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Screening for Anxiety in Children and Adolescents: Evidence Report and Systematic Review for the US Preventive Services Task Force.

Authors :
Viswanathan, Meera
Wallace, Ina F.
Cook Middleton, Jennifer
Kennedy, Sara M.
McKeeman, Joni
Hudson, Kesha
Rains, Caroline
Vander Schaaf, Emily B.
Kahwati, Leila
Source :
JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association. 10/11/2022, Vol. 328 Issue 14, p1445-1455. 11p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

<bold>Importance: </bold>Anxiety in children and adolescents is associated with impaired functioning, educational underachievement, and future mental health conditions.<bold>Objective: </bold>To review the evidence on screening for anxiety in children and adolescents to inform the US Preventive Services Task Force.<bold>Data Sources: </bold>PubMed, Cochrane Library, PsycINFO, CINAHL, and trial registries through July 19, 2021; references, experts, and surveillance through June 1, 2022.<bold>Study Selection: </bold>English-language, randomized clinical trials (RCTs) of screening; diagnostic test accuracy studies; RCTs of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) or US Food and Drug Administration-approved pharmacotherapy; RCTs, observational studies, and systematic reviews reporting harms.<bold>Data Extraction and Synthesis: </bold>Two reviewers assessed titles/abstracts, full-text articles, and study quality and extracted data; when at least 3 similar studies were available, meta-analyses were conducted.<bold>Main Outcomes and Measures: </bold>Test accuracy, symptoms, response, remission, loss of diagnosis, all-cause mortality, functioning, suicide-related symptoms or events, adverse events.<bold>Results: </bold>Thirty-nine studies (N = 6065) were included. No study reported on the direct benefits or harms of screening on health outcomes. Ten studies (n = 3260) reported the sensitivity of screening instruments, ranging from 0.34 to 1.00, with specificity ranging from 0.47 to 0.99. Twenty-nine RCTs (n = 2805) reported on treatment: 22 on CBT, 6 on pharmacotherapy, and 1 on CBT, sertraline, and CBT plus sertraline. CBT was associated with gains on several pooled measures of symptom improvement (magnitude of change varied by outcome measure), response (pooled relative risk [RR], 1.89 [95% CI, 1.17 to 3.05]; n = 606; 6 studies), remission (RR, 2.68 [95% CI, 1.48 to 4.88]; n = 321; 4 studies), and loss of diagnosis (RR range, 3.02-3.09) when compared with usual care or wait-list controls. The evidence on functioning for CBT was mixed. Pharmacotherapy, when compared with placebo, was associated with gains on 2 pooled measures of symptom improvement-mean difference (Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale mean difference, -4.0 [95% CI, -5.5 to -2.5]; n = 726; 5 studies; and Clinical Global Impression-Severity scale mean difference, -0.84 [95% CI, -1.13 to -0.55]; n = 550; 4 studies) and response (RR, 2.11 [95% CI, 1.58 to 2.98]; n = 370; 5 studies)-but was mixed on measures of functioning. Eleven RCTs (n = 1293) reported harms of anxiety treatments. Suicide-related harms were rare, and the differences were not statistically significantly different.<bold>Conclusions and Relevance: </bold>Indirect evidence suggested that some screening instruments were reasonably accurate. CBT and pharmacotherapy were associated with benefits; no statistically significant association with harms was reported. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00987484
Volume :
328
Issue :
14
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159682795
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2022.16303