Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4185197 European Psychiatry 2008 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

PurposeThis study investigates the influence of age at onset of OCS on psychiatric comorbidities, and tries to establish a cut-off point for age at onset.MethodsThree hundred and thirty OCD patients were consecutively recruited and interviewed using the following structured interviews: Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale; Yale Global Tic Severity Scale and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. Data were analyzed with regression and cluster analysis.ResultsLower age at onset was associated with a higher probability of having comorbidity with tic, anxiety, somatoform, eating and impulse–control disorders. Longer illness duration was associated with lower chance of having tics. Female gender was associated with anxiety, eating and impulse–control disorders. Tic disorders were associated with anxiety disorders and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. No cut-off age at onset was found to clearly divide the sample in homogeneous subgroups. However, cluster analyses revealed that differences started to emerge at the age of 10 and were more pronounced at the age of 17, suggesting that these were the best cut-off points on this sample.ConclusionsAge at onset is associated with specific comorbidity patterns in OCD patients. More prominent differences are obtained when analyzing age at onset as an absolute value.

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