Generalized Anxiety Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Web-based Attention Bias Modification Treatment for Childhood Anxiety Disorders: a Randomized, Double-blind, Controlled Trial
Anxiety disorders are the most common childhood psychiatric disorders, with prevalence rates as high as 15% to 20%. Success rates of the first choice treatment strategy (i.e. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy; CBT) are around 50%. Non-response increases the risk for other psychiatric disorders, school dropout, social isolation, alcoholism, and suicide attempts. These negative consequences endorse the urgent need to develop more effective and accessible treatments that enhance effectiveness of current treatment options. A promising new treatment for childhood anxiety disorders is Attention Bias Modification Treatment (ABMT). ABMT is based on evidence that anxiety-disordered individuals selectively allocate their attention toward threatening information (i.e. attention bias). This bias in early and automatic attention processes starts a cascade of subsequent biases in information processing and memory, resulting in heightened anxiety. Attention bias is an underlying mechanism of anxiety. Thus ABMT, which implicitly trains individuals to attend away from threatening information should alleviate anxiety. In contrast to ABMT, CBT explicitly targets later stages of information processing that are under volitional control. Meta-analyses of studies in adults have shown that ABMT indeed results in increased recovery rates and clinically significant changes in anxiety, compared to so-called "sham" attention training (control condition). Imaging studies have shown that ABMT modifies lateral prefrontal cortex activity to emotional stimuli. Despite its promising results, fewer studies have examined ABMT in anxiety-disordered children. The aim of this trial is to enhance treatment effectiveness by combining web-based ABMT with CBT in a large sample of anxiety-disordered children. The primary aim is to compare ABMT-augmented CBT with CBT as monotherapy on recovery rates for anxiety disorders and changes in anxiety. The secondary aim is to compare ABMT with sham attention training on anxiety disorder recovery rates and changes in anxiety. We hypothesize that (1) ABMT-augmented CBT will result in a significantly better treatment success than CBT alone, and (2) ABMT will result in a significantly better treatment success than sham attention training. The design will be a randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled clinical trial.
Anxiety disorders are the most prevalent psychiatric disorders, occurring in among 15% to 20%
of children. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is currently the first-choice treatment for
anxiety-disordered children. Despite proven efficacy, almost half of them do not respond,
causing prolonged suffering. Children with persistent anxiety have an increased risk for
other psychiatric disorders, school dropout, social isolation, alcoholism, and suicide
attempts. Another concern is that only a small proportion of anxiety-disordered children
actually receive treatment. These negative consequences in combination with the limited
accessibility of treatment endorse the urgent need to develop more effective and accessible
treatments that can enhance effectiveness of current treatment options.
A newly emerging and promising childhood anxiety treatment is Attention Bias Modification
Treatment (ABMT). ABMT is build upon evidence that anxious children tend to selectively focus
their attention on threatening information in the context of other non-threatening
information, and that attention bias is related to development and maintenance of anxiety
disorders. Children with an attention bias scan their environment for potential threat or
danger thereby starting a cascade of subsequent processing biases in interpretation and
memory, resulting in heightened anxiety.
Hence, as attention bias is an underlying mechanism of anxiety, treatment that diminishes
attention bias toward threat in anxiety-disordered individuals should alleviate anxiety.
Subsequently, several researchers began to examine the effect of ABMT, which implicitly
trains anxiety-disordered individuals to attend away from threat toward neutral information.
This is a different approach than CBT, which does not target early and automatic information
processes, but addresses later stages of information processing that are under volitional
control. Several studies highlighted the potential of ABMT in reducing anxiety levels in
adults. A meta-analysis revealed that ABMT in adults produces significantly greater
reductions in anxiety than sham control training, with a large effect size in clinical
populations. A previous study found that 72% of the adults were free from their primary
anxiety disorder after ABMT as compared to 11% after sham attention training, which is far
more than CBT. These training effects were maintained at 4-month follow-up. Importantly, ABMT
also modifies neural systems that are involved in the control of attention to emotional
stimuli, in particular the lateral prefrontal cortex.
Despite the promising results in adults, ABMT has been scarcely examined in children. A few
studies demonstrated a significant anxiolytic effect of ABMT, but not of the sham control
condition. A major limitation of previous studies is that sample sizes were quite low and
that a limited number of training sessions were provided. It has been shown that more
training sessions enhance the magnitude of treatment effect. This is the first study that
examines the effectiveness of a 9-session web-based ABMT in a large sample of
anxiety-disordered children as well as examines the additive effect of web-based ABMT on CBT.
As reviewed above, childhood anxiety disorders are highly prevalent and debilitating, and
there is an urgent need for improvement of current treatment strategies. An innovative, but
scarcely examined, treatment option for childhood anxiety disorders is ABMT. A randomized,
sham-controlled, double-blind trial of web-based Attention Bias Modification Treatment for
childhood anxiety disorders will be conducted. One hundred twenty-eight children will be
randomly allocated to a 9 session internet-delivered ABMT or sham attention training. The
primary aim is to compare ABMT-augmented CBT with CBT as monotherapy on recovery rates for
anxiety disorders and changes in anxiety. The secondary aim is to compare ABMT with sham
attention training on anxiety disorder recovery rates and changes in anxiety.
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