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Citation

Short, Nicole A.; van Rooij, Sanne J. H.; Murty, Vishnu P.; Stevens, Jennifer S.; An, Xinming; Ji, Yinyao; McLean, Samuel A.; House, Stacey L.; Beaudoin, Francesca L.; & Zeng, Donglin, et al. (2022). Anxiety Sensitivity as a Transdiagnostic Risk Factor for Trajectories of Adverse Posttraumatic Neuropsychiatric Sequelae in the AUROA Study. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 156, 45-54.

Abstract

Anxiety sensitivity, or fear of anxious arousal, is cross-sectionally associated with a wide array of adverse posttraumatic neuropsychiatric sequelae, including symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, sleep disturbance, pain, and somatization. The current study utilizes a large-scale, multi-site, prospective study of trauma survivors presenting to emergency departments. Hypotheses tested whether elevated anxiety sensitivity in the immediate posttrauma period is associated with more severe and persistent trajectories of common adverse posttraumatic neuropsychiatric sequelae in the eight weeks posttrauma. Participants from the AURORA study (n = 2,269 recruited from 23 emergency departments) completed self-report assessments over eight weeks posttrauma. Associations between heightened anxiety sensitivity and more severe and/or persistent trajectories of trauma-related symptoms identified by growth mixture modeling were analyzed. Anxiety sensitivity assessed two weeks posttrauma was associated with severe and/or persistent posttraumatic stress, depression, anxiety, sleep disturbance, pain, and somatic symptoms in the eight weeks posttrauma. Effect sizes were in the small to medium range in multivariate models accounting for various demographic, trauma-related, pre-trauma mental health-related, and personality-related factors. Anxiety sensitivity may be a useful transdiagnostic risk factor in the immediate posttraumatic period identifying individuals at risk for the development of adverse posttraumatic neuropsychiatric sequelae. Further, considering anxiety sensitivity is malleable via brief intervention, it could be a useful secondary prevention target. Future research should continue to evaluate associations between anxiety sensitivity and trauma-related pathology.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2022.09.027

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

Journal of Psychiatric Research

Author(s)

Short, Nicole A.
van Rooij, Sanne J. H.
Murty, Vishnu P.
Stevens, Jennifer S.
An, Xinming
Ji, Yinyao
McLean, Samuel A.
House, Stacey L.
Beaudoin, Francesca L.
Zeng, Donglin
Neylan, Thomas C.
Clifford, Gari D.
Linnstaedt, Sarah D.
Germine, Laura T.
Bollen, Kenneth A.
Rauch, Scott L.
Haran, John P.
Lewandowski, Christopher
Musey, Paul I. Jr.
Hendry, Phyllis L.
Sheikh, Sophia
Jones, Christopher W.
Punches, Brittany E.
Swor, Robert A.
McGrath, Meghan E.
Hudak, Lauren A.
Pascual, Jose L.
Seamon, Mark J.
Datner, Elizabeth M.
Pearson, Claire
Peak, David A.
Merchant, Roland C.
Domeier, Robert M.
Rathlev, Niels K.
O'Neil, Brian J.
Sergot, Paulina
Sanchez, Leon D.
Bruce, Steven E.
Pietrzak, Robert H.
Joormann, Jutta
Barch, Deanna M.
Pizzagalli, Diego A.
Sheridan, John F.
Smoller, Jordan W.
Harte, Steven E.
Elliott, James M.
Kessler, Ronald C.
Koenen, Karestan C.
Jovanovic, Tanja

Article Type

Regular

Data Set/Study

Advancing Understanding of RecOvery afteR traumA (AURORA) Study

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

ORCiD

Bollen - 0000-0002-6710-3800