Background: This follow-up study investigated the potential priming effect of the 35% CO2 challenge on the development of anxiety disorders and/or panic attacks in healthy first-degree relatives of panic patients across a period of 3-4 years subsequent to the challenge.
Methods: Thirty-one relatives who underwent the 35% CO2 challenge 3-4 years before and 14 relatives, free from psychiatric diagnoses in the same period, were directly reevaluated for the presence of anxiety disorders and panic attacks.
Results: None developed anxiety disorders and only 1, among relatives previously tested with the 35% CO2 challenge, reported sporadic panic attacks.
Conclusions: The 35% CO2 challenge is a safe research paradigm in the investigation of healthy subjects with a familial vulnerability to panic, and CO2 hypersensitivity might be considered a trait marker of an underlying familial vulnerability to panic disorder.