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Psychological treatment for panic disorder with agoraphobia: A randomized controlled trial to examine the role of therapist-guided exposure in situ in CBT

Authors :
Andrew T, Gloster
Hans-Ulrich, Wittchen
Franziska, Einsle
Thomas, Lang
Sylvia, Helbig-Lang
Thomas, Fydrich
Lydia, Fehm
Alfons O, Hamm
Jan, Richter
Georg W, Alpers
George W, Alpers
Alexander L, Gerlach
Andreas, Ströhle
Tilo, Kircher
Jürgen, Deckert
Peter, Zwanzger
Michael, Höfler
Volker, Arolt
Source :
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. 79:406-420
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2011.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is a first-line treatment for panic disorder with agoraphobia (PD/AG). Nevertheless, an understanding of its mechanisms and particularly the role of therapist-guided exposure is lacking. This study was aimed to evaluate whether therapist-guided exposure in situ is associated with more pervasive and long-lasting effects than therapist-prescribed exposure in situ. METHOD: A multicenter randomized controlled trial, in which 369 PD/AG patients were treated and followed up for 6 months. Patients were randomized to 2 manual-based variants of CBT (T+/T-) or a wait-list control group (WL; n = 68) and were treated twice weekly for 12 sessions. CBT variants were identical in content, structure, and length, except for implementation of exposure in situ: In the T+ variant (n = 163), therapists planned and supervised exposure in situ exercises outside the therapy room; in the T- group (n = 138), therapists planned and discussed patients' in situ exposure exercises but did not accompany them. Primary outcome measures were (a) Hamilton Anxiety Scale, (b) Clinical Global Impression, (c) number of panic attacks, and (d) agoraphobic avoidance (Mobility Inventory). RESULTS: For T+ and T- compared with WL, all outcome measures improved significantly with large effect sizes from baseline to post (range = -0.5 to -2.5) and from post to follow-up (range = -0.02 to -1.0). T+ improved more than T- on the Clinical Global Impression and Mobility Inventory at post and follow-up and had greater reduction in panic attacks during the follow-up period. Reduction in agoraphobic avoidance accelerated after exposure was introduced. A dose-response relation was found for Time × Frequency of Exposure and reduction in agoraphobic avoidance. CONCLUSIONS: Therapist-guided exposure is more effective for agoraphobic avoidance, overall functioning, and panic attacks in the follow-up period than is CBT without therapist-guided exposure. Therapist-guided exposure promotes additional therapeutic improvement--possibly mediated by increased physical engagement in feared situations--beyond the effects of a CBT treatment in which exposure is simply instructed.

Details

ISSN :
19392117 and 0022006X
Volume :
79
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ce415f517876eb50676aebcc2518320
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/a0023584