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Behavior therapy for children with Tourette disorder: a randomized controlled trial
- Source :
- JAMA. 303(19)
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- Tourette disorder is a chronic and typically impairing childhood-onset neurologic condition. Antipsychotic medications, the first-line treatments for moderate to severe tics, are often associated with adverse effects. Behavioral interventions, although promising, have not been evaluated in large-scale controlled trials.To determine the efficacy of a comprehensive behavioral intervention for reducing tic severity in children and adolescents.Randomized, observer-blind, controlled trial of 126 children recruited from December 2004 through May 2007 and aged 9 through 17 years, with impairing Tourette or chronic tic disorder as a primary diagnosis, randomly assigned to 8 sessions during 10 weeks of behavior therapy (n = 61) or a control treatment consisting of supportive therapy and education (n = 65). Responders received 3 monthly booster treatment sessions and were reassessed at 3 and 6 months following treatment.Comprehensive behavioral intervention.Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (range 0-50, score15 indicating clinically significant tics) and Clinical Global Impressions-Improvement Scale (range 1 [very much improved] to 8 [very much worse]).Behavioral intervention led to a significantly greater decrease on the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (24.7 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 23.1-26.3] to 17.1 [95% CI, 15.1-19.1]) from baseline to end point compared with the control treatment (24.6 [95% CI, 23.2-26.0] to 21.1 [95% CI, 19.2-23.0]) (P.001; difference between groups, 4.1; 95% CI, 2.0-6.2) (effect size = 0.68). Significantly more children receiving behavioral intervention compared with those in the control group were rated as being very much improved or much improved on the Clinical Global Impressions-Improvement scale (52.5% vs 18.5%, respectively; P.001; number needed to treat = 3). Attrition was low (12/126, or 9.5%); tic worsening was reported by 4% of children (5/126). Treatment gains were durable, with 87% of available responders to behavior therapy exhibiting continued benefit 6 months following treatment.A comprehensive behavioral intervention, compared with supportive therapy and education, resulted in greater improvement in symptom severity among children with Tourette and chronic tic disorder.clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00218777.
- Subjects :
- Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Pediatrics
Tic disorder
Tics
Adolescent
Habit reversal training
Tourette syndrome
Severity of Illness Index
law.invention
Randomized controlled trial
law
Behavior Therapy
Severity of illness
medicine
Humans
Psychiatry
Child
business.industry
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Treatment Outcome
Treatment of Tourette syndrome
Chronic Tic Disorder
Female
business
Tourette Syndrome
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15383598
- Volume :
- 303
- Issue :
- 19
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- JAMA
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e6539ecb509ffdcbe07849a1966ffb15