4.5 Article

Validity and utility of Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP): III. Emotional dysfunction superspectrum

Journal

WORLD PSYCHIATRY
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 26-54

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/wps.20943

Keywords

HiTOP; emotional dysfunction; internalizing; somatoform; depression; anxiety disorders; eating disorders; sexual dysfunction; negative affect; neuroticism; clinical utility

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The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP) provides a quantitative approach to address limitations of traditional mental disorder diagnoses. It suggests an emotional dysfunction superspectrum, which includes the internalizing and somatoform spectra. These spectra consist of dimensions found in multiple diagnostic categories and are linked to individual differences in negative affect. The evidence shows shared genetic diatheses, environmental risk factors, cognitive and affective difficulties, neural substrates, childhood temperamental antecedents, and treatment response within the superspectrum. Compared to traditional diagnoses, the internalizing and somatoform spectra demonstrate improved utility in terms of reliability, explanatory and predictive power, and clinical applicability.
The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP) is a quantitative nosological system that addresses shortcomings of traditional mental disorder diagnoses, including arbitrary boundaries between psychopathology and normality, frequent disorder co-occurrence, substantial heterogeneity within disorders, and diagnostic unreliability over time and across clinicians. This paper reviews evidence on the validity and utility of the internalizing and somatoform spectra of HiTOP, which together provide support for an emotional dysfunction superspectrum. These spectra are composed of homogeneous symptom and maladaptive trait dimensions currently subsumed within multiple diagnostic classes, including depressive, anxiety, trauma-related, eating, bipolar, and somatic symptom disorders, as well as sexual dysfunction and aspects of personality disorders. Dimensions falling within the emotional dysfunction superspectrum are broadly linked to individual differences in negative affect/neuroticism. Extensive evidence establishes that dimensions falling within the superspectrum share genetic diatheses, environmental risk factors, cognitive and affective difficulties, neural substrates and biomarkers, childhood temperamental antecedents, and treatment response. The structure of these validators mirrors the quantitative structure of the superspectrum, with some correlates more specific to internalizing or somatoform conditions, and others common to both, thereby underlining the hierarchical structure of the domain. Compared to traditional diagnoses, the internalizing and somatoform spectra demonstrated substantially improved utility: greater reliability, larger explanatory and predictive power, and greater clinical applicability. Validated measures are currently available to implement the HiTOP system in practice, which can make diagnostic classification more useful, both in research and in the clinic.

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