Panic Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Treatment of Panic Disorder: Long Term Strategies
Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) with or without medication has been used in the treatment
of panic disorder (PD). The purpose of this study is 1) to determine whether nine months of
maintenance cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) significantly improves the likelihood of
sustained improvement; and 2) to determine the acute acceptability and efficacy of
medication therapy or continued CBT alone among patients who fail to respond sufficiently to
an initial course of CBT alone.
It has been found that patients with PD respond as well to CBT or medication alone as they
do to a combination of the two. Since the combined treatments are expensive and CBT is
associated with less risk of medical toxicity compared to medications, CBT alone will be
used first.
All patients will first receive CBT alone. If the patient responds to this therapy, the
patient will be assigned randomly (like tossing a coin) to 1 of 2 groups. One group will
continue to receive CBT (maintenance therapy) for 9 months. The other group of responders
will not receive any further therapy. If a patient does not respond to CBT alone, he/she
will be assigned randomly to 1 of 2 different groups. One group will receive paroxetine; the
other will continue to receive CBT for a longer period. The response to treatment will be
evaluated to see which regimen works best to treat PD. The study will last approximately 3
years.
An individual may be eligible for this study if he/she has panic disorder with no more than
mild agoraphobia (fear of being in public places) and is at least 18 years old.
To determine if maintenance CBT produces a more sustained improvement among patients with
panic disorder (PD) who respond to an initial course of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT)
alone. For those who do not respond sufficiently to CBT alone, to determine if the addition
of pharmacotherapy is acceptable and if this improves response among those inadequate
responders to CBT alone.
This multicenter study builds upon the findings of a prior study comparing imipramine,
placebo, CBT, and their combination in the treatment of PD patients with no more than mild
agoraphobia. That study found response rates were as high with CBT or imipramine alone as
with their combination. Given the added cost of combined treatments, it therefore seems
reasonable to begin with monotherapy. Further, following general principles of medical
practice, it would be reasonable to initiate treatment with the less invasive cognitive
behavioral intervention. It is then important to learn what should be done following initial
treatment.
All patients initially receive CBT alone. Patients are then randomized into 1 of 2
post-acute studies, depending on response status. Responders are randomized to a maintenance
study comparing no maintenance with 9 months of continued CBT. Nonresponders are randomized
to a study comparing paroxetine with continued CBT. The following outcomes will be examined:
the necessity of maintenance therapy in maintaining response; the ability of adjunct
pharmacotherapy to improve the response of patients who did not respond to CBT alone;
possible predictors of response and relapse; and possible mediators of response.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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