Tulburare compulsivă a comportamentului sexual în tulburarea obsesiv-compulsivă: Prevalența și comorbiditatea asociată (2019)

Numerous terms have been used to describe excessive sexual behaviors, including compulsive sexual behavior, hypersexuality, sexual addiction, sexual impulsivity, and impulsive–compulsive sexual behavior. There is continuing controversy about labeling “out-of-control” sexual behavior as an “addiction,” as a compulsive or as an impulsive disorder (Bőthe, Bartók, și colab., 2018; Bőthe, Tóth-Király, și colab., 2018; Carnes, 1983, 1991; Fuss et al., 2019; Gola și Potenza, 2018; Grant și colab., 2014; Griffiths, 2016; Kraus, Voon și Potenza, 2016; Potenza, Gola, Voon, Kor și Kraus, 2017; Stein, 2008; Stein, Black, & Pienaar, 2000). In addition, despite scientific support for inclusion of the condition into diagnostic manuals, there has also been substantial advocacy against this, based on the risk of pathologizing of normal sexual behavior due to religious, moralistic, or sex-negative attitudes (Fuss et al., 2019; Klein, Briken, Schröder, & Fuss, in press). Indeed, the proposal for the inclusion of hypersexual disorder into the fifth edition of the Manualul de diagnostic si statistica a tulburarilor mentale (DSM-5; Kafka, 2010) was denied by the American Psychiatric Association (APA) board of trustees (Kafka, 2014). Inclusion of compulsive sexual behavior disorder (CSBD) as an impulse-control disorder in the 11th revision of the Clasificarea statistică internațională a bolilor și problemele de sănătate conexe (ICD-11) is due for official ratification in 2019 (Kraus și colab., 2018).

Partly due to the controversy about the disorder, the lack of officially accepted diagnostic criteria, and the lack of a validated diagnostic instrument, few rigorous epidemiological studies on CSBD have been carried out. In this article, we refer to CSBD as a condition characterized by a persistent pattern of failure to control intense, repetitive sexual impulses or urges, resulting in repetitive sexual behavior over an extended period that causes marked distress or impairment in personal, family, social, educational, occupational, or other important areas of functioning (Kraus și colab., 2018). It has been estimated that 5%–6% of the general population may be affected by the disorder (Carnes, 1991; Coleman, 1992); however, a recent representative study found even higher rates of distress associated with difficulty controlling sexual feelings, urges, and behaviors in the US (Dickenson, Coleman, & Miner, 2018). Importantly, these prevalence estimates may be an overestimation due to a lack of research using reliable and validated operational criteria (Klein, Rettenberger și Briken, 2014).

Patients with CSBD commonly report compulsive behaviors, impulse-control difficulties, and substance use (Derbyshire & Grant, 2015). Attention to these comorbidities may ultimately be helpful in the conceptualization of out-of-control sexual behavior as compulsivity, impulsivity, or as an addiction. A recent study found that both impulsivity and compulsivity are related to “out-of-control” sexual behaviors, while the relation to impulsivity was stronger (Bőthe, Tóth-Király, și colab., 2018). Nevertheless, a relationship between “out-of-control” sexual behavior and compulsivity has repeatedly been suggested (Carnes, 1983, 1991; Coleman, 1991; Stein, 2008) because both phenomena are characterized by repetitiveness and a rise in tension before the behavior, followed by a sense of release during execution. Consequently, the term obsesiv sexual behavior disorder has been proposed for “out-of-control” sexual behaviors that are accompanied by distress and problems in functioning for ICD-11 (Kraus și colab., 2018). However, there has been relatively little systematic investigation of CSBD in obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), the paradigmatic compulsive disorder. In this study, we focused on the comorbidity of CSBD and OCD. Although the prevalence of OCD has previously been assessed in clinical and non-clinical samples of people with compulsive sexual behavior with prevalence rates ranging from 2.3% to 14% (Black, Kehrberg, Flumerfelt, & Schlosser, 1997; de Tubino Scanavino și colab., 2013; Morgenstern și colab., 2011; Raymond, Coleman și Miner, 2003), this is the first study to assess the prevalence of CSBD in OCD patients and its associated sociodemographic and clinical features. Such information may be clinically useful and may also assist in the conceptualization of CSBD.

Participanți și procedură

Adult outpatients with current OCD recruited between January 2000 and December 2017 took part in this study. To be eligible, patients had to meet the fourth edition of DSM (DSM-IV; APA, 2000) criteria for a primary diagnosis of OCD on the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Axis I Disorders–Patient Version (SCID-I/P; First, Spitzer, Gobbon, & Williams, 1998). A history of psychosis was an exclusion criterion. A clinical psychologist or other mental health clinician with OCD expertise interviewed patients referred from a wide range of sources (e.g., the OCD Association of South Africa and community-based primary care practitioners).

măsuri

The semi-structured interview included questions on specific demographic and clinical data including current age, ethnicity, and age of onset of OCD. Clinical diagnoses, including mood, anxiety, substance use, selected somatoform, and eating disorders, were based upon data obtained with the SCID-I/P. In addition, the Structured Clinical Interview for Obsessive–Compulsive Spectrum Disorders (OCSDs) (SCID-OCSD; du Toit, van Kradenburg, Niehaus, & Stein, 2001) was used to diagnose putative OCSDs, which included Tourette’s disorder and DSM-IV impulse-control disorders [i.e., Tourette’s syndrome, compulsive shopping, pathological gambling, kleptomania, pyromania, intermittent explosive disorder (IED), self-injurious behavior, and CSBD]. Current CSBD was diagnosed when participants presently met all of the following criteria – lifetime CSBD was diagnosed when participants met all of the following criteria in the past and/or presence:

-Over a period of at least 6 months, a pattern of failure to control recurrent, intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors that do not fall under the definition of paraphilia.
-The fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
-The symptoms are not better accounted for by another disorder (e.g., manic episode, delusional disorder: erotomanic subtype).
-The symptoms are not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a drug of abuse or a medication) or a general medical condition.

Yale–Brown Obsessive–Compulsive Scale (YBOCS) symptom checklist and severity rating scale were used to assess the typology and severity of obsessive–compulsive symptoms (Goodman, Price, Rasmussen, Mazure, Delgado, et al., 1989; Goodman, Price, Rasmussen, Mazure, Fleischmann, et al., 1989).

analize statistice

Univariate analyses were carried out using IBM SPSS Statistics 22.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA). χ2 and Fisher’s exact tests, as appropriate, were performed to compare prevalence rates of OCSDs, including CSBD, between male and female patients with OCD and to compare rates of all comorbidities as assessed during the interview (i.e., Tourette’s syndrome, hypochondriasis, substance dependence, substance abuse, alcohol dependence, alcohol abuse, major depressive disorder, dysthymic disorder, bipolar disorder, compulsive shopping, pathological gambling, kleptomania, pyromania, IED, panic disorder with agoraphobia, panic disorder without agoraphobia, agoraphobia without history of panic, social phobia, specific phobia, post-traumatic stress disorder, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and self-injurious behavior) between OCD patients with and without CSBD. Student’s t-tests were performed to compare age, age of onset of OCD, and YBOCS score between OCD patients with and without CSBD. Statistical significance was set at p <.05.

Etică

The study procedures were carried out in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. The institutional review board of the University of Stellenbosch (Stellenbosch University Health Research Ethics Committee Reference 99/013) approved the study. All subjects were informed about the study and all provided informed consent.

Adulți în ambulatoriu cu TOC actual (N = 539; 260 men and 279 women), with ages ranging between 18 and 75 years (mean = 34.8, SD = 11.8 years), participated in this study. Lifetime prevalence of CSBD was 5.6% (n = 30) in patients with current OCD. In male patients, the lifetime prevalence was significantly higher compared to female patients [χ2(1) = 10.3, p = .001; Masa 1]. Overall, 3.3% (n = 18) of the sample reported current CSBD. Again, this was significantly higher in male compared to female patients [χ2(1) = 6.5, p = .011; Masa 1].

 

Tabel

Tabelul 1. Lifetime prevalence and current prevalence rates of CSBD compared to other impulse-control disorders in patients with lifetime OCD

 

Tabelul 1. Lifetime prevalence and current prevalence rates of CSBD compared to other impulse-control disorders in patients with lifetime OCD

Lifetime diagnoses [n (%)]Current diagnoses [n (%)]
TOATEBărbațiFemeiTOATEBărbațiFemei
CSBD30 (5.6)23 (8.8)7 (2.5)18 (3.3)14 (5.4)4 (1.4)
piromania4 (0.7)4 (1.5)01 (0.2)1 (0.4)0
Cleptomanie22 (4.1)8 (3.1)14 (5.0)10 (1.9)2 (0.8)8 (2.9)
IED70 (13.0)37 (14.2)33 (11.8)40 (7.4)20 (7.7)20 (7.2)
Jocurile de noroc patologice5 (0.9)5 (1.9)0000

Notă. CSBD: compulsive sexual behavior disorder; OCD: obsessive–compulsive disorder; IED: intermittent explosive disorder.

CSBD was the second most prevalent impulse-control disorder assessed in this cohort of patients with OCD after IED. The prevalence rates of other impulse-control disorders and pathological gambling (which is cross-listed in Impulse Control Disorders in ICD-11) are also depicted in Table 1. Compared to OCD patients without CSBD, OCD patients with CSBD reported comparable age, age of onset of OCD, current YBOCS score, as well as a comparable educational and ethnicity (Table 2).

 

Tabel

Tabelul 2. Demographics and clinical characteristics of OCD patients with and without CSBD

 

Tabelul 2. Demographics and clinical characteristics of OCD patients with and without CSBD

Patients with CSBD [n = 30 (5.6%)]Patients without CSBD [n = 509 (94.4%)]χ2/tp valoare
Age (mean ± SD; years)33.9 ± 9.834.8 ± 11.90.4.7
Onset age of OCD (mean ± SD; years)15.5 ± 7.617.5 ± 9.91.1.3
YBOCS score (mean ± SD)21.4 ± 8.020.7 ± 7.3-0.4.7
Cel mai înalt nivel de educație [n (%)]
Only school education15 (50%)212 (42%)0.8.4
Post-school education15 (50%)297 (58%)

Notă. SD: standard deviation; CSBD: compulsive sexual behavior disorder; OCD: obsessive–compulsive disorder; YBOCS: Yale–Brown Obsessive–Compulsive Scale.

The prevalence rates for comorbid disorders in patients with and without lifetime CSBD are depicted in Table 3. Importantly, Tourette’s syndrome, hypochondriasis, kleptomania, bipolar disorder, compulsive shopping, IED, and dysthymia had an odds ratio above 3 with a confidence interval above 1.

 

Tabel

Tabelul 3. Lifetime prevalence rates of comorbid disorders in OCD patients with and without CSBD

 

Tabelul 3. Lifetime prevalence rates of comorbid disorders in OCD patients with and without CSBD

Patients with CSBD [n (%)]Patients without CSBD [n (%)]χ2(1)ap valoareOdds ratio [CI]
Sindromul Tourette4 (13.3)7 (1.4). 00211.0 [3.0–40.1]
Hypochondriasis5 (16.7)11 (2.2)20.7<.0019.1 [2.9–28.1]
Cleptomanie5 (16.7)17 (3.3)12.9<.0015.8 [2.0–17.0]
Tulburare bipolara4 (13.3)15 (2.9). 0175.1 [1.6–16.3]
Jocurile de noroc patologice1 (3.3)4 (0.8). 2504.4 [0.5–40.2]
Compulsive cumpărături6 (20.0)28 (5.5)10.1. 0024.3 [1.6–11.4]
IED10 (33.3)60 (11.8)11.6. 0013.77 [1.7–8.4]
Distimia10 (33.3)72 (14.1)8.1. 0043.0 [1.4–6.7]
Abuzul de alcool5 (16.7)33 (6.5)4.5. 0342.9 [1.0–8.0]
Panic disorder without agoraphobia3 (10.0)19 (3.7). 1202.9 [0.8–10.3]
Dependentei de alcool2 (6.6)14 (2.8). 2202.5 [0.5–11.7]
Self-injurious behavior8 (26.7)66 (13.0)4.5. 0342.4 [1.0–5.7]
Panic disorder with agoraphobia5 (16.7)39 (7.7)3.1. 0802.4 [(0.9–6.6]
Abuz de substante1 (3.3)3 (0.6). 2102.4 [0.5–10.8]
Post-traumatic tulburare de stres3 (10.0)23 (4.5). 1702.3 [0.7–8.3]
Bulimia nervosa3 (10.0)25 (4.9). 2002.2 [0.6–7.6]
Substanță dependență1 (3.3)11 (2.2). 5001.6 [0.2–12.5]
Fobie sociala4 (13.3)52 (10.2). 5401.4 [0.5–4.0]
Fobie specifică5 (16.7)70 (13.8). 6501.3 [0.5–3.4]
Tulburare depresivă majoră21 (70.0)320 (62.9)0.6. 4301.2 [0.7–2.2]
Anorexia nervoasă1 (3.3)27 (5.3)1.0000.6 [0.8–4.7]
piromania04 (0.8)1.000-
Agoraphobia without panic disorder05 (1.0)1.000-

Notă. CSBD: compulsive sexual behavior disorder; IED: intermittent explosive disorder; OCD: obsessive–compulsive disorder; CI: confidence interval.

aMissing when Fisher’s exact test was used to compare prevalence rates.

In this study, we were interested in the prevalence and the associated sociodemographic and clinical features of CSBD in patients with OCD. First, we found that 3.3% of patients with OCD had current CSBD and 5.6% had lifetime CSBD, with a significantly higher prevalence in men than in women. Second, we found that other conditions, particularly mood, obsessive–compulsive, and impulse-control disorders, were more common in OCD patients with CSBD than in those without CSBD, but not disorders due to substance use or addictive behaviors.

The early estimations of prevalence rates of CSBD provided by Carnes (1991) and Coleman (1992) suggested that up to 6% of people from the general population suffer from compulsive sexual behavior. Although it is unclear how these estimates were obtained (Negru, 2000), subsequent epidemiological research confirmed that compulsive sexuality, which may include increased masturbation frequency, pornography use, number of sexual partners, and extramarital affairs, is common in the general population (Dickenson și colab., 2018). Our findings on prevalence rates of CSBD in OCD seem roughly comparable to those in the general population (Langstrom & Hanson, 2006; Odlaug et al., 2013; Skegg, Nada-Raja, Dickson și Paul, 2010). However, any conclusions about the prevalence of CSBD must be drawn with caution because prevalence rates may be affected by sociocultural factors and so may vary across populations. For example, among male military veterans, the rate of current CSBD seems to be much higher (16.7%) compared to psychiatric patients (4.4%) and university students (3%) in the United States using the same interview for CSBD (Grant, Levine, Kim, & Potenza, 2005; Odlaug et al., 2013; Smith și colab., 2014). In addition, a range of different measures and operationalizations of the construct have been used to assess CSBD, thereby limiting the comparability of results. For example, Jaisoorya et al. (2003) used a self-designed measure to detect impulse-control disorders based on DSM-IV criteria to compare comorbidity (including sexual compulsions) in patients with OCD (n = 231) and control subjects (n = 200) in Indian population. They found that only one subject reported a lifetime prevalence of sexual compulsions (which may or may not be comparable to CSBD).

We also found that several comorbidities were more likely in OCD patients with CSBD than in those without CSBD. Four disorders with impulse-control difficulties, namely IED, Tourette’s syndrome, kleptomania, and compulsive shopping, were more prevalent in OCD patients with CSBD compared to those without CSBD. The lifetime prevalence of these disorders was also higher than in other reports studying their prevalence in CSBD patients (Black și colab., 1997; Raymond și colab., 2003), indicating a more pronounced impairment in impulse control in people with both disorders, that is CSBD and OCD. Since ample evidence supports a genetic relationship between some forms of OCD and Tourette’s syndrome (Pauls, Leckman, Towbin, Zahner, & Cohen, 1986; Pauls, Towbin, Leckman, Zahner, & Cohen, 1986; Swain, Scahill, Lombroso, King, & Leckman, 2007), our data may also indicate that the same genetic or neurobiological (Stein, Hugo, Oosthuizen, Hawkridge, & van Heerden, 2000) factors may also predispose individuals to CSBD. We also found a high lifetime prevalence of mood disorders, particularly dysthymia and bipolar disorder in OCD patients with CSBD exceeding earlier reports about comorbidities in CSBD (Raymond și colab., 2003). It is pertinent to note that some people use compulsive sexual behavior to cope with stress and negative feelings (Folkman, Chesney, Pollack, & Phillips, 1992). Thus, CSBD might not only be used for emotion regulation by some patients but may also be a cause of impaired mood due to distress associated with CSBD. Kafka (2010) noted earlier that some hypomanic episodes seem to last significantly shorter than 4 days (Benazzi, 2001; Judd & Akiskal, 2003), so that subthreshold cases may be falsely classified with CSBD when the displayed sexual behavior is in fact a symptom of bipolar disorder. Our data are consistent with a view that clinicians should be cautious in diagnosing CSBD in patients with bipolar disorder. We also found that the prevalence of another obsessive–compulsive-related disorder, hypochondriasis (Coleman, 1991; Jenike, 1989), was significantly elevated in OCD patients with CSBD. Patients with hypochondriasis typically present with preoccupations with bodily health (Salkovskis & Warwick, 1986). Those with frequent intercourse or masturbation who suffer from hypochondriasis may be particularly at risk of perceiving their sexual behavior as unhealthy. They may be preoccupied with the question whether their sexual desire and behavior is “out-of-control” or within normal boundaries.

Limitări

Several limitations of this study deserve emphasis. First, this study only included OCD patients without a control group of CSBD patients with no OCD. Findings on CSBD in OCD may not generalize to other diagnostic cohorts, warranting further investigation. Furthermore, these participants did not seek treatment for CSBD and as such may not be the typical population presenting to the clinic with CSBD. In addition, because of the relatively low number of individuals fulfilling CSBD criteria, we did not separate the cohort by gender in further analysis, although the psychopathology of CSBD may differ in men versus women. We also did not correct for multiple comparisons due to the low number of individuals fulfilling CSBD criteria and the exploratory nature of this study.

CSBD was diagnosed using the SCID-OCSD. This instrument assesses the core diagnostic guidelines of CSBD in ICD-11 focusing on distress and impairment (see “Methods” section); however, in the Clinical Descriptions and Diagnostic Guidelines version of ICD-11, concerns about overpathologizing are also addressed to help clinicians (e.g., in the boundaries to normality section). Our instrument was lacking such a boundary section.

Concluzii și direcții viitoare

În concluzie, datele noastre indică faptul că ratele prevalenței CSBD la TOC sunt comparabile cu cele din populația generală și în alte grupuri de diagnostic. Mai mult, am constatat că CSBD în TOC a fost mai probabil comorbid cu alte tulburări impulsive, compulsive și de dispoziție, dar nu și dependențele legate de comportament sau substanțe. Această constatare susține conceptualizarea CSBD ca tulburare compulsiv-impulsivă. Mergând înainte, sunt necesare măsuri standardizate cu proprietăți psihometrice solide pentru a evalua prezența și severitatea CSBD. Cercetările viitoare ar trebui să continue să consolideze conceptualizarea acestei tulburări și să adune date empirice suplimentare, pentru a îmbunătăți în cele din urmă îngrijirea clinică.

CL and DJS supervised study design, obtained funding, and supervised manuscript preparation. JF conducted statistical analyses. JF and PB wrote the first draft of the manuscript. All authors substantially contributed to the conceptual design of the study and the final version of the manuscript. They had full access to all data in the study and take responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

Autorii nu prezintă niciun raport financiar sau de altă natură relevant pentru subiectul acestui articol.

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