Bb. Lahey et al., DSM-IV FIELD TRIALS FOR ATTENTION-DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS, The American journal of psychiatry, 151(11), 1994, pp. 1673-1685
Objective: Optimal diagnostic thresholds were determined for DsM-IV at
tention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and the psychometric propertie
s were compared to alternative definitions. Method: Structured diagnos
tic interviews of multiple informants for 380 clinic-referred youths a
ged 4-17 years were conducted. In addition, standardized clinicians' v
alidation diagnoses of attention deficit disorder were obtained to ass
ess agreement with clinical judgment. Measures of impairment were obta
ined to assess the accuracy of identifying youth with an impairing con
dition. Results: Three subtypes of attention deficit hyperactivity dis
order (predominantly inattentive, predominantly hyperactive-impulsive,
and combined types) were distinguished on the basis of the degree of
deviance on separate dimensions of inattention and hyperactivity-impul
sivity. These three subtypes were found to differ in terms of types of
impairment, age, and sex ratio, but not ethnicity. In terms of case i
dentification of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, DSM-IV was
found to be very similar to DSM-III-R, except that DSM-IV identified m
ore impaired girls and preschool children. Conclusions: These results
support the decision to subdivide the heterogeneous category of DSM-II
I-R attention deficit hyperactivity disorder into three subtypes. The
resulting DSM-IV definition appears to be somewhat less biased toward
the symptom pattern typical of elementary school boys.