DSM-5-TR prolonged grief disorder and DSM-5 posttraumatic stress disorder are related, yet distinct : confirmatory factor analyses in traumatically bereaved people

BACKGROUND 

Prolonged grief disorder (PGD) is newly included in the text revision of the DSM-5 (DSM-5-TR). So far, it is unknown if DSM-5-TR PGD is distinguishable from bereavement-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Prior research examining the distinctiveness of PTSD and pathological grief focused on non-traumatic loss samples, used outdated conceptualizations of grief disorders, and has provided mixed results.

 

OBJECTIVE 

In a large sample of traumatically bereaved people, we first evaluated the factor structure of PTSD and PGD separately and then evaluated the factor structure when combining PTSD and PGD symptoms to examine the distinctiveness between the two syndromes.

 

METHODS 

Self-reported data were used from 468 people bereaved due to the MH17 plane disaster (N = 200) or a traffic accident (N = 268). The 10 DSM-5-TR PGD symptoms were assessed with the Traumatic Grief Inventory-Self Report Plus (TGI-SR+). The 20-item Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5) was used to tap PTSD symptoms. Confirmatory factor analyses were conducted.

 

RESULTS 

For PTSD, a seven factor, so-called ‘Hybrid’ model yielded the best fit. For PGD, a univariate factor model fits the data well. A combined model with PGD items loading on one factor and PTSD items on seven factors (associations between PGD and PTSD subscales r ≥ .50 and ≤.71), plus a higher-order factor (i.e. PTSD factors on a higher-order PTSD factor) (association between higher-order PTSD factor and PGD factor r = .82) exhibited a better fit than a model with all PGD and PTSD symptom loading on a single factor or two factors (i.e. one for PGD and one for PTSD).

 

CONCLUSIONS 

This is the first study examining the factor structure of DSM-5-TR PGD and DSM-5 PTSD in people confronted with a traumatic loss. The findings provide support that PGD constitutes a syndrome distinguishable from, yet related with, PTSD.

 

•  This is the first factor analytic study on PGD and PTSD after traumatic loss.

•  PTSD and PGD factors are related, but distinguishable.

•  DSM-5-TR PGD is distinct from DSM-5 PTSD.

Reference: 
L. I. M. Lenferink, M. J. A. van den Munckhof, J. de Keijser & P. A. Boelen | 2021
In: European Journal of Psychotraumatology ; ISSN: 2000-8066 | 12 | 1 | december | 1-14
https://doi.org/10.1080/20008198.2021.2000131
Keywords: 
Air Traffic Accidents, Arousal, Bereavement, Comorbidity, Factor Structure, Loss, Netherlands, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Prolonged Grief Disorder, Psychotrauma, PTSD (DSM-5), PTSD (en), PTSD (ICD-11), Research, Statistical Analysis, Traumatic events, Traumatic Grief
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