Anxiety disorders in patients with noncardiac chest pain: association with health-related quality of life and chest pain severity

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Abstract

Background: Patients with noncardiac chest pain (NCCP) report more severe symptoms and lowered health-related quality of life when they present with comorbid panic disorder (PD). Although generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is the second most common psychiatric disorder in these patients, its impact on NCCP and health-related quality of life remains understudied. This study describes and prospectively compares patients with NCCP with or without PD or GAD in terms of (1) NCCP severity; and (2) the physical and mental components of health-related quality of life. Methods: A total of 915 patients with NCCP were consecutively recruited in two emergency departments. The presence of comorbid PD or GAD was assessed at baseline with the Anxiety Disorder Schedule for DSM-IV. NCCP severity at baseline and at the six-month follow-up was assessed with a structured telephone interview, and the patients completed the 12-item Short-Form Health Survey Version 2 (SF-12v2) to assess health-related quality of life at both time points. Results: Average NCCP severity decreased between baseline and the six-month follow-up (p

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Hamel, S., Denis, I., Turcotte, S., Fleet, R., Archambault, P., Dionne, C. E., & Foldes-Busque, G. (2022). Anxiety disorders in patients with noncardiac chest pain: association with health-related quality of life and chest pain severity. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-021-01912-8

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