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461285
2012
Viewpoint
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 47(1) 1215 DOI: 10.1177/0004867412461285 The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists 2012 Reprints and permission: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav anp.sagepub.com
A 23-year-old woman was referred to an anxiety clinic because her symptoms intensified every time she had an argument with her partner or when the latter went out alone At the patients insistence, her partner had moved in to live with her in her parents home She continued to be anxious about her parents leaving the house and would imagine all sorts of disasters befalling them when they were out. She was plagued by similar fears in relation to her partner. Six months prior to presentation, the patients separation anxiety symptoms worsened substantially and she was obliged to give up work She insisted on accompanying her partner everywhere her insistence on shadowing her partner led to arguments and threats by the latter to desert the relationship. It was at that point that the patient began experiencing panic attacks (Manicavasagar and Silove, 1997). As illustrated by this case excerpt, the team at the Psychiatry Research and Teaching Unit, the University of New South Wales (UNSW), began to describe separation anxiety disorder (SAD) occurring in adulthood in the mid-1990s. Consistent with the characteristics of the childhood category, the core features of adult SAD involved fears of separation and/or harm befalling close attachment figures (Manicavasagar etal., 2000). As expected, symptoms were modified by the stage of maturation; for example, whereas the focus of childhood SAD tends to be exclusively on parents, adult fears encompass a wider network of attachment figures, including spouses, children, parents and romantic partners (not to mention dogs). Rather than overt behaviours
like crying and clinging to attachment figures, adults exhibit their fears in more subtle ways, for example by delaying or avoiding leaving home to go to work, and finding reasons to maintain close proximity to or contact with family members, perhaps by phoning repeatedly throughout the day to check on their safety. The recent changes to the category of SAD in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5 Task Force, 2012) reflect the above observations. The prevalence of adult patients with SAD in anxiety clinic populations appears to be substantial, as is the level of disability associated with the disorder (Silove etal., 2010b). Yet none of the patients with SAD had been so diagnosed by the mental health professionals with whom they had previously consulted, even though many of the patients themselves had been convinced that the diagnoses they had received, such as panic disorder or agoraphobia, did not accurately reflect their core anxieties (Manicavasagar and Silove, 1997; Manicavasagar etal., 1997).
the task of separation-individuation as central to the psychological development of infants and young children, with inadequacies in the care given by the mother laying the foundations for separation anxiety and via that route to future psychopathology. Attachment theory extended this theme, drawing on evolutionary principles to argue that attachment to parental figures in early life is vital to survival in a species where there is a prolonged period of dependency on care-givers (MacLean, 1985). SAD therefore represents a core safety signal that alerts the infant and the caretaker to imminent threats to the security of primary bonds. Concurrent research in neurophysiology led leaders in the field such as Paul MacLean to conclude that the fear of separation, and the behavioural reactions that it triggers, are of such importance to survival that the establishment of the neural substrates that underpin these survival mechanisms were fundamental to the evolution of the human brain (MacLean, 1985). One of the most influential and enduring hypotheses arising from attachment theory was Bowlbys hypo thesis that an anxious attach ment style was the underlying psychopathology
1 School
of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Randwick, Australia 2 Centre for Population Mental Health Research, Sydney South West Area Health Service, Liverpool, Australia Corresponding author: Claire Marnane, Psychiatry Research and Teaching Unit, Level 1 Mental Health Centre, Liverpool Hospital, Liverpool, NSW 2170, Australia. Email: c.marnane@unsw.edu.au
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Marnane and Silove linking SAD in childhood, commonly manifesting as school refusal, and agoraphobia in adulthood (Bowlby, 1973). The separation anxiety (SA) agoraphobia (Ag) developmental model has evolved over time, particularly with the close link established in DSM-III between panic disorder (PD) and Ag. The SAPDAg hypothesis has been tested empirically over time, with most studies relying on the retrospective reports of adults about their early anxieties. Kleins (1964) seminal studies supported the model by indicating that a substantial number of adult patients with PDAg reported a hisphy tory of childhood SA. Neuro siological and genetic studies appeared to support the link by demonstrating a common underlying diathesis to both SA and PDAg (Roberson-Nay etal., 2012), although this study only compared the associations between childhood overanxious disorder or SAD with adult onset panic attacks. Nevertheless, over time, studies in the field began to produce contradictory results, particularly when patients with a wider range of adult anxiety subtypes were included (Biederman etal., 2005; Lipsitz etal., 1994). These latter studies have cast doubt upon the idea that early SA is specifically associated with PDAg, suggesting instead that it represents a general risk factor to a range of adult anxiety (and other) disorders. prevalence of adult SAD has varied from 20 to 40%, depending on whether a strict or wider definition of the disorder has been used (Pini etal., 2009; Silove etal., 2010b). A large-scale epidemiological study (the National Comorbidity Survey Replication, NCSR) conducted in the USA recorded a lifetime prevalence of SAD in adulthood of 6.6%, indicating that the category is one of the most common forms of anxiety (Shear etal., 2006). Importantly, a large number of cases in that study reported the onset of SAD in early adulthood. Clinic studies suggest that SAD in adulthood is disabling (Silove etal., 2010b) and, when occurring comorbidly with other disorders, is associated with a poor response to standard cognitive behavioural therapies (Aaronson etal., 2008). Our clinic studies have examined the association between SAD in adulthood and reports of heightened SA symptoms in early life, based on the SASI. The findings have been consistent in showing a strong association between early SA symptoms and a diagnosis of SAD in adulthood. Moreover, once the association with adult SAD is accounted for, there is no direct link between early SA and PDAg or any other adult anxiety subtype (Manicavasagar etal., 2000). These observations offer an explanation for the ambiguous findings produced by the body of previous studies testing the SAPDAg hypothesis, none of which took into account the presence of adult SAD. Once that newly discovered category was included in the analysis, the pattern became clear: a specific and unique relationship emerged between childhood and adult SAD. Previous studies showing an association between SAD in early life and PDAg may therefore be explained by the pattern of comorbidity amongst the adult anxiety disorders: the apparent link between SA and PDAg may be explained by comorbidity between the latter category and adult SAD, as has been found in some studies (Pini etal., 2009; Silove etal., 2010b).
13 SAD also appears to aggregate across the generations within families. For example, a small study undertaken in a childhood anxiety clinic found a strong and exclusive relationship between childhood and parental SAD, but no association between childhood SAD and parental PDAg (Manicavasagar etal., 2001). In summary, existing data suggest that SAD can occur across the lifespan and that there is a specific developmental relationship between the childhood and adult form of the disorder.
14 adult SAD was strongly associated with PTSD but not with symptoms of traumatic grief (Silove etal., 2010a). Fears for the safety and security of the self are closely linked to fears for others amongst the symptoms of SAD, offering a possible explanation for its overlap with PTSD. Indeed, in some instances, SAD may be the opposite side of the coin of PTSD, particularly in settings where the initiating trauma posed a threat to close others. As such, as a diagnostic category, SAD may prove to have complex origins that are not necessarily aligned with the constructs of attachment theory. changes have a far-reaching impact on the interpretation of past epidemiological and clinical studies involving the anxiety disorders. In effect, the changed status of SAD means that the epidemiology, patterns of comorbidity and risk factor profiles of the anxiety disorders need to be updated because it is likely that past studies that have not taken into account persons with adult SAD have overlooked or misdiagnosed a substantial number of individuals included in the analyses. It is to be expected that changes in the classification of mental disorders will be greeted with controversy and at times acrimonious disagreement, especially if categories are removed or expanded. The birth pangs of DSM-5 have not been an exception to this rule. It is of interest, therefore, that the modifications proposed for SAD have not attracted any public or professional debate, possibly because the evidence supporting these changes is relatively strong. Yet the maturation of SAD has profound implications for research and practice, opening up important questions about the origins, patterns of comorbidity and consequences in relation to disability for adults who can now legitimately be assigned that diagnosis. As yet, there are no treatment studies testing interventions for SAD in adulthood, a remarkable hiatus in itself. Hopefully, the changes ushered in by DSM-5 will act as a catalyst for research aimed at establishing interventions for SAD in adulthood. Perhaps the most profound immediate effect of allowing SAD to grow up, however, is that it acknowledges the suffering of countless patients, many of whom have contacted the present authors over time to express their despair at not having their core anxieties properly recognised or understood by the mental health professionals with whom they have consulted. Funding
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
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