# Pediatric obsessive–compulsive disorder as a developmental disorder of cognitive–emotional control: a transdiagnostic and family-integrated perspective

**Authors:** Cristina Di Vincenzo, Francesco Demaria, Ilaria Bertoncini, Deny Menghini, Alessandro Antonietti, Stefano Vicari, Maria Pontillo

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1750938 · Frontiers in Psychiatry · 2026-01-16

## TL;DR

This paper explores pediatric OCD as a developmental issue involving cognitive and emotional control, linking it to other conditions and emphasizing family and transdiagnostic approaches.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a new developmental and transdiagnostic framework for understanding pediatric OCD, integrating family dynamics and regulatory mechanisms.

## Key findings

- Pediatric OCD is characterized by difficulties in cognitive-emotional control, such as flexibility and inhibition.
- Regulatory vulnerabilities in OCD overlap with conditions like autism and ADHD, suggesting shared mechanisms.
- Family accommodation reflects and reinforces the child's regulatory challenges, impacting treatment approaches.

## Abstract

Pediatric obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) is a complex condition that typically emerges in childhood or adolescence and is closely linked to developmental changes in cognitive and emotional control. This mini-review offers a clinically oriented synthesis of pediatric OCD from a developmental and transdiagnostic perspective, framing it as a disturbance of flexibility, inhibition, and distress regulation that organizes its clinical presentation. Variations in these control processes across development shape the content and form of obsessive–compulsive symptoms and contribute to their frequent overlap with conditions such as autism spectrum disorder, tic disorders and Tourettic OCD, ADHD, bipolar disorder, and psychosis-risk presentations, which share similar regulatory vulnerabilities. Within this framework, family accommodation is conceptualized as an interpersonal extension of the child’s regulatory difficulties, temporarily reducing distress while reinforcing reliance on external control. A transdiagnostic focus on underlying regulatory mechanisms also helps to clarify why interventions such as developmentally adapted cognitive-behavioral therapy with exposure and response prevention, family-focused treatments, and process-based transdiagnostic protocols can promote more flexible cognitive–emotional regulation in both the child and the family system. Taken together, these elements support a developmental, family-integrated, and transdiagnostic conceptualization of pediatric OCD centered on cognitive–emotional control.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** obsessive–compulsive disorder (MONDO:0008114), autism spectrum disorder (MONDO:0005258), ADHD (MONDO:0007743), bipolar disorder (MONDO:0004985)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** disturbance of (MESH:D014832), developmental disorder of cognitive-emotional control (MESH:D003072), bipolar disorder (MESH:D001714), psychosis (MESH:D011618), OCD (MESH:D009771), ADHD (MESH:D001289), autism spectrum disorder (MESH:D000067877), tic disorders (MESH:D013981)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

94 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12856497/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12856497