Chronic pain is associated with high rates of major depressive disorder (MD
D), but somatic symptoms caused by pain may complicate the diagnosis of MDD
. Different methods to address this issue include the adoption of an inclus
ive approach to diagnosis (i.e. including all symptoms when assessing MDD,
regardless of their presumed cause), an etiologic approach (i.e. disregardi
ng symptoms that are caused by medical problems), and a substitutive approa
ch (i.e. replacing somatic symptoms with non-somatic alternatives). In this
study, 129 patients with chronic pain (56 men and 73 women) underwent semi
-structured interviews addressing 23 individual symptoms of MDD. Detailed p
robing was undertaken into patients' perceptions of the causes of those sym
ptoms that could potentially be brought on by pain. We found that the preva
lence of MDD was highest with the inclusive diagnostic method (35.7%), lowe
st with on etiologic approach that discounted symptoms based on patient att
ributions (19.4%), and intermediate with the substitutive method (30.3%). A
lthough some symptoms, such as insomnia, fatigue, and difficulty concentrat
ing, were reported by 34-53% of the patients who did not meet criteria for
MDD, they were still more common among those who did (85-94%, P < 0.001). P
atients who met criteria for MDD with the inclusive method, but who did not
meet criteria using the etiologic method, had Beck Depression Inventory sc
ores (M = 24.5) that were comparable to those of patients who were consiste
ntly classified with MDD across methods (M = 25.6). These scores were much
higher than those of patients who were consistently classified without MDD
(M = 13.8, P < 0.001). In conclusion, excluding criterion symptoms that pat
ients attribute to pain can reduce the observed prevalence of MDD by about
45%. However, this method introduces a problem of false-negative diagnoses
that appears to be more significant than the problem of false positives ass
ociated with the inappropriate inclusion of somatic symptoms. (C) 2001 Inte
rnational Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier Science
B.V. All rights reserved.