Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
Adding Motivational Interviewing to Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Severe Generalized Anxiety Disorder
The current study examines whether change-readiness, and consequently treatment outcome, can be enhanced in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for severe Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) by adding a brief course of Motivational Interviewing (MI adapted for anxiety, Westra & Dozois, 2003) before and during CBT when motivation wanes. 106 individuals with severe GAD will be randomly assigned to receive an equal number of sessions of either MI and CBT (MI-CBT arm) or CBT alone (CBT alone arm). It is expected that the MI-CBT arm relative to the CBT alone arm will show lower levels of resistance in CBT, higher levels of homework compliance and therapeutic alliance, better moment-to-moment interpersonal process, and consequently superior outcomes - both post-treatment and at 6 and 12 month follow-ups.
The proposed study builds on the findings of the clinical trial by Westra, Arkowitz and
Dozois (2009), and aims to: (1) provide a powerful test of the value of adding MI to CBT for
high severity GAD (as pilot data has indicated that individuals with severe GAD may
preferentially benefit from the addition of MI to CBT), (2) employ treatment procedures
generalizable to clinical practice, and (3) examine the mechanisms underlying any additive
treatment benefit. 106 individuals with a principal diagnosis of GAD and of high worry
severity will be randomly assigned to receive either 4 sessions of MI followed by 11
sessions of CBT (MI-CBT arm) or 15 sessions of CBT (CBT alone arm). Both groups will also
receive 2 follow-up CBT treatment sessions at 1 and 3 months post-treatment. Each therapist
will deliver all treatment components, treatments will appear seamless to clients, and
therapists will be nested within treatment group to control for allegiance effects and avoid
cross-contamination of the therapies. In order to increase generalizability to clinical
practice, in the CBT phase for the MI-CBT arm, therapists will shift to MI in the presence
of empirically derived markers of resistance and shift back to CBT when resistance has
diminished. In the CBT alone arm therapists will respond to resistance using manualized
recommendations derived from leading CBT theorists for the management of resistance. Anxiety
and related symptoms, motivation, and treatment engagement will be assessed at various
points during treatment, and at 6 and 12 months post-treatment. A multi-method approach to
assessment will be used, including self-report, clinician-report, clinician-administered,
observer-rated, and interview-based measures. Importantly, we will include not only
traditional outcome measures, but also process measures (e.g., observer-coded interpersonal
behavior, interview-based derivation of client experiences) to investigate possible
mechanisms underlying any additive treatment benefit. In addition, all therapy sessions will
be videotaped and assessed by independent raters for protocol adherence.
The specific hypotheses are as followed:
Hypothesis 1: Worry, Anxiety, & Related Symptoms. The MI-CBT arm will show greater
reductions in worry, anxiety, and related symptoms (depression, disability, maladaptive
beliefs about worry, life satisfaction) and a greater percentage of treatment responders
(using clinical significance criteria) across the treatment period and at follow-up (FU),
compared to the CBT alone arm.
Hypothesis 2: Motivation and Resistance. Over the course of early treatment (i.e., sessions
1 to 4), the MI-CBT arm will demonstrate greater increases in motivation compared to the CBT
alone arm. In addition, the MI-CBT arm will exhibit lower in-session resistance during early
(sessions 5 & 7), middle (sessions 10 & 12), and late (sessions 15 & 17) phases of
treatment.
Hypothesis 3: Homework Compliance. The MI-CBT arm will show greater client- and
therapist-rated homework compliance throughout CBT treatment compared to the CBT alone arm.
Hypothesis 4a: Interpersonal Processes between Clients and Therapists. Compared to CBT alone
clients, MI-CBT clients and therapists will report higher working alliance quality during
both the initial MI sessions and subsequent phases of CBT. Furthermore, moment-to-moment
interpersonal processes between client and therapist during early, middle, and late
treatment are expected to be characterized by more adaptive processes (e.g., higher
affiliation and less hostility) in the MI-CBT vs. CBT alone arms.
Hypothesis 4b. Interpersonal Processes During Resistance. During episodes of client
resistance (identified with resistance coding), therapist and client exchanges in MI-CBT are
expected to be characterized by more adaptive processes (i.e., higher affiliation, less
hostility, and greater client autonomy-preservation) compared to CBT alone. Further, when a
small subset of clients (5 per treatment group) are interviewed about their experiences of
resistance episodes, we expect client accounts in the MI-CBT arm to be characterized more
positively (e.g., more supportive of client autonomy, more conducive to increased engagement
vs. disengagement with treatment) compared to CBT alone.
Hypothesis 5: Mediation of Therapeutic Outcomes. We expect that increased motivation and
reduced resistance in MI-CBT, compared to CBT alone, will lead to higher levels of
engagement in the CBT (better homework compliance and therapeutic alliance), which will
result in greater worry reduction.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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