The p Factor Consistently Predicts Long-Term Psychiatric and Functional Outcomes in Anxiety-Disordered Youth.

Matti Cervin, Lesley A Norris, Golda Ginsburg, Elizabeth Gosch, Scott N Compton, John Piacentini, Anne Marie Albano, Dara Sakolsky, Boris Birmaher, Courtney Keeton, Eric A Storch, Philip C Kendall

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Pediatric anxiety disorders can have a chronic course and are considered gateway disorders to adult psychopathology, but no consistent predictors of long-term outcome have been identified. A single latent symptom dimension that reflects features shared by all mental health disorders, the p factor, is thought to reflect mechanisms that cut across mental disorders. Whether p predicts outcome in youth with psychiatric disorders has not been examined. We tested whether the p factor predicted long-term psychiatric and functional outcomes in a large naturalistically followed-up cohort of anxiety-disordered youth.

METHOD: Youth enrolled in a randomized controlled treatment trial of pediatric anxiety during childhood/adolescence were followed-up on average six years posttreatment and then annually for four years. Structural equation modeling was used to estimate p at baseline. p and previously established predictors were modeled as predictors of long-term outcome.

RESULTS: Higher levels of p at baseline were related to more mental health disorders, poorer functioning, and greater impairment across all measures at all follow-up time points. p predicted outcome above and beyond previously identified predictors, including diagnostic comorbidity at baseline. Post hoc analyses showed that p predicted long-term anxiety outcomes, but not acute treatment outcome, suggesting that p may be uniquely associated with long-term outcome.

CONCLUSION: Youth with anxiety disorders who present with a liability towards broad mental health problems may be at a higher risk for poor long-term outcome across mental health and functional domains. Efforts to assess and address this broad liability may enhance long-term outcome.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalJournal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
StatePublished - Sep 16 2020

Keywords

  • adolescents
  • anxiety disorders
  • children
  • outcome
  • p factor

Disciplines

  • Medicine and Health Sciences
  • Psychiatry and Psychology

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