Prevalence and Clinical Features of newly diagnosed Generalized Anxiety Disorder patients in Spanish Primary Care Settings: The GADAP study

Authors

  • Javier García-Campayo 1 Departamento de Psiquiatría Miguel Servet Hospital y Universidad de Zaragoza, España. Grupo Aragonés de Investigación en Atención Primaria Red de Actividades Preventivas y de Promoción de la Salud (REDIAPP) (G06/170)
  • Fernando Caballero Departamento de Investigación Clínico-Epidemiológica Facultad de Medicina. Universidad Francisco de Vitoria Madrid, Spain
  • María Perez Unidad Médica Pfi zer España Alcobendas (Madrid), Spain
  • Vanessa López Unidad Médica Pfi zer España Alcobendas (Madrid), Spain

Keywords:

Generalized anxiety disorder, Primary care, Treatment, Healthcare resources

Abstract

Background. Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is the most impairing anxiety disorder, a high percentage of patients remain undiagnosed at the primary care level. The aim of this study was to determine the clinical features of newly diagnosed GAD patients.

Method: Multicentre, cross-sectional observational study conducted in primary care settings. GAD patients were diagnosed according to the MINI psychiatric interview, and were included in the study if their score for GAD-7 was ≥10. Anxiety and depression levels, and sleep disturbances were determined by HADS and MOS-sleep scales, respectively. Data regarding pharmacological treatment and healthcare resources in the previous 3 months were collected.

Results. 2,232 patients were recruited; average GAD-7 score was 14.1 ± 2.7 (mean symptom duration 32.3 ± 43.3 months). 96.9% of patients had a comorbid medical illness, with 83.9% patients suffering from pain. Psychiatric comorbidities were present in 66.4% of patients (social anxiety 37%, major depression 19.1%). HADS-depression scores rendered 28.4% and 55.9% of patients as probable and depressive cases, respectively. Patients’ sleep rated 6.2 ± 1.9 on average in a 1 to 10 visual analogue scale. Only 34.9% of patients were following non-pharmacological treatment and 86.5%, 69.4% and 49.7% were treated with benzodiazepines, antidepressants and antiepileptics, respectively. The mean number of visits to the primary care physician in the previous 3 months was 5 times.

Limitations. Cross-sectional design; does not allow to infer causality.

Published

2012-05-01

How to Cite

Javier García-Campayo, et al. “Prevalence and Clinical Features of Newly Diagnosed Generalized Anxiety Disorder Patients in Spanish Primary Care Settings: The GADAP Study”. Actas Españolas De Psiquiatría, vol. 40, no. 3, May 2012, pp. 105-13, https://actaspsiquiatria.es/index.php/actas/article/view/453.

Issue

Section

Original