Skin-Picking Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Skin Picking Treatment Using a Cognitive-Behavioral Protocol in Individual and Group Format: a Randomized Clinical Trial
Skin Picking Disorder (SPD) affects 1.4-5.4% of the general population. It has a high association with anxiety and depressive symptoms. Only behavioral treatments demonstrated significant benefits compared with inactive control conditions, but with poor accessibility of this treatment to patients. Besides this, behavioral treatment does not address the associated anxious and depressive symptoms. Trichotillomania and SPD have co-occurrence rate greater than expected, indicating that can be part of the same disease spectrum. The Rothbaum Cognitive Behavioral Therapy(CBT) protocol is effective in treating trichotillomania. Based on the similarity of these diseases, this study uses the Rothbaum Protocol to treat SPD in individual and group format. We hypothesize that this protocol will be effective in treating SPD, anxiety and depression symptoms associated and also facilitate therapist training. Methods: A community sample of 40 participants with SPD will be randomly allocated to receive treatment with the Rothbaum Protocol individually or in group format. Patients with current psychotic disorder, suicide risk or mental disability will be excluded. Instruments measuring anxiety, depression and SPD severity will be applied in the baseline, after the intervention and after a 6 months follow-up. Motivation of patients to therapy will be evaluated at the baseline. The primary outcome will be the remission of symptoms evaluated by the overall clinical impression. The secondary outcomes will be the degree of improvement in anxiety, depression and SPD severity.
Skin Picking Disorder (SPD) is a new diagnosis in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders (DSM) 5 and affects about 1.4% to 5.4% of the general population, increasing
this prevalence to 7% to 30% in psychiatric patients. Despite the importance of this
pathology, less than half of the patients with SPD seek treatment, only 53% receive the
correct diagnosis and more than 57% are not satisfied with the treatment received. About 85%
of patients think that professionals are not trained to treat SPD. Skin Picking Disorder
occurs frequently with other mental disorders, with 13-48% of patients having major
depressive disorder and 5-23% having anxiety disorders. The literature suggests that neither
Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) nor Lamotrigine are effective when compared
to placebo in treating SPD, and only treatment with behavioral techniques are effective.
However, studies using behavioral techniques do not address associated symptoms, as anxiety
and depression.
Some studies found that the rate of co-occurrence of dermatillomania and trichotillomania is
higher than expected, so it has been hypothesized that these disorders are part of the
spectrum of a single pathology. It is known that the Rothbaum Protocol, a standardized
treatment for Trichotillomania, is effective in treating this disorder, addressing also the
management of anxiety and depressive symptoms, besides working with relapse prevention.
Thus, our study works with the hypothesis that the Rothbaum CBT Protocol can be effective in
the treatment of dermatillomania, in both individual or group format. Having the same
protocol to treat SPD and Trichotillomania might facilitate the patient access to treatment
and the therapist training, and also might improve the SPD treatment in a long-term, by
managing the relapse prevention.
Methods: this study is a thwo armed randomized controlled and single masked clinical trial.
Participants with SPD according to DSM 5 will be included and randomly allocated in
individual or group format of treatment with the Rothbaum CBT Protocol. The protocol will be
adapted to SPD, changing the habit of pulling the hair to the habit of picking the skin.
Symptoms of anxiety, depression and the SPD severity will be evaluated by specific
instruments and by a photographic measurement before the intervention, after and in a 6 moths
follow-up. The motivation of patient to the CBT will be measured at the baseline. Will be
excluded patients with current psychotic disorder, suicide risk or mental disability.
The CBT protocol will consist of 8 weekly sessions, during 45 minutes in individual format
and 90 minutes in group format, always applied by a trained therapist. This protocol includes
psychoeducation, habit reversal techniques, anxiety management, change of disfunctional
cognitive schemes and relapse prevention.
The primary outcome will be the remission of symptoms of SPD, assessed by the Clinical Global
Impression scale. The secondary outcomes will be the improvement of depressive symptoms,
anxiety and SPD symptoms assessed by the others instruments.
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