Development of a self-report screening instrument for emotional dysregulation: the Reactivity, Intensity, Polarity and Stability questionnaire, screening version (RIPoSt-SV)

Emotional dysregulation (ED) refers to the inability to manage emotional experiences or expressions hindering goal-oriented behavior. Moderate impairment on at least two domains among temper control, affective lability, and emotional over-reactivity has been proposed to identify ED in adults with at...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders 2024-06, Vol.355, p.406-414
Hauptverfasser: Brancati, Giulio Emilio, De Rosa, Ugo, Acierno, Donatella, Caruso, Valerio, De Dominicis, Francesco, Petrucci, Alessandra, Moriconi, Martina, Elefante, Camilla, Gemignani, Samuele, Medda, Pierpaolo, Schiavi, Elisa, Perugi, Giulio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Emotional dysregulation (ED) refers to the inability to manage emotional experiences or expressions hindering goal-oriented behavior. Moderate impairment on at least two domains among temper control, affective lability, and emotional over-reactivity has been proposed to identify ED in adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). No screening measure designed for use in diverse psychiatric samples exists. We aimed to develop a self-report screening tool for ED based on the 40-item version of the Reactivity, Intensity, Polarity, and Stability questionnaire (RIPoSt-40). 150 adult outpatients with non-psychotic conditions were enrolled between February and July 2023 at the Second Psychiatry Unit of Pisa University Hospital. Clinically significant ED (CSED) was defined based on the previously suggested approach for ADHD. Differences between patients with and without CSED were tested. To develop our screening instrument, a decision tree algorithm was trained by hyperparameter tuning through 5-fold cross-validation in 120 subjects and tested on the remaining 30. 75 subjects met criteria for CSED (50 %). CSED was associated with lower age and higher prevalence of psychiatric conditions, including minor mood disorders, ADHD, cannabis use disorders, and eating disorders. We identified a decision tree consisting of six items from RIPoSt-40 that effectively detected CSED, with accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of 80 % or higher in both the training and testing sets. Tertiary-level; no consensus on criteria; sample size. The screening version of the Reactivity, Intensity, Polarity, and Stability questionnaire (RIPoSt-SV) demonstrates promise as a valuable tool for ED screening in clinical settings. •50 % of patients from tertiary-level clinic showed clinically significant emotional dysregulation (CSED).•RIPoSt-SV was developed as a screening self-report tool for CSED based on RIPoSt-40.•A decision tree algorithm composed of 6 items was chosen through cross-validation.•The items primarily centered around affective instability and emotion dynamics.•Accuracy and other classification performance metrics were all equal or above 80 %.
ISSN:0165-0327
1573-2517
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2024.03.167