Factors associated with anxious distress in major depressive episodes: a cross-sectional study
F. Bartoli, B. Bachi, T. Callovini, D. Palpella, S. Piacenti, M. Morreale, M. E. Di Lella, C. Crocamo, G. Carrà

TL;DR
This study explores factors linked to anxious distress in people with major depressive episodes, finding associations with mixed features, manic symptoms, and a diagnosis of major depressive disorder.
Contribution
The study identifies clinical correlates of anxious distress in major depressive episodes using a cross-sectional design.
Findings
Anxious distress was associated with mixed features and higher manic symptom severity.
Psychotic features and a diagnosis of major depressive disorder (MDD) were also linked to anxious distress.
The findings suggest a distinct clinical profile for individuals with anxious distress during depressive episodes.
Abstract
The comorbidity between depression and anxiety is a common occurrence. The DSM-5 introduced the “anxious distress” (AD) specifier that can be applied to any depressive episode – both in major depressive disorder (MDD) and bipolar disorder (BD) – when symptoms such as feelings of tension, restlessness, difficulty concentrating, and fear that something awful may happen or to lose control are present. Longitudinal data showed that the AD specifier may be an effective predictor of chronicity, time to remission, and functional disability in depressive disorders. In addition, evidence on AD proved its association with increased depressive symptom severity. Available literature seems to suggest that AD occurs in a specific subgroup of patients, thus enabling a peculiar clinical profile to be outlined. To expand knowledge in this field, we performed a cross-sectional study aimed at identifying…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development
