国际强迫症学院 (ICOCS) (www.icocs.org)、欧洲神经精神药理学学院 (ECNP) 焦虑症和强迫症研究网络 (www.ecnp.eu) 以及欧洲互联网问题使用网络 (www.internetandme.eu) 等主要利益相关团体合作,在世界心理学会会议上组织活动,出版科学刊物,并就相关主题制定指南。在此,我们回顾了该科最近的一些举措及其未来五年的雄心壮志。ICD-11细化并扩展了焦虑症的分类,并创建了两个新的分类,一个是强迫症及相关障碍,另一个是成瘾行为导致的障碍,其中包括几个新的诊断、ICD-11 将恐惧相关障碍(即与离散的厌恶情境有关的恐惧症)与持续预期会发生弥漫性厌恶事件的焦虑障碍区分开来。分离焦虑症和选择性缄默症也被归入了这一组。强迫症及相关障碍往往很晚才接受治疗,导致临床疗效不佳。为了改进识别和诊断,我们科的一些成员与世界卫生组织合作,将不同的诊断重新归类为单一的强迫症及相关障碍组。一项开创性的实地研究表明,医护人员使用 ICD-11 与 ICD-101 对这些疾病做出的诊断更为准确。此外,这一新的分类方法还推动了研究启发式方法的发展,将强迫症确定为一种跨诊断的神经心理学领域。这包括两个新的疾病--游戏障碍和赌博障碍(在线或离线)--以及一个残余类别,用于诊断其他形式的具有成瘾、冲动和/或强迫特征的问题行为,包括购买或购物、使用色情制品、使用社交媒体、网络成瘾症、数字囤积和在线流媒体。该网络出版了有关诊断、基本机制和评估的重要共识文件2,最终举办了科学与艺术节、一系列教育网络研讨会、在WPA《全球心理健康实践丛书》中出版了一本教科书3,并出版了一本广受欢迎的电子书《学会应对有问题的互联网使用》,该书被翻译成五种语言,免费下载数百次(www.icocs.org)。COVID-19大流行病及其后果使人们更加关注焦虑症和强迫症以及有问题的互联网使用。对于患有上述疾病的人来说,大流行期间固有的感染危险直接影响了临床治疗,因为这增加了他们对社会的回避,阻碍了他们参与重要的治疗活动。僵化的思维和对健康的执着关注导致了公共卫生方面的挑战,如对疫苗的犹豫不决以及难以摆脱 COVID-19 封闭状态。这些挑战和风险包括如何平衡在线和离线时间、滥用和错误信息的传播以及社会分裂等问题。有问题的互联网使用是一个总的类别,代表了各种形式的适应不良的互联网使用,涉及失控或危险的使用模式,对个人和社会的健康和福祉具有深远的有害影响2, 4。认知控制能力尚未发育成熟的青少年和有某些心理健康问题的青少年受这种情况的影响尤为严重,可将其视为自我管理紊乱的标志。重要的是,在 COVID-19 大流行期间,全球有问题的互联网使用率有所增加,在一项荟萃分析中达到了 7.9%,在一些中低收入国家超过了 30%5。
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来源期刊
World Psychiatry
World Psychiatry Nursing-Psychiatric Mental Health
CiteScore
64.10
自引率
7.40%
发文量
124
期刊介绍: World Psychiatry is the official journal of the World Psychiatric Association. It aims to disseminate information on significant clinical, service, and research developments in the mental health field. World Psychiatry is published three times per year and is sent free of charge to psychiatrists.The recipient psychiatrists' names and addresses are provided by WPA member societies and sections.The language used in the journal is designed to be understandable by the majority of mental health professionals worldwide.
期刊最新文献
The contribution of the WPA to the development of the ICD-11 CDDR. A report from the WPA Working Group on Providing Mental Health Care for Migrants and Refugees. Global launch of the ICD-11 Clinical Descriptions and Diagnostic Requirements (CDDR). Addictive disorders through the lens of the WPA Section on Addiction Psychiatry. Physician-assisted dying in people with mental health conditions - whose choice?
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