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2021-07-22Zeitschriftenartikel DOI: 10.1002/da.23204
Efficacy of temporally intensified exposure for anxiety disorders: A multicenter randomized clinical trial
Pittig, Andre
Heinig, Ingmar
Goerigk, Stephan
Thiel, Freya
Hummel, Katrin
Scholl, Lucie
Deckert, Jürgen
Pauli, Paul
Domschke, Katharina
Lueken, Ulrike cc
Fydrich, Thomas cc
Fehm, Lydia cc
Plag, Jens
Ströhle, Andreas
Kircher, Tilo cc
Straube, Benjamin cc
Rief, Winfried
Koelkebeck, Katja
Arolt, Volker cc
Dannlowski, Udo cc
Margraf, Jürgen
Totzeck, Christina
Schneider, Silvia cc
Neudeck, Peter
Craske, Michelle G.
Hollandt, Maike
Richter, Jan
Hamm, Alfons cc
Wittchen, Hans‐Ulrich
Lebenswissenschaftliche Fakultät
Background The need to optimize exposure treatments for anxiety disorders may be addressed by temporally intensified exposure sessions. Effects on symptom reduction and public health benefits should be examined across different anxiety disorders with comorbid conditions. Methods This multicenter randomized controlled trial compared two variants of prediction error-based exposure therapy (PeEx) in various anxiety disorders (both 12 sessions + 2 booster sessions, 100 min/session): temporally intensified exposure (PeEx-I) with exposure sessions condensed to 2 weeks (n = 358) and standard nonintensified exposure (PeEx-S) with weekly exposure sessions (n = 368). Primary outcomes were anxiety symptoms (pre, post, and 6-months follow-up). Secondary outcomes were global severity (across sessions), quality of life, disability days, and comorbid depression. Results Both treatments resulted in substantial improvements at post (PeEx-I: dwithin = 1.50, PeEx-S: dwithin = 1.78) and follow-up (PeEx-I: dwithin = 2.34; PeEx-S: dwithin = 2.03). Both groups showed formally equivalent symptom reduction at post and follow-up. However, time until response during treatment was 32% shorter in PeEx-I (median = 68 days) than PeEx-S (108 days; TRPeEx-I = 0.68). Interestingly, drop-out rates were lower during intensified exposure. PeEx-I was also superior in reducing disability days and improving quality of life at follow-up without increasing relapse. Conclusions Both treatment variants focusing on the transdiagnostic exposure-based violation of threat beliefs were effective in reducing symptom severity and disability in severe anxiety disorders. Temporally intensified exposure resulted in faster treatment response with substantial public health benefits and lower drop-out during the exposure phase, without higher relapse. Clinicians can expect better or at least comparable outcomes when delivering exposure in a temporally intensified manner.
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DOI
10.1002/da.23204
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https://doi.org/10.1002/da.23204
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<a href="https://doi.org/10.1002/da.23204">https://doi.org/10.1002/da.23204</a>