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Anxiety disorders are among the most prevalent mental disorders. However, only a minority of patients receives adequate psychotherapeutic treatment despite strong empirical evidence for the efficacy of CBT in anxiety disorders (Marcks et al. Psychiatr Serv 2009; 60 823-830). App-based psychotherapy can help to reduce this massive treatment gap.
Objectives
We aimed at evaluating the efficacy of an app-based treatment for anxiety disorders including exposure in virtual reality.
Methods
The randomized controlled trial was conducted in two university outpatient treatment centers in Northern Germany. Patients were diagnosed with agoraphobia (AP; with or without panic disorder; n=103), panic disorder (PD; n=84) or social anxiety disorder (SAD; n=110) and were randomly assigned to either the app-based intervention or treatment as usual (up to 6 sessions of supportive therapy). The app was developed based on evaluated CBT manuals and includes 14 hours of audio and video content and 15 disorder specific virtual reality exposure scenarios. Participants in the intervention groups also received two appointments with a therapist during the app-based treatment. Primary outcome was the change in Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) score pre to post (after 6 months). Mixed ANOVAs were conducted in intention to treat and completer analyses. Secondary outcomes were disorder specific questionnaires (Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale LSAS for SAD and Panic and Agoraphobia Scale PAS for AP and PD) and health related quality of life measured with a single item (L-1).
Results
In the ITT analysis, the interaction effect between group and time was significant in patients with AP as well as in patients with PD (AP: p=.014, partial η²=.06; PD: p=.028, partial η²=.06). This indicates a stronger improvement of symptoms in the intervention group compared to the control group. In patients with SAD, there was no significant interaction effect (p=.101, partial η²=.03). The disorder specific measures LSAS and PAS showed a significantly stronger decrease in the intervention group than in the control group for each of the specific disorders. Concerning quality of life, a stronger improvement in the intervention group was only found in patients with PD.
Conclusions
A stronger symptom reduction in the app-based intervention group compared to the control group could be found in patients with AP (BAI/PAS), PD (BAI/PAS) and SAD (LSAS). This is particularly remarkable as the app was compared to an active control group with up to 6 sessions of psychotherapy. Effect sizes were comparable to those found in studies comparing face-to-face CBT to an active control group. The lack of an intervention-specific effect on BAI scores in patients with SAD might be due to the poor sensitivity of the BAI for the specific symptoms of SAD.
The study aims to investigate the recognition of patients with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) in psychiatric outpatients.
Subjects and methods
A total of 2282 outpatients seen at 14 different psychiatric clinics in South Germany were asked to participate in the study. Five hundred and eighty-nine (30%) of the original 2282 patients met screening criteria for OCD, and of those, 237 (42%) participated in the final interview including DSM-IV diagnosis, and comorbidity.
Results
Sixty-nine of 589 participating patients who screened positively for obsessive symptoms actually had an Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. Only 19 (28%) of the outpatients diagnosed with OCD according to DSM-IV criteria were also given this diagnosis by their consultant. The psychopathology scores indicated that the OCD patients had clinically relevant OCD with a mean Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Score (Y-BOCS) of 17.5 (± 5.4), and a mean Clinical Global Impression Score (CGI) of 5.2 (± 1.2).
Conclusions
In outpatient clinics over 70% of OCD patients remain unrecognised and thus untreated by consultants. Screening questions provide a rapid way of identifying those who may have OCD and should be incorporated into every mental state examination by consultants.
Childhood maltreatment (CM) plays an important role in the development of major depressive disorder (MDD). The aim of this study was to examine whether CM severity and type are associated with MDD-related brain alterations, and how they interact with sex and age.
Methods
Within the ENIGMA-MDD network, severity and subtypes of CM using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire were assessed and structural magnetic resonance imaging data from patients with MDD and healthy controls were analyzed in a mega-analysis comprising a total of 3872 participants aged between 13 and 89 years. Cortical thickness and surface area were extracted at each site using FreeSurfer.
Results
CM severity was associated with reduced cortical thickness in the banks of the superior temporal sulcus and supramarginal gyrus as well as with reduced surface area of the middle temporal lobe. Participants reporting both childhood neglect and abuse had a lower cortical thickness in the inferior parietal lobe, middle temporal lobe, and precuneus compared to participants not exposed to CM. In males only, regardless of diagnosis, CM severity was associated with higher cortical thickness of the rostral anterior cingulate cortex. Finally, a significant interaction between CM and age in predicting thickness was seen across several prefrontal, temporal, and temporo-parietal regions.
Conclusions
Severity and type of CM may impact cortical thickness and surface area. Importantly, CM may influence age-dependent brain maturation, particularly in regions related to the default mode network, perception, and theory of mind.
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) with exposure and response prevention (ERP) is the psychotherapeutic treatment of choice for obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD). However, little is known about the impact of CBT on frontostriatal dysfunctioning, known to be the neuronal correlate of OCD.
Method
A probabilistic reversal learning (RL) task probing adaptive strategy switching capabilities was used in 10 unmedicated patients with OCD and 10 healthy controls during an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment. Patients were scanned before and after intensive CBT, controls twice at comparable intervals.
Results
Strategy change within the RL task involved activity in a broad frontal network in patients and controls. No significant differences between the groups or in group by time interactions were detected in a whole-brain analysis corrected for multiple comparisons. However, a reanalysis with a more lenient threshold revealed decreased responsiveness of the orbitofrontal cortex and right putamen during strategy change before treatment in patients compared with healthy subjects. A group by time effect was found in the caudate nucleus, demonstrating increased activity for patients over the course of time. Patients with greater clinical improvement, reflected by greater reductions in Yale–Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (YBOCS) scores, showed more stable activation in the pallidum.
Conclusions
Although these findings are preliminary and need to be replicated in larger samples, they indicate a possible influence of psychotherapy on brain activity in core regions that have been shown to be directly involved both in acquisition of behavioral rules and stereotypes and in the pathophysiology of OCD, the caudate nucleus and the pallidum.
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