Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy Staff Publications

Publication Date

10-1-2022

Journal

Psychological Medicine

DOI

10.1017/S0033291720005437

PMID

33557980

PMCID

PMC9693708

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

2-9-2021

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Published Open-Access

yes

Keywords

Adult, Adolescent, Child, Humans, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Personality Assessment, Obsessive–compulsive disorder, symptom dimensions, heterogeneity, factor analysis, network analysis

Abstract

Background: The symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are highly heterogeneous and it is unclear what is the optimal way to conceptualize this heterogeneity. This study aimed to establish a comprehensive symptom structure model of OCD across the lifespan using factor and network analytic techniques.

Methods: A large multinational cohort of well-characterized children, adolescents, and adults diagnosed with OCD (N = 1366) participated in the study. All completed the Dimensional Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale, which contains an expanded checklist of 87 distinct OCD symptoms. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis were used to outline empirically supported symptom dimensions, and interconnections among the resulting dimensions were established using network analysis. Associations between dimensions and sociodemographic and clinical variables were explored using structural equation modeling (SEM).

Results: Thirteen first-order symptom dimensions emerged that could be parsimoniously reduced to eight broad dimensions, which were valid across the lifespan: Disturbing Thoughts, Incompleteness, Contamination, Hoarding, Transformation, Body Focus, Superstition, and Loss/Separation. A general OCD factor could be included in the final factor model without a significant decline in model fit according to most fit indices. Network analysis showed that Incompleteness and Disturbing Thoughts were most central (i.e. had most unique interconnections with other dimensions). SEM showed that the eight broad dimensions were differentially related to sociodemographic and clinical variables.

Conclusions: Future research will need to establish if this expanded hierarchical and multidimensional model can help improve our understanding of the etiology, neurobiology and treatment of OCD.

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