The next edition may look nothing like the one on your shelf
STUDY: Boyce N, The Lancet 2026; published online June 11.
STUDY TYPE: Expert commentary
FUNDING: Independent
Background
The most recent (2013) edition of DSM-5 was widely criticized, even among psychiatrists. A new revision is now underway, and the American Psychiatric Association’s Strategic Committee is proposing the most ambitious overhaul since DSM-III in 1980. Here are key proposals:
New Name: Diagnostic and Scientific Manual
Frequent Updates: Make it a living digital document, updated with new evidence
Personalized Medicine: Move away from fixed categorical diagnoses toward individualized profiles that incorporate symptom patterns, biomarkers, developmental factors, and quality-of-life measures
Symptom based conditions: Recognizing that some of our diagnoses are not well established, DSM may move toward recognition of symptoms clusters. You can get a preview of this through DSM-5’s symptom-based dimensional assessment scales.
There are four subcommittees guiding the revision:
- Structure and dimensions
- Functioning and quality of life
- Biomarkers
- Socioeconomic and cultural determinants of mental health.
A practical concern: clinicians and billing systems have operated on simple diagnostic codes for decades, and a more complex, bespoke system may be difficult to implement in everyday practice.
—Chris Aiken, MD
Director, Psych Partners
Editor in Chief, Carlat Psychiatry Report







