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Published Online: 1 February 2017

Increased Treatment Complexity for Major Depressive Disorder for Inpatients With Comorbid Personality Disorder

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Abstract

Objective:

The study examined inpatient treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD) when it is complicated by comorbid personality disorder.

Methods:

In this descriptive analysis of a large data sample from 2013 (German VIPP data set) of 58,913 cases from 75 hospitals, three groups were compared: patients with MDD, patients with MDD and a comorbid personality disorder, and patients with a main diagnosis of personality disorder.

Results:

Compared with MDD patients, those with comorbid personality disorder had higher rates of recurrent depression and nearly twice as many readmissions within one year, despite longer mean length of stay. Records of patients with comorbidities more often indicated accounting codes for “complex diagnostic procedures,” “crisis intervention,” and “constant observation.” Patients with comorbid disorders differed from patients with a main diagnosis of personality disorder in treatment indicator characteristics and distribution of personality disorder diagnoses.

Conclusions:

Personality disorder comorbidity made MDD treatment more complex, and recurrence of MDD episodes and hospital readmission occurred more often than if patients had a sole MDD diagnosis.
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is one of the most important health problems in the developed world (1). Personality disorders are a frequent comorbidity with MDD (2). Views differ (3,4) on how a comorbid personality disorder influences MDD treatment course and outcome, but a recent review suggests that comorbidity is associated with a worse outcome (3). However, not much is known about these comorbidity effects in routine treatment. The aim of this study was to conduct a descriptive analysis of inpatient routine data in order to evaluate how a secondary diagnosis of personality disorder among patients with MDD influences indicators of treatment course and treatment complexity.
In addition, patients with MDD and a secondary personality disorder (MDD+PD) were compared with patients with a main diagnosis of personality disorder to identify characteristics of these two groups. The indicators were MDD episode severity; rate of recurrence; rate of emergency admissions; rate of discharge against medical advice; average length of stay; readmission rates within one year; amount of therapy time units (TTUs), a measure of individual care by therapist and nursing staff; frequency of accounting codes for standard, intensive, or day clinic treatment; frequency of accounting codes indicating “complex diagnostic procedures,” “crisis intervention,” and “constant observation”; and the distribution of personality disorder diagnoses in the MDD+PD group and in the group with a main diagnosis of personality disorder.

Methods

The introduction of a new remuneration system obliges all psychiatric and psychosomatic hospitals in Germany to collect standardized routine data. For research purposes, the VIPP (Versorgungsindikatoren in Psychiatrie und Psychosomatik, or care indicators in psychiatry and psychosomatics) database merges these data from a subsample of hospitals and enriches them with supplementary information (5). This study examined year 2013 VIPP data from 20 psychiatric and psychosomatic departments in general hospitals and 55 psychiatric and psychosomatic hospitals (approximately 15%−20% of all psychiatric and psychosomatic hospitals) (6) from 14 of the 16 federal states of Germany. All cases from the participating hospitals were included in the data set.
The indicators were based on diagnoses and procedure information that were initially generated for accounting purposes. All available accounting information categories that appeared helpful for this study’s aims were included as indicators. The data followed standardized definitions of ICD-10-GM (German modification) codes (7) and otherwise of the German Institute for Medical Documentation and Information’s German Procedure Classification (8, available only in German). All diagnoses were discharge diagnoses.
From 671,062 inpatient or day treatment clinic cases for patients ages 18 to 64 (all cases of the participating hospitals in 2013, with “case” meaning one admission), we selected three groups: first, the MDD group included all patients with ICD-10-GM codes F32.X or F33.X as the main diagnosis without a secondary diagnosis of F60.X or F61.X; second, the MDD+PD group included all patients with F32.X or F33.X as a main diagnosis code and F60.X or F61.X as a secondary diagnosis; and third, the personality disorder group consisted of all patients with a main diagnosis code of F60.X or F61.X.
There were several indicators. Episode severity was obtained by comparing the MDD and MDD+PD groups in percentage of cases that included diagnoses of mild, moderate, severe, or psychotic depression. Recurrent depression involved comparison between the MDD and MDD+PD groups for percentage of cases that included diagnoses of recurrent depression (ICD-10-GM code F33.X), and one depressive episode only (ICD-10-GM code F32.X). Emergency admissions indicated the admissions for acute medical reasons (suicidality, for example) without prior authorization by the patient’s health insurance fund. Discharge against medical advice was the percentage of cases discharged against medical advice. Average length of stay did not account for absences and periods of leave. Readmissions within one year indicated cases admitted a second time within 365 days to a psychiatric or psychosomatic hospital with an ICD-10-GM F-code main diagnosis (the diagnosis was not necessarily the same on the second admission).
TTUs, or Therapieeinheiten, are a standardized measure for contacts by physicians and psychologist. Both individual and group contacts are counted. For calculating the total TTUs, the weight of group contacts depends on group size. Only contacts with a duration of at least 25 minutes are taken into account, and time is counted in 25-minute steps. Thus TTUs do not give the exact amount of time spent with the patient, because short contacts are not counted. However, TTUs can serve as an estimate of how much time is provided for psychotherapeutic interventions.
Accounting codes for treatment modalities were another indicator used for the study. In the current German reimbursement system, every psychiatric and psychosomatic case gets a standardized code that indicates treatment complexity and setting for every day of treatment. The options most used are standard treatment (Regelbehandlung); intensive treatment (Intensivbehandlung), which required endangerment of self or others, special safety measures, severe increase or decrease in goal-directed activity, no autonomous liquid or food intake, acute danger by distortions of orientation and reality, or withdrawal syndrome with vital danger, or some combination of these; and day clinic treatment (Tagesklinische Behandlung). Because a single case can have different categories on different days, this indicator compares the percentage of days in the three categories.
Another indicator included the reimbursement accounting codes for special treatment efforts or complexities (“add-on codes”) that indicate an especially long diagnostic interview (complex diagnostic procedures), a crisis intervention of more than 25 minutes (crisis intervention), or the permanent presence of a staff member for surveillance (constant observation) (9). The study compared the percentage of cases that received an add-on code at least once during the stay.
Distribution of personality disorder diagnoses was compared across groups, specifically, the spectrum of personality disorder main diagnoses in the personality disorder group and secondary diagnoses in the MDD+PD group. To determine whether differences were significant, we performed chi-square or t tests, and the null hypothesis assumed no differences among the groups.

Results

The study included 58,913 cases within 2013, with 41,556 in the MDD group, 8,730 in the MDD+PD group, and 8,627 in the personality disorder group. For the ten indicators, the results of the comparison of the three groups are shown in Table 1.
TABLE 1. Indicators of inpatient care for 58,913 cases from 75 psychiatric and general hospitals in Germany in 2013, by disorder type
IndicatorMajor depression (MDD) (N=41,556)MDD+PD (N=8,730)Personality disorder (PD) (N=8,627)p
N%N%N%MDD vs. MDD+PDMDD vs. PDMDD+PD vs. PD
Female24,311 5,704 6,335    
Male17,245 3,026 2,292    
Readmission         
 Hospitals73 73 73    
 Cases28,683 6,221 7,416    
Severity of major depressive disorder (cases)         
 Mild243.648.5  ns  
 Moderate15,72537.83,55240.7  <.001  
 Severe22,95155.24,77654.7  ns  
 Psychotic2,3885.73183.6  <.001  
Recurrent depression (cases)21,82152.55,90067.6  <.001  
Emergency admissions (cases)9,99724.12,16824.83,59841.7ns<.001<.001
Discharge against medical advice (cases)1,4393.54014.66437.5ns<.001<.001
Average length of stay (M±SD days) 36.2±28.4 38.7±32.6 24.9±40.0<.001<.001<.001
Readmission within 365 days (cases)7,09524.72,52540.64,07255.0<.001<.001<.001
Treatment time units (M±SD).26±1.07 .25±.41 .24±.41 nsnsns
Accounting codes         
 Treatment setting (days)         
  Standard treatment836,22059.3186,61057.4122,98160.9<.001<.001<.001
  Intensive treatment59,1184.222,2576.829,07614.4<.001<.001<.001
  Day clinic treatment401,01528.485,59326.327,12613.4<.001<.001<.001
 Special treatment efforts or complexities (cases)         
  Complex diagnostic procedures2,0304.95856.74495.2<.001ns<.001
  Crisis intervention306.7961.11812.1<.001<.001<.001
  Constant observation5031.22012.35616.5<.001<.001<.001
PD diagnosis (cases)         
 F60.0   .4 .4   
 F60.1   .8 .3   
 F60.2   .3 .9   
 F60.30   6.2 10.9   
 F60.31   36.1 68.2   
 F60.4   2.1 .7   
 F60.5   2.3 .1   
 F60.6   8.0 1.4   
 F60.7   6.0 1.2   
 F60.8   8.9 2.3   
 F60.9   3.4 .8   
 F61.X   27.5 12.7   
The comparison between MDD and MDD+PD groups showed no differences for emergency admissions, discharge against medical advice, and TTUs. Differences were small and without clinical significance for mild and severe depression and for accounting codes for treatment modalities. Accounting codes for special treatment efforts or complexities indicated that the MDD+PD group more frequently received complex diagnostic procedures, crisis intervention, and constant observation compared with the MDD group, although rates were on a low level for both groups. However, rates of recurrent depression were 15 percentage points higher and readmission rates within one year were 16 percentage points higher in the MDD+PD group compared with the MDD group despite a higher mean length of stay. These differences might be partially due to a more thorough diagnostic review (as indicated by the complex diagnostic procedures indicator) of more complicated cases, leading to more secondary diagnoses of personality disorder. But regardless of the underlying cause, this study thereby identified with the MDD+PD group a subgroup of MDD patients with a more complex treatment course. Indirectly, the indicators of recurrent depression and readmission within one year implied a worse treatment outcome for the MDD+PD group.
Comparison of the MDD+PD group with the personality disorder group revealed that for the MDD+PD group, many indicators, including length of stay, day clinic treatment, intensive treatment, and rates of emergency admissions, were more similar to the MDD group than to the PD group. However, the MDD+PD and personality disorder groups shared the very high rate of one-year readmissions, with the latter group faring worse. In terms of diagnoses, the MDD+PD group was much less dominated by borderline personality disorder (ICD-10-GM code F60.3); instead, mixed and other personality disorders (F61) and other specific personality disorders, including narcissistic and passive-aggressive personality disorder (F60.8), avoidant personality disorder (F60.6), and dependent personality disorder (F60.7), were more common.

Discussion and Conclusions

This study compared indicators of inpatient routine care between three groups—all patients with MDD, patients with a main diagnosis of MDD and a secondary diagnosis of personality disorder, and patients with a main diagnosis of personality disorder—in a large sample of 58,913 cases from 75 psychiatric hospitals. The main finding was that MDD treatment was more complex, and recurrence of MDD episodes and hospital readmission occurred more often in patients with a personality disorder comorbidity.
This analysis of health care routine data was limited by several factors. It was not possible to test the validity of diagnoses (for example if personality disorder criteria in a patient with MDD were present not only during the depressive episode but prior to it as well) or exclude bias of the indicators by factoring in accounting incentives. Furthermore, the indicators provided only indirect evidence for relevant variables, such as complexity or remission. Finally, the indicators of depression recurrence and readmission are probably also strongly influenced by features of outpatient care, such as availability of integrated care concepts and outpatient psychotherapy (10).
Several questions arose in analyzing these results. First, in most evidence-based treatment strategies for personality disorder and MDD, psychotherapeutic approaches play an important role (1113). These approaches require a certain minimum treatment time with qualified professionals (14,15). The amount of individual contacts with therapists and nursing staff measured by TTUs in this study was quite low and variable in all groups. A TTU of .25 corresponded to only 6.25 minutes of daily individual contact with doctors and a psychologist. On the one hand, a straightforward interpretation of this result is complicated, because group therapies also counted toward the TTU value, and their weight in our analysis was dependent on group size. On the other hand, the low TTU value and its large variability suggest that many different therapeutic approaches were in use and raise doubt that all were evidence based. Translating evidence-based concepts into routine practice may help to lower rates of readmission and recurrence, especially for the MDD+PD group and the personality disorder group. Therefore, more research is needed on the application of therapeutic concepts and allocation of qualified professionals such as psychotherapists, psychiatrists, and mental health nurses during psychiatric inpatient treatment and their influence on outcomes.
Second, future research should take the influence of the outpatient treatment infrastructure into account, especially for patient groups with high rates of readmission and recurrence (10). Third, the influence of other comorbidities and social determinants would be interesting to examine to complete the picture on which patient groups require improved treatment concepts in routine treatment. Finally, relating the indirect outcome parameters used in this study to direct indicators of recovery and patient-rated outcome measures would be an important contribution in future research.

References

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Friborg O, Martinsen EW, Martinussen M, et al: Comorbidity of personality disorders in mood disorders: a meta-analytic review of 122 studies from 1988 to 2010. Journal of Affective Disorders 152–154:1–11, 2014
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Pope HG Jr, Jonas JM, Hudson JI, et al: The validity of DSM-III borderline personality disorder: a phenomenologic, family history, treatment response, and long-term follow-up study. Archives of General Psychiatry 40:23–30, 1983
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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

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Cover: Untitled, by Sam Francis, 1958. Watercolor on paper. Gift of Udo M. Reinach Estate, The Museum of Modern Art, New York City. ©2017 Sam Francis Foundation, California/Artists Rights Society, New York City. Digital image © The Museum of Modern Art/licensed by SCALA/Art Resource, New York City.

Psychiatric Services
Pages: 524 - 527
PubMed: 28142390

History

Received: 24 April 2016
Revision received: 4 August 2016
Accepted: 8 September 2016
Published online: 1 February 2017
Published in print: May 01, 2017

Keywords

  1. Depression
  2. Personality Disorder
  3. Inpatient treatment
  4. Mental health systems/hospitals

Authors

Details

Hauke F. Wiegand, M.D., Ph.D.
The authors are with the Department of Gerontopsychiatry and Behavioural Medicine, Alexianer St. Joseph-Krankenhaus Berlin-Weissensee, Berlin (e-mail: [email protected]).
Frank Godemann, M.D.
The authors are with the Department of Gerontopsychiatry and Behavioural Medicine, Alexianer St. Joseph-Krankenhaus Berlin-Weissensee, Berlin (e-mail: [email protected]).

Notes

Parts of this work were presented as a poster at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, Atlanta, May 14–18, 2016.

Competing Interests

The authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

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