21 results on '"FAMILY-BASED TREATMENT"'
Search Results
2. Attitudes Toward Family-Based Treatment Impact Therapists’ Intent to Change Their Therapeutic Practice for Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa
- Author
-
Erin C. Accurso, Daniel Le Grange, and Andrea K. Graham
- Subjects
family-based treatment ,eating disorders ,children and adolescents ,dissemination and implementation ,clinician attitudes ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Community-based clinicians who treat patients with eating disorders rarely use empirically-supported treatments, and research demonstrates that clinicians make significant modifications when implementing family-based treatment (FBT) for anorexia nervosa. This study examined clinician attitudes toward FBT and explored the extent to which attitudes predicted intent to shift practices following training in FBT. Clinicians (N = 129) completed a standardized training in FBT for AN, either a two-day introductory training (n = 99) or a one-day “advanced” training (n = 30). Linear regressions were used to examine the association between therapists’ attitudes toward FBT and their intent to use strategies consistent with FBT in the future, adjusting for pre-training use of strategies. Providers reported very positive attitudes toward evidence-based practices in general and moderately positive attitudes toward FBT. There were no significant differences between “novice” and “advanced” providers on attitudes toward evidence-based practices or FBT (ps > .10). For the subset of providers attending their first training in FBT, more positive attitudes toward FBT significantly predicted greater intent to use FBT-consistent strategies (p = .004), and more positive attitudes toward evidence-based practice significantly predicted lesser intent to use FBT-inconsistent strategies (p = .009). This study suggests that both general attitudes toward evidence-based practice and specific attitudes toward FBT may impact implementation. Future research might examine whether a brief intervention to improve attitudes toward FBT might increase the likelihood of seeking expert consultation post-training.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Rebooting 'Failed' Family-Based Treatment
- Author
-
Kellie R. Lavender
- Subjects
family-based treatment ,anorexia nervosa ,adolescents ,treatment fidelity ,failed FBT ,modified FBT ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Family-based treatment (FBT) has become well established as the first-line evidence-based treatment for adolescents with anorexia nervosa. However, fidelity to the FBT model can be poor, and treatment is often augmented or modified in various untested forms in the hope of increasing its effectiveness and acceptability. The New Zealand Eating Disorders Clinic, a private specialist outpatient clinic in New Zealand, has been seeing increasing numbers of families presenting for treatment reporting an experience of “failed FBT”. All of the families who presented with a child under the age 19 living at home agreed to restart FBT with the author when re-engaging in treatment. This essay summarizes the experience of the author in repeating FBT with previously “failed” FBT cases over 20 months between 2017 and 2019. Common themes of the first course of FBT were identified that raised questions for the author as to whether FBT had been implemented with sufficient fidelity and proficiency the first time around. This clinical perspective essay describes how these identified issues were addressed when FBT was administered again. It does not intend to make broad claims, but instead is intended to be helpful to clinicians who are implementing FBT, to assist them in carefully examining and assessing whether key FBT principles and procedures have been exhausted before evaluating the need for modification or augmentation. Furthermore, this perspective provides suggestions as to how the identified common themes can be addressed if families re-present for FBT treatment after having had a course of “failed FBT”.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Investigating Early Response to Treatment in a Multi-Site Study for Adolescent Bulimia Nervosa
- Author
-
Brittany E. Matheson, Sasha Gorrell, Cara Bohon, W. Stewart Agras, Daniel Le Grange, and James Lock
- Subjects
bulimia nervosa ,adolescent ,treatment ,early response ,family-based treatment ,cognitive behavioral therapy ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
BackgroundThis secondary data analysis seeks to replicate and extend findings that early response to treatment in adolescent bulimia nervosa (BN) predicts outcome, resulting in earlier identification of patients who might need a different treatment approach.MethodsParticipants were 71 adolescents (M ± SD: 15.69 ± 1.55 years; 93% female; 75% non-Hispanic) with a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition (DSM-IV) diagnosis of BN or partial BN enrolled in a two-site treatment study. Participants were randomized to cognitive behavioral therapy for adolescents (CBT-A), family-based treatment for BN (FBT-BN), or supportive psychotherapy (SPT). The Eating Disorder Examination was administered at baseline, end-of-treatment (EOT), 6-month, and 12-month follow-up. Binge eating and purge symptoms were self-reported at each session. Outcome was defined as abstinence of binge eating and compensatory behaviors (self-induced vomiting, laxative use, diet pills, diuretics, compensatory exercise, fasting) in the 28 days prior to assessment. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses were utilized to assess the viability of predicting treatment outcomes based on reduction of symptoms within the first 10 sessions of treatment.ResultsROC analyses suggest that reduction in purging at session 2 (AUC =.799, p < .001) and binge eating at session 4 (AUC =.750, p < .01) were independently related to abstinence of symptoms at EOT, regardless of treatment type. Symptom reduction later in treatment predicted outcome at follow-up, as change in binge eating at session 8 and purging at session 9 were the strongest predictors of abstinence at 6-month follow-up (AUCs =.726–.763, ps < .01). Change in binge eating, but not purging behaviors, was significantly related to abstinence at 12-month follow-up (AUC =.766, p < .01). Only slight differences emerged based on treatment group, such that reductions in symptoms most predictive of abstinence at EOT occurred one session sooner in FBT-BN than SPT.ConclusionReductions in binge eating and purge symptoms early in adolescent BN treatment suggest better outcome, regardless of treatment modality. Additional research with larger samples is needed to better understand which treatments, if any, contribute to earlier change in BN symptoms and/or likelihood of improved patient response.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Toward A Greater Understanding of the Ways Family-Based Treatment Addresses the Full Range of Psychopathology of Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa
- Author
-
James Lock and Dasha Nicholls
- Subjects
family-based treatment ,anxiety ,cognitions ,social ,family ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Family-based treatment (FBT) for anorexia nervosa (AN) is an empirically supported treatment for this disorder. Derived from several different schools of family therapy, it is a highly focused approach that initially targets weight restoration under parental management at home. However, the view that manualized FBT is solely a behavioral therapy directing parents to refeed their children AN with the single purpose of weight gain is a common but misleading over simplification of the therapy. Indeed, weight restoration is the main goal only in phase 1 of this 3-phase treatment. When practiced with fidelity and skill, FBT's broadest aim is to promote adolescent development without AN thoughts and behaviors interfering and disrupting these normal processes. Although weight restoration is a key starting point in FBT, the entire course of treatment takes into consideration the ongoing impact of starvation, cognitions, emotions, and behaviors on adolescent development. These factors associated with maintaining low weight are viewed in FBT as interfering with the adolescent being able to take up the tasks of adolescence and thus must be overcome before fully turning to those broader adolescent tasks. In addition, FBT recognizes that adolescence takes place in the context of family and community and respects the importance of learning in a home environment both for weight gain as well as related developmental tasks to have a lasting effect. Specifically, in this article we describe how the current FBT manualized approach addresses temperament/personality traits, emotional processing, cognitive content and process, social communication and connections, psychiatric comorbidity, and family factors. This report makes no claim to superiority of FBT compared to other therapies in addressing these broader concerns nor does it add interventions to augment the current manual to improve FBT.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Family-Based Treatment for Anorexia Nervosa Symptoms in High-Risk Youth: A Partially-Randomized Preference-Design Study
- Author
-
Katharine L. Loeb, Ruth Striegel Weissman, Sue Marcus, Cassandra Pattanayak, Lisa Hail, Kelly C. Kung, Diana Schron, Nancy Zucker, Daniel Le Grange, James Lock, Jeffrey H. Newcorn, C. Barr Taylor, and B. Timothy Walsh
- Subjects
anorexia nervosa ,early identification ,early intervention ,family-based treatment ,partially-randomized preference design ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
This pilot study adapted family-based treatment (FBT) for youth with potentially prodromal anorexia nervosa (AN). Fifty-nine youth with clinically significant AN symptom constellations, but who never met full Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text rev.) (DSM-IV) criteria for AN, were enrolled in a partially randomized preference design study. Participants were offered randomization to FBT or supportive psychotherapy (SPT); those who declined to be randomized because of a strong treatment preference were entered into a parallel, non-randomized self-selected intervention study. Without accessing outcome data, an observational analysis with three diagnostic subclasses was designed based on AN symptom severity profiles, combining randomized and non-randomized participants, such that participants receiving FBT and SPT within each subclass were similar on key baseline characteristics. Outcomes of this pilot study were explored by calculating effect sizes for end-of-treatment values within each subclass, and also with a longitudinal mixed effect model that accounted for subclass. Weight trajectory was measured by percent expected body weight. Psychological outcomes were fear of weight gain, feeling fat, importance of weight, and importance of shape. Results show that the pattern of symptom observations over time was dependent on subclass of SAN (least symptomatic, moderately symptomatic, or most symptomatic) and on the target outcome variable category (weight or psychological). Results from this study, which should be considered in the context of the small sample sizes overall and within groups, can generate hypotheses for future, larger research trials on early treatment strategies. Feasibility findings illustrate how the innovative partially randomized preference design has potential broader application for AN intervention research.Clinical Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT00418977.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Delivery of Family-Based Treatment for Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa in a Public Health Care Setting: Research Versus Non-Research Specialty Care
- Author
-
Daniel Le Grange, Sasha Gorrell, Elizabeth K. Hughes, Erin C. Accurso, Michele Yeo, Martin Pradel, and Susan M. Sawyer
- Subjects
anorexia nervosa ,adolescents ,eating disorder ,family-based treatment ,treatment outcome ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Comparing evidence-based psychotherapy (EBP) to usual care typically demonstrates the superiority of EBPs, although this has not been studied for eating disorders EBPs such as family-based treatment (FBT). The current study set out to examine weight outcomes for adolescents with anorexia nervosa who received FBT through a randomized clinical research trial (RCT, n = 54) or non-research specialty care (n = 56) at the same specialist pediatric eating disorder service. Weight was recorded throughout outpatient treatment (up to 18 sessions over 6 months), as well as at 6- and 12-month follow-up. Survival curves were used to examine time to weight restoration [greater than 95% median body mass index (mBMI)] as predicted by type of care (RCT vs. non-research specialty care), baseline clinical and demographic characteristics, and their potential interaction. Results did not indicate a significant main effect for type of care, but there was a significant effect for baseline weight (p = .03), such that weight restoration was achieved faster across both treatment types for those with a higher initial %mBMI. These data suggest that weight restoration achieved in non-research specialty care FBT was largely similar to that achieved in a controlled research trial.Clinical Trial Registrationhttp://www.anzctr.org.au/, identifier ACTRN12610000216011.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. An Evaluation of Family-Based Treatment for OCD in Japan: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
- Author
-
Yuki Kobayashi, Ayako Kanie, Atsuo Nakagawa, Yoshitake Takebayashi, Issei Shinmei, Noriko Nakayama, Keiko Yamaguchi, Chiaki Nakayama, Naotsugu Hirabayashi, Masaru Mimura, and Masaru Horikoshi
- Subjects
obsessive-compulsive disorder ,family-based treatment ,exposure response prevention ,pilot randomized controlled trial ,treatment ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Objective: Although family involvement in the treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) produces a reduction in OCD symptoms and has significant effects on global functioning, few studies have focused on family intervention as part of OCD treatment in Japan. This study aims to examine the feasibility and efficacy of the family-based exposure and response prevention (FERP) program for adult patients with OCD and their family members.Design: Randomized controlled pilot study.Methods: A total of 18 outpatients aged 18–65 years with a primary diagnosis of OCD and one family member of each patient were randomized to an intervention group or a control group (1:1). The intervention group received the FERP program, which consisted of 16 weekly face-to-face cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) sessions, including eight joint sessions with family members, in addition to treatment-as-usual (TAU). The control group received TAU alone. The primary outcome was the alleviation of OCD symptoms, as measured by changes in the total Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) score from baseline to posttreatment. Analyses were provided on an intention-to-treat basis, and linear mixed models were used to test for significant group differences.Results: After 16 weeks, patients allocated to the FERP program showed improvement in OCD symptom severity, as measured by the total change score of the Y-BOCS (Hedges’ g = −1.58), as compared to the control group. Two patients (22.2%) in the FERP group reached remission, and five patients (55.6%) in the FERP group achieved treatment response. Clinical global improvement measured by the FAS-SR scores, K6 scores, and CGI-S scores was also observed (Hedges’ g = −1.35, −1.25, and −1.26, respectively) in the FERP group as compared to the control group. The dropout rate from the study was low (n = 2, 11.8%), and no adverse events were reported in the FERP group.Conclusion: Our results suggest that FERP may be an effective program for reducing patients’ OCD symptoms.Clinical Trial Registration:www.umin.ac.jp/ctr/, identifier UMIN000021763.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Attitudes Toward Family-Based Treatment Impact Therapists' Intent to Change Their Therapeutic Practice for Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa.
- Author
-
Accurso, Erin C., Le Grange, Daniel, and Graham, Andrea K.
- Subjects
ANOREXIA nervosa ,EATING disorders - Abstract
Community-based clinicians who treat patients with eating disorders rarely use empirically-supported treatments, and research demonstrates that clinicians make significant modifications when implementing family-based treatment (FBT) for anorexia nervosa. This study examined clinician attitudes toward FBT and explored the extent to which attitudes predicted intent to shift practices following training in FBT. Clinicians (N = 129) completed a standardized training in FBT for AN, either a two-day introductory training (n = 99) or a one-day "advanced" training (n = 30). Linear regressions were used to examine the association between therapists' attitudes toward FBT and their intent to use strategies consistent with FBT in the future, adjusting for pre-training use of strategies. Providers reported very positive attitudes toward evidence-based practices in general and moderately positive attitudes toward FBT. There were no significant differences between "novice" and "advanced" providers on attitudes toward evidence-based practices or FBT (p s >.10). For the subset of providers attending their first training in FBT, more positive attitudes toward FBT significantly predicted greater intent to use FBT-consistent strategies (p =.004), and more positive attitudes toward evidence-based practice significantly predicted lesser intent to use FBT-inconsistent strategies (p =.009). This study suggests that both general attitudes toward evidence-based practice and specific attitudes toward FBT may impact implementation. Future research might examine whether a brief intervention to improve attitudes toward FBT might increase the likelihood of seeking expert consultation post-training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Rebooting "Failed" Family-Based Treatment.
- Author
-
Lavender, Kellie R.
- Subjects
ANOREXIA nervosa ,EATING disorders ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Family-based treatment (FBT) has become well established as the first-line evidence-based treatment for adolescents with anorexia nervosa. However, fidelity to the FBT model can be poor, and treatment is often augmented or modified in various untested forms in the hope of increasing its effectiveness and acceptability. The New Zealand Eating Disorders Clinic, a private specialist outpatient clinic in New Zealand, has been seeing increasing numbers of families presenting for treatment reporting an experience of "failed FBT". All of the families who presented with a child under the age 19 living at home agreed to restart FBT with the author when re-engaging in treatment. This essay summarizes the experience of the author in repeating FBT with previously "failed" FBT cases over 20 months between 2017 and 2019. Common themes of the first course of FBT were identified that raised questions for the author as to whether FBT had been implemented with sufficient fidelity and proficiency the first time around. This clinical perspective essay describes how these identified issues were addressed when FBT was administered again. It does not intend to make broad claims, but instead is intended to be helpful to clinicians who are implementing FBT, to assist them in carefully examining and assessing whether key FBT principles and procedures have been exhausted before evaluating the need for modification or augmentation. Furthermore, this perspective provides suggestions as to how the identified common themes can be addressed if families re-present for FBT treatment after having had a course of "failed FBT". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Investigating Early Response to Treatment in a Multi-Site Study for Adolescent Bulimia Nervosa.
- Author
-
Matheson, Brittany E., Gorrell, Sasha, Bohon, Cara, Agras, W. Stewart, Le Grange, Daniel, and Lock, James
- Subjects
BULIMIA ,COGNITIVE therapy ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,FOOD habits - Abstract
Background: This secondary data analysis seeks to replicate and extend findings that early response to treatment in adolescent bulimia nervosa (BN) predicts outcome, resulting in earlier identification of patients who might need a different treatment approach. Methods: Participants were 71 adolescents (M ± SD : 15.69 ± 1.55 years; 93% female; 75% non-Hispanic) with a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4
th Edition (DSM-IV) diagnosis of BN or partial BN enrolled in a two-site treatment study. Participants were randomized to cognitive behavioral therapy for adolescents (CBT-A), family-based treatment for BN (FBT-BN), or supportive psychotherapy (SPT). The Eating Disorder Examination was administered at baseline, end-of-treatment (EOT), 6-month, and 12-month follow-up. Binge eating and purge symptoms were self-reported at each session. Outcome was defined as abstinence of binge eating and compensatory behaviors (self-induced vomiting, laxative use, diet pills, diuretics, compensatory exercise, fasting) in the 28 days prior to assessment. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses were utilized to assess the viability of predicting treatment outcomes based on reduction of symptoms within the first 10 sessions of treatment. Results: ROC analyses suggest that reduction in purging at session 2 (AUC =.799, p <.001) and binge eating at session 4 (AUC =.750, p <.01) were independently related to abstinence of symptoms at EOT, regardless of treatment type. Symptom reduction later in treatment predicted outcome at follow-up, as change in binge eating at session 8 and purging at session 9 were the strongest predictors of abstinence at 6-month follow-up (AUCs =.726–.763, p s <.01). Change in binge eating, but not purging behaviors, was significantly related to abstinence at 12-month follow-up (AUC =.766, p <.01). Only slight differences emerged based on treatment group, such that reductions in symptoms most predictive of abstinence at EOT occurred one session sooner in FBT-BN than SPT. Conclusion: Reductions in binge eating and purge symptoms early in adolescent BN treatment suggest better outcome, regardless of treatment modality. Additional research with larger samples is needed to better understand which treatments, if any, contribute to earlier change in BN symptoms and/or likelihood of improved patient response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Toward A Greater Understanding of the Ways Family-Based Treatment Addresses the Full Range of Psychopathology of Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa.
- Author
-
Lock, James and Nicholls, Dasha
- Subjects
ANOREXIA nervosa ,ADOLESCENCE ,BEHAVIOR therapy ,FAMILY psychotherapy ,WEIGHT gain ,ADOLESCENT psychopathology - Abstract
Family-based treatment (FBT) for anorexia nervosa (AN) is an empirically supported treatment for this disorder. Derived from several different schools of family therapy, it is a highly focused approach that initially targets weight restoration under parental management at home. However, the view that manualized FBT is solely a behavioral therapy directing parents to refeed their children AN with the single purpose of weight gain is a common but misleading over simplification of the therapy. Indeed, weight restoration is the main goal only in phase 1 of this 3-phase treatment. When practiced with fidelity and skill, FBT's broadest aim is to promote adolescent development without AN thoughts and behaviors interfering and disrupting these normal processes. Although weight restoration is a key starting point in FBT, the entire course of treatment takes into consideration the ongoing impact of starvation, cognitions, emotions, and behaviors on adolescent development. These factors associated with maintaining low weight are viewed in FBT as interfering with the adolescent being able to take up the tasks of adolescence and thus must be overcome before fully turning to those broader adolescent tasks. In addition, FBT recognizes that adolescence takes place in the context of family and community and respects the importance of learning in a home environment both for weight gain as well as related developmental tasks to have a lasting effect. Specifically, in this article we describe how the current FBT manualized approach addresses temperament/personality traits, emotional processing, cognitive content and process, social communication and connections, psychiatric comorbidity, and family factors. This report makes no claim to superiority of FBT compared to other therapies in addressing these broader concerns nor does it add interventions to augment the current manual to improve FBT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Delivery of Family-Based Treatment for Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa in a Public Health Care Setting: Research Versus Non-Research Specialty Care.
- Author
-
Le Grange, Daniel, Gorrell, Sasha, Hughes, Elizabeth K., Accurso, Erin C., Yeo, Michele, Pradel, Martin, and Sawyer, Susan M.
- Subjects
ANOREXIA nervosa ,CLINICAL trial registries ,MEDICAL care ,EVIDENCE-based psychotherapy ,BODY mass index - Abstract
Comparing evidence-based psychotherapy (EBP) to usual care typically demonstrates the superiority of EBPs, although this has not been studied for eating disorders EBPs such as family-based treatment (FBT). The current study set out to examine weight outcomes for adolescents with anorexia nervosa who received FBT through a randomized clinical research trial (RCT, n = 54) or non-research specialty care (n = 56) at the same specialist pediatric eating disorder service. Weight was recorded throughout outpatient treatment (up to 18 sessions over 6 months), as well as at 6- and 12-month follow-up. Survival curves were used to examine time to weight restoration [greater than 95% median body mass index (mBMI)] as predicted by type of care (RCT vs. non-research specialty care), baseline clinical and demographic characteristics, and their potential interaction. Results did not indicate a significant main effect for type of care, but there was a significant effect for baseline weight (p =.03), such that weight restoration was achieved faster across both treatment types for those with a higher initial %mBMI. These data suggest that weight restoration achieved in non-research specialty care FBT was largely similar to that achieved in a controlled research trial. Clinical Trial Registration: http://www.anzctr.org.au/ , identifier ACTRN12610000216011. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Family-Based Treatment for Anorexia Nervosa Symptoms in High-Risk Youth: A Partially-Randomized Preference-Design Study.
- Author
-
Loeb, Katharine L., Weissman, Ruth Striegel, Marcus, Sue, Pattanayak, Cassandra, Hail, Lisa, Kung, Kelly C., Schron, Diana, Zucker, Nancy, Le Grange, Daniel, Lock, James, Newcorn, Jeffrey H., Taylor, C. Barr, and Walsh, B. Timothy
- Subjects
AT-risk youth ,ANOREXIA nervosa ,CLINICAL trial registries ,WEIGHT gain ,BODY weight - Abstract
This pilot study adapted family-based treatment (FBT) for youth with potentially prodromal anorexia nervosa (AN). Fifty-nine youth with clinically significant AN symptom constellations, but who never met full Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text rev.) (DSM-IV) criteria for AN, were enrolled in a partially randomized preference design study. Participants were offered randomization to FBT or supportive psychotherapy (SPT); those who declined to be randomized because of a strong treatment preference were entered into a parallel, non-randomized self-selected intervention study. Without accessing outcome data, an observational analysis with three diagnostic subclasses was designed based on AN symptom severity profiles, combining randomized and non-randomized participants, such that participants receiving FBT and SPT within each subclass were similar on key baseline characteristics. Outcomes of this pilot study were explored by calculating effect sizes for end-of-treatment values within each subclass, and also with a longitudinal mixed effect model that accounted for subclass. Weight trajectory was measured by percent expected body weight. Psychological outcomes were fear of weight gain, feeling fat, importance of weight, and importance of shape. Results show that the pattern of symptom observations over time was dependent on subclass of SAN (least symptomatic, moderately symptomatic, or most symptomatic) and on the target outcome variable category (weight or psychological). Results from this study, which should be considered in the context of the small sample sizes overall and within groups, can generate hypotheses for future, larger research trials on early treatment strategies. Feasibility findings illustrate how the innovative partially randomized preference design has potential broader application for AN intervention research. Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov , identifier NCT00418977. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. An Evaluation of Family-Based Treatment for OCD in Japan: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
-
Kobayashi, Yuki, Kanie, Ayako, Nakagawa, Atsuo, Takebayashi, Yoshitake, Shinmei, Issei, Nakayama, Noriko, Yamaguchi, Keiko, Nakayama, Chiaki, Hirabayashi, Naotsugu, Mimura, Masaru, and Horikoshi, Masaru
- Subjects
CLINICAL trial registries ,COGNITIVE therapy ,OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder ,PATIENT-family relations - Abstract
Objective: Although family involvement in the treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) produces a reduction in OCD symptoms and has significant effects on global functioning, few studies have focused on family intervention as part of OCD treatment in Japan. This study aims to examine the feasibility and efficacy of the family-based exposure and response prevention (FERP) program for adult patients with OCD and their family members. Design: Randomized controlled pilot study. Methods: A total of 18 outpatients aged 18–65 years with a primary diagnosis of OCD and one family member of each patient were randomized to an intervention group or a control group (1:1). The intervention group received the FERP program, which consisted of 16 weekly face-to-face cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) sessions, including eight joint sessions with family members, in addition to treatment-as-usual (TAU). The control group received TAU alone. The primary outcome was the alleviation of OCD symptoms, as measured by changes in the total Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) score from baseline to posttreatment. Analyses were provided on an intention-to-treat basis, and linear mixed models were used to test for significant group differences. Results: After 16 weeks, patients allocated to the FERP program showed improvement in OCD symptom severity, as measured by the total change score of the Y-BOCS (Hedges' g = −1.58), as compared to the control group. Two patients (22.2%) in the FERP group reached remission, and five patients (55.6%) in the FERP group achieved treatment response. Clinical global improvement measured by the FAS-SR scores, K6 scores, and CGI-S scores was also observed (Hedges' g = −1.35, −1.25, and −1.26, respectively) in the FERP group as compared to the control group. The dropout rate from the study was low (n = 2, 11.8%), and no adverse events were reported in the FERP group. Conclusion: Our results suggest that FERP may be an effective program for reducing patients' OCD symptoms. Clinical Trial Registration: www.umin.ac.jp/ctr/ , identifier UMIN000021763. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A Protocol for Integrating Neuroscience Into Studies of Family-Based Treatment for Anorexia Nervosa: An Approach to Research and Potential Benefits for Clinical Care
- Author
-
Cara Bohon, Noam Weinbach, and James Lock
- Subjects
neuroimaging ,treatment ,anorexia nervosa ,family-based treatment ,adolescents ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a life-threatening disorder with peak onset during adolescence. Prior research supports the effectiveness of family-based treatment (FBT) for AN in adolescents, but studies do not regularly include neuroimaging to investigate the effects of FBT on the brain. This is important because we know that malnutrition has a detrimental impact on brain volume, cortical thickness, and function, which often recover with weight restoration. Additionally, early weight gain in FBT has emerged as a robust predictor of treatment outcome, yet it is unclear whether it is associated with neural change. Understanding neural change during treatment, particularly in the early weeks, has the potential to improve outcome by enhancing motivation for rapid behavior change, while also highlighting mechanisms by which early treatment response leads to improved outcome. This manuscript describes a study protocol and discusses both challenges and implications for this type of integrative research.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. A Protocol for Integrating Neuroscience Into Studies of Family-Based Treatment for Anorexia Nervosa: An Approach to Research and Potential Benefits for Clinical Care.
- Author
-
Bohon, Cara, Weinbach, Noam, and Lock, James
- Subjects
ANOREXIA nervosa ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,NEUROSCIENCES ,BEHAVIOR ,WEIGHT gain - Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a life-threatening disorder with peak onset during adolescence. Prior research supports the effectiveness of family-based treatment (FBT) for AN in adolescents, but studies do not regularly include neuroimaging to investigate the effects of FBT on the brain. This is important because we know that malnutrition has a detrimental impact on brain volume, cortical thickness, and function, which often recover with weight restoration. Additionally, early weight gain in FBT has emerged as a robust predictor of treatment outcome, yet it is unclear whether it is associated with neural change. Understanding neural change during treatment, particularly in the early weeks, has the potential to improve outcome by enhancing motivation for rapid behavior change, while also highlighting mechanisms by which early treatment response leads to improved outcome. This manuscript describes a study protocol and discusses both challenges and implications for this type of integrative research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Editorial: Innovations in Research and Practice of Family Based Treatment for Eating Disorders
- Author
-
James, Lock, Daniel, Le Grange, Dasha, Nicholls, and Jennifer, Couturier
- Subjects
Psychiatry ,Editorial ,Family-based Treatment ,research ,bulimia nervosa ,eating disorders ,clinical ,anorexia nervosa - Published
- 2020
19. Toward A Greater Understanding of the Ways Family-Based Treatment Addresses the Full Range of Psychopathology of Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa
- Author
-
Dasha Nicholls and James E. Lock
- Subjects
Family therapy ,family ,SATISFACTION ,lcsh:RC435-571 ,ANXIETY DISORDERS ,SELF-ESTEEM ,Psychological intervention ,Context (language use) ,Anorexia nervosa ,1117 Public Health and Health Services ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Policy and Practice Reviews ,lcsh:Psychiatry ,medicine ,PERFECTIONISM ,Big Five personality traits ,Psychiatry ,Science & Technology ,family-based treatment ,cognitions ,EATING-DISORDERS ,1103 Clinical Sciences ,Cognition ,social ,REMISSION ,EMOTION REGULATION ,DEPRESSION ,medicine.disease ,anxiety ,030227 psychiatry ,COGNITIVE REMEDIATION THERAPY ,RANDOMIZED CLINICAL-TRIAL ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,1701 Psychology ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Psychopathology - Abstract
Family-based treatment (FBT) for anorexia nervosa (AN) is an empirically supported treatment for this disorder. Derived from several different schools of family therapy, it is a highly focused approach that initially targets weight restoration under parental management at home. However, the view that manualized FBT is solely a behavioral therapy directing parents to refeed their children AN with the single purpose of weight gain is a common but misleading over simplification of the therapy. Indeed, weight restoration is the main goal only in phase 1 of this 3-phase treatment. When practiced with fidelity and skill, FBT's broadest aim is to promote adolescent development without AN thoughts and behaviors interfering and disrupting these normal processes. Although weight restoration is a key starting point in FBT, the entire course of treatment takes into consideration the ongoing impact of starvation, cognitions, emotions, and behaviors on adolescent development. These factors associated with maintaining low weight are viewed in FBT as interfering with the adolescent being able to take up the tasks of adolescence and thus must be overcome before fully turning to those broader adolescent tasks. In addition, FBT recognizes that adolescence takes place in the context of family and community and respects the importance of learning in a home environment both for weight gain as well as related developmental tasks to have a lasting effect. Specifically, in this article we describe how the current FBT manualized approach addresses temperament/personality traits, emotional processing, cognitive content and process, social communication and connections, psychiatric comorbidity, and family factors. This report makes no claim to superiority of FBT compared to other therapies in addressing these broader concerns nor does it add interventions to augment the current manual to improve FBT.
- Published
- 2020
20. Editorial: Innovations in Research and Practice of Family Based Treatment for Eating Disorders.
- Author
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Lock, James, Le Grange, Daniel, Nicholls, Dasha, and Couturier, Jennifer
- Subjects
EATING disorders ,FAMILY research ,ANOREXIA nervosa ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
Keywords: Family-based Treatment; research; clinical; eating disorders; anorexia nervosa; bulimia nervosa EN Family-based Treatment research clinical eating disorders anorexia nervosa bulimia nervosa N.PAG N.PAG 2 01/25/21 20210121 NES 210121 This special issue of I Frontiers in Psychiatry/Psychosomatic Medicine i is focused on innovations in research and treatment for eating disorders using Family-based Treatment (FBT). FBT is at this time the first line treatment recommended by most international treatment guidelines for Anorexia Nervosa (AN) and Bulimia Nervosa (BN) for adolescents ([1]). Starting first with novel clinical applications, Spettigue, Norris et al. in their article entitled "Feasibility of Implementing a Family-Based Inpatient Program for Adolescents With Anorexia Nervosa: A Retrospective Cohort Study" describe how the principles of FBT can be adapted to an inpatient setting. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Family-Based Treatment for Anorexia Nervosa Symptoms in High-Risk Youth: A Partially-Randomized Preference-Design Study
- Author
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Nancy Zucker, B. Timothy Walsh, Ruth Striegel Weissman, Sue M. Marcus, James E. Lock, Diana Schron, Cassandra Pattanayak, Lisa Hail, Jeffrey H. Newcorn, Katharine L. Loeb, Kelly C. Kung, Daniel Le Grange, and C. Barr Taylor
- Subjects
Randomization ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,lcsh:RC435-571 ,Eating Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Sciences ,Context (language use) ,anorexia nervosa ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Research ,lcsh:Psychiatry ,early identification ,Psychology ,Medicine ,Nutrition ,media_common ,Pediatric ,Psychiatry ,business.industry ,family-based treatment ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Serious Mental Illness ,Clinical Trial ,partially-randomized preference design ,Preference ,Anorexia ,Brain Disorders ,030227 psychiatry ,Clinical trial ,early intervention ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mental Health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Feeling ,Anorexia nervosa (differential diagnoses) ,Supportive psychotherapy ,Public Health and Health Services ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Weight gain ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This pilot study adapted family-based treatment (FBT) for youth with potentially prodromal anorexia nervosa (AN). Fifty-nine youth with clinically significant AN symptom constellations, but who never met full Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text rev.) (DSM-IV) criteria for AN, were enrolled in a partially randomized preference design study. Participants were offered randomization to FBT or supportive psychotherapy (SPT); those who declined to be randomized because of a strong treatment preference were entered into a parallel, non-randomized self-selected intervention study. Without accessing outcome data, an observational analysis with three diagnostic subclasses was designed based on AN symptom severity profiles, combining randomized and non-randomized participants, such that participants receiving FBT and SPT within each subclass were similar on key baseline characteristics. Outcomes of this pilot study were explored by calculating effect sizes for end-of-treatment values within each subclass, and also with a longitudinal mixed effect model that accounted for subclass. Weight trajectory was measured by percent expected body weight. Psychological outcomes were fear of weight gain, feeling fat, importance of weight, and importance of shape. Results show that the pattern of symptom observations over time was dependent on subclass of SAN (least symptomatic, moderately symptomatic, or most symptomatic) and on the target outcome variable category (weight or psychological). Results from this study, which should be considered in the context of the small sample sizes overall and within groups, can generate hypotheses for future, larger research trials on early treatment strategies. Feasibility findings illustrate how the innovative partially randomized preference design has potential broader application for AN intervention research. Clinical Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier {"type":"clinical-trial","attrs":{"text":"NCT00418977","term_id":"NCT00418977"}}NCT00418977.
- Published
- 2019
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