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Evid Based Mental Health: first published as 10.1136/ebmh.1.2.44 on 1 May 1998. Downloaded from Exposure and response prevention reduced obsessive compulsive disorder symptoms Lindsay M,Crino R,Andrews G.Controlled trial of exposure and response prevention in obsessive-compulsive disorder. Br J Psychiatry 1997;171:135–9. Objective Main outcome measures To compare exposure and response prevention with general Change in severity of obsessions, compulsions, anxiety, and anxiety management in patients with obsessive compulsive depression using the following scales: Padua Inventory, Mauds- disorder (OCD). ley Obsessional-Compulsive Inventory (MOCI), Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, and Design aninterference rating scale. Randomised controlled trial witha3weekinterventionperiod. Main results Setting Patients in both groups rated their therapists as supportive and understanding.A principal components analysis yielded 2 com- Outpatient clinic in New South Wales, Australia. ponents, the first accounting for 62.6% of the variance in scores onindividual measures and the second accounting for 16.7% of Patients the variance. The first component gave a combined measure of 18patients(meanage33y,67%women)whomettheDiagnostic OCDsymptom severity, and the second a general measure of and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,4th edition diagnosis of anxiety and depression.After treatment,when scores on the first OCDandhadameandurationofOCDof11years(range1to principal component were combined, an overall reduction in 26y). scores occurred in patients in the exposure and response prevention group whereas no change in scores occurred in Intervention patients in the anxiety management group (p<0.006). No Patients were allocated to exposure and response prevention differences existed between the groups on the second principal (n=9) or a control group involving general anxiety manage- component, but when pretreatment and post-treatment scores ment (n=9). Exposure and response prevention consisted of were combined differences between the groups in favour of the graded exposure to situations that were previously associated exposure group were seen on the MOCI (p<0.006) and with obsessional thoughts or impulses. Patients then imple- interference ratings (p<0.006). mented self imposed prevention of compulsive rituals. The Conclusions treatment programme included outpatient clinic sessions and A reduction in obsessional symptoms in obsessive compulsive daily homework exposure tasks. General anxiety management disorder occurred aftera3weekprogrammeofexposure and consisted of learning breathing techniques in response to response prevention techniques. No improvement was seen hyperventilation, muscle relaxation, and problem solving about non-OCD life stressors. No instruction was given about after a programme of general anxiety management. http://ebmh.bmj.com/ exposure to triggers or prevention of rituals. Patients in both Source of funding:no external funding. groups received about 15 hours of face to face therapy sessions For article reprint:Dr R Crino,Clinical Research Unit for Anxiety Disorders,299 Forbes Street,Dar- over the 3 week intervention period. linghurst,New South Wales 2010,Australia.Fax +61 2 9332 4316. Commentary on September 26, 2022 by guest. Protected by copyright. Barlow has described generalised anxiety for the efficacy of the total package but The findings are of considerable rel- disorder as being the “basic anxiety disor- not for the individual parts. Anxiety man- evance for clinical practice. Many patients der” characterised by intense, uncontrol- agementhasbeenshowntobeeffectivein with OCD are still treated primarily with 1 lableworry. TherelationofOCDtoother generalised anxiety disorder. attemptstoreduceanxietyratherthanwith anxiety disorders has been in question for The study addresses the issue of techniques that directly target the major many years. In North America, OCD is whether anxiety management, an active symptoms and behaviours of the disorder. included as one of the anxiety disorders anxiety treatment, is as effective in reduc- This study confirms the need for the appli- whereas OCDiscategorised separately in ingtheseverityofsymptomsinoneofthe cation of exposure and response preven- the International Classification of Disease, anxiety disorders as exposure and re- tion in the optimal management of OCD. 10th edition. sponsepreventionwhichhasusuallybeen Richard Swinson,MD The study by Lindsay et al compares 2 comparedwithinert psychological place- McMaster University treatments,each of which has been found bos. The outcome of the study is quite Hamilton,Ontario,Canada to be effective in various specific anxiety clear in this small sample. Exposure plus disorders. Exposure plus response pre- response prevention reduces the symp- vention has become the standard treat- toms of OCD whereas anxiety manage- 1BarlowDH.Anxiety and its disorders: the nature and treatment of anxiety and panic.NewYork: ment for OCD with consistent evidence mentdoesnot. Guilford Press, 1988. 44 Therapeutics Evidence-Based Mental Health May 1998 Vol 1 No 2
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