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Agoraphobia is intense anxiety and/or avoidance of situations (eg, being in crowds or shopping malls, driving) that may be difficult to leave or in which help is not readily available if incapacitating panic-like symptoms were to develop. Diagnosis is based on clinical criteria. Treatment focuses on cognitive-behavioral therapy, specifically, exposure therapy.
Agoraphobia is a common consequence of panic disorder, but the 2 disorders can also develop independently.
Agoraphobia affects about 2% of the population in a given year and is more common in women (1). Agoraphobia often develops in adolescence and young adulthood, but it can also develop in older adults, especially in the context of fears about safety and their own physical limitations.
Common examples of situations or places that create fear and anxiety in patients with agoraphobia include leaving home, standing in line, sitting in the middle of a long row in a theatre or classroom, and using public transportation, such as a bus or an airplane. Some people develop agoraphobia in response to panic attacks that lead to avoidance of the potential triggers of the panic. Agoraphobia can be relatively mild but can also become so debilitating that the person becomes essentially housebound.
As is true for other anxiety disorders, symptoms of agoraphobia may wax and wane in severity.
To meet the DSM-5-TR criteria for agoraphobia, patients must have marked, persistent (≥ 6 months) fear of or anxiety about 2 or more of the following situations (1):
Fear must involve thoughts that escape from the situation might be difficult or that patients would receive no help if they became incapacitated by fear or a panic attack. In addition, all of the following should be present:
In addition, fear and anxiety cannot be better characterized as different mental disorders (eg, social anxiety disorder, body dysmorphic disorder).
The most effective treatment approach, based on the most robust evidence, is exposure therapy that uses CBT principles (1). Agoraphobia may resolve without formal treatment, possibly because some affected people conduct their own form of exposure therapy and also because anxiety symptoms (and precipitating stressors) fluctuate with time.
Many patients with agoraphobia also benefit from pharmacotherapy with an SSRI.