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Exposure and response prevention versus stress management training for adults and adolescents with obsessive compulsive disorder: A randomized clinical trial

Though exposure and response prevention (ERP) is a well-proven treatment for OCD across the lifespan, prior RCTs have not studied adolescent and adult patients with the same ERP protocol relative to an active comparator that controls for non-specific effects of treatment. This approach assesses diff...

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Published in:Behaviour research and therapy 2024-01, Vol.172, p.104458-104458, Article 104458
Main Authors: Himle, Joseph A., Grogan-Kaylor, Andrew, Hiller, Matthew A., Mannella, Kristin A., Norman, Luke J., Abelson, James L., Prout, Aileen, Shunnarah, Angela A., Becker, Hannah C., Russman Block, Stefanie R., Taylor, Stephan F., Fitzgerald, Kate D.
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c412t-234d6e2c4b04d462c9c57fda62fb0ea2b639004382def455e4e656bd1c1689513
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container_title Behaviour research and therapy
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creator Himle, Joseph A.
Grogan-Kaylor, Andrew
Hiller, Matthew A.
Mannella, Kristin A.
Norman, Luke J.
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Shunnarah, Angela A.
Becker, Hannah C.
Russman Block, Stefanie R.
Taylor, Stephan F.
Fitzgerald, Kate D.
description Though exposure and response prevention (ERP) is a well-proven treatment for OCD across the lifespan, prior RCTs have not studied adolescent and adult patients with the same ERP protocol relative to an active comparator that controls for non-specific effects of treatment. This approach assesses differences in the effect of OCD-specific exposures in affected adolescents and adults and in response to ERP compared to a stress-management control therapy (SMT). This assessor-blinded, parallel, 2-arm, randomized, ambulatory clinical superiority trial randomized adolescents (aged 12–18) and adults (24–46) with OCD (N = 126) to 12 weekly sessions of ERP or SMT. OCD severity was measured before, during and after treatment using the child or adult version of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (C/Y-BOCS), depending on participant age. We predicted that ERP would produce greater improvement in OCD symptoms than SMT and that there would be no significant post-treatment differences across age groups. ERP (n = 63) produced significantly greater improvements on C/Y-BOCS scores at post-treatment than SMT (n = 63) (Effect size = −0.72, CI = −0.52 to −0.91, p 
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.brat.2023.104458
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This approach assesses differences in the effect of OCD-specific exposures in affected adolescents and adults and in response to ERP compared to a stress-management control therapy (SMT). This assessor-blinded, parallel, 2-arm, randomized, ambulatory clinical superiority trial randomized adolescents (aged 12–18) and adults (24–46) with OCD (N = 126) to 12 weekly sessions of ERP or SMT. OCD severity was measured before, during and after treatment using the child or adult version of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (C/Y-BOCS), depending on participant age. We predicted that ERP would produce greater improvement in OCD symptoms than SMT and that there would be no significant post-treatment differences across age groups. ERP (n = 63) produced significantly greater improvements on C/Y-BOCS scores at post-treatment than SMT (n = 63) (Effect size = −0.72, CI = −0.52 to −0.91, p &lt; .001). ERP also produced more treatment responders (ERP = 86%, SMT = 32%; χ2 = 46.37, p &lt; .001) and remitters than SMT (ERP = 39%, SMT = 7%; χ2 = 16.14, p &lt; .001). Finally, there were no statistically significant post-treatment differences in C/Y-BOCS scores between adolescents and adults assigned to ERP. A single ERP protocol is superior to SMT in treating both adolescents and adults with OCD. 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subjects Adolescent
Adolescents
Adult
Adults
Child
Exposure and response prevention
Humans
Obsessive compulsive disorder
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder - diagnosis
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder - therapy
Stress management
Treatment Outcome
title Exposure and response prevention versus stress management training for adults and adolescents with obsessive compulsive disorder: A randomized clinical trial
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