1. Academic Validation
  2. Hoarding in obsessive-compulsive disorder: results from the OCD Collaborative Genetics Study

Hoarding in obsessive-compulsive disorder: results from the OCD Collaborative Genetics Study

  • Behav Res Ther. 2007 Apr;45(4):673-86. doi: 10.1016/j.brat.2006.05.008.
Jack F Samuels 1 O Joseph Bienvenu 3rd Anthony Pinto Abby J Fyer James T McCracken Scott L Rauch Dennis L Murphy Marco A Grados Benjamin D Greenberg James A Knowles John Piacentini Paul A Cannistraro Bernadette Cullen Mark A Riddle Steven A Rasmussen David L Pauls Virginia L Willour Yin Y Shugart Kung-yee Liang Rudolf Hoehn-Saric Gerald Nestadt
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 600 N. Wolfe Street, Meyer 4-181, Baltimore, MD 21287-7228, USA. [email protected]
Abstract

Hoarding behavior occurs frequently in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Results from previous studies suggest that individuals with OCD who have hoarding symptoms are clinically different than non-hoarders and may represent a distinct clinical group. In the present study, we compared 235 hoarding to 389 non-hoarding participants, all of whom had OCD, collected in the course of the OCD Collaborative Genetics Study. We found that, compared to non-hoarding individuals, hoarders were more likely to have symmetry obsessions and repeating, counting, and ordering compulsions; poorer insight; more severe illness; difficulty initiating or completing tasks; and indecision. Hoarders had a greater prevalence of social phobia and generalized anxiety disorder. Hoarders also had a greater prevalence of obsessive-compulsive and dependent personality disorders. Five personality traits were independently associated with hoarding: miserliness, preoccupation with details, difficulty making decisions, odd behavior or appearance, and magical thinking. Hoarding and indecision were more prevalent in the relatives of hoarding than of non-hoarding probands. Hoarding in relatives was associated with indecision in probands, independently of proband hoarding status. The findings suggest that hoarding behavior may help differentiate a distinct clinical subgroup of people with OCD and may aggregate in some OCD families. Indecision may be a risk factor for hoarding in these families.

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