| Literature DB >> 23467711 |
Angélica M Prazeres1, Antônio L Nascimento, Leonardo F Fontenelle.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to review the efficacy of different methods of cognitive and/or behavioral therapies used to treat body dysmorphic disorder. We evaluated all case series, open studies, controlled trials, and meta-analyses of cognitive and/or behavioral treatment approaches to body dysmorphic disorder published up to July 2012, identified through a search in the PubMed/Medline, PsycINFO, ISI Web of Knowledge, and Scopus databases. Our findings indicate that individual and group cognitive behavioral therapies are superior to waiting list for the treatment of body dysmorphic disorder. While the efficacy of cognitive therapy is supported by one controlled trial, utility of behavioral therapy is suggested by one open study and one controlled relapse prevention follow-up study. There is a pressing need to conduct head-to-head studies, with appropriate, active, control treatment groups, in order to examine further the efficacy of cognitive and/or behavioral therapies for body dysmorphic disorder.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral therapy; cognitive therapy; dysmorphophobia; literature review
Year: 2013 PMID: 23467711 PMCID: PMC3589080 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S41074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Cognitive or behavioral treatment of BDD: controlled trials
| References | Diagnostic criteria | Mean age and gender (%, female) | Duration of active treatment | Treatment | n | Y-BOCS-BDD scores pre → post treatment | Sig | BDDE scores pre → post treatment | Sig | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rosen et al | DSM-III-R | 36.5 ± 9.5 years; 100% | 8 sessions per week; 2 hours each; total 8 weeks | CBGT | 27 | NA | – | 83.9 (14.8) → 41.1 (16.9) | CBGT significantly reduced BDD symptoms compared with the waiting list | |
| Veale et al | DSM-IV | 35.4 ± NA years; 89.5% | 1 session per week; duration NA; total 12 weeks | CBT | 9 | 22.0 (5.1) → 10.7 (9.7) | 72.9 (17.0) → 42.4 (25.2) | CBT significantly reduced BDD symptoms compared with the waiting list | ||
| McKay et al | DSM-III-R | 31.2 ± 4.7 years; 60% | 5 sessions per week; 90 minutes each; total 6 weeks | ERP + MP | 5 | 31.1 (NA) → 9.1 (NA) | NS | NA | – | ERP improved BDD symptoms, but MP did not add further benefits |
| Khemlani- Patel et al | DSM-IV | 32.4 ± 10.5 years; 30% | 3 sessions per week; 90 minutes each; total 8 weeks | CT + ERP | NA | 27.8 (6.6) → 14.2 (6.3) | NS | NA | – | ERP improved BDD symptoms, but CT plus ERP did not differ from ERP |
| Rabiei et al | DSM-IV-TR | 25.2 ± 6.5 years; 90% | 8 sessions per week; 45–60 minutes each; total 8 weeks | MCT | 10 | 30.1 (6.5) → 20.1 (6.9) | NA | – | MCT significantly reduced BDD symptoms compared with the waiting list |
Abbreviations: BDD, body dysmorphic disorder; CT, cognitive therapy; CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; CBGT, cognitive behavioral group therapy; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; ERP, exposure and response prevention; MP, maintenance program; MCT, metacognitive therapy; n, number of patients; NA, not available; NS, not significant; Y-BOCS-BDD, Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale modified for BDD; Sig, statistical significance; BDDE, Body Dysmorphic Disorder Examination.
Cognitive or behavioral treatment for BDD: meta-analysis
| References | Treatment assessed | Studies analyzed (n) | Response |
|---|---|---|---|
| Williams et al | Pharmacotherapy (clomipramine, fluvoxamine, fluoxetine, citalopram) and CBT (ERP; CT; ERP + CT) | 15 studies
Five pharmacological (1 RCT; 3 case series; 1 crossover) 10 CBT (2 RCT; 8 case series) | Both approaches were effective with small advantage of CBT in reduction of severity of BDD symptoms |
| Ipser et al | Pharmacotherapy (clomipramine versus desipramine and fluoxetine versus placebo) and CBT (ERP; ERP + CT) | 5 studies
Two pharmacological (2 RCT) Three CBT (3 RCT) | Both approaches were effective, with no advantage of CBT. Differences in study design prohibited synthesis of data from pharmacotherapy trials |
Abbreviations: n, number of samples; ERP, exposure and response prevention; CT, cognitive therapy; RCT, randomized controlled trial; CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; BDD, body dysmorphic disorder.
Cognitive or behavioral treatment for BDD: case series and open trials
| References | Type of study | Diagnostic criteria | Age and gender (% female) | Duration of treatment | Treatment | n | Y-BOCSBDD scores pre → post treatment | Sig | General comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neziroglu and Yaryura- Tobias | Case series | DSM-III-R | 24.6 ± NA years; 60% | 1–5 sessions per week, 90 minutes each (total 12–48 sessions) | Intensive CBT or weekly CBT | 5 | NA | NA | Authors note improvement of BDD symptoms (including overvalued ideas) in four patients |
| Wilhelm et al | Case series | DSM-IV | 30.6 ± 10.9 years; 76.9% | 1 session per week, 90 minutes each (total 12 sessions) | CBGT | 13 | 28.5 (NA) → 21.3 (NA) | High levels of attrition (31%) were reported this sample | |
| Saxena et al | Case series | DSM-III-R | 32.5 ± 8.5 years; 54.4% | 6 weeks (other information NA) | Intensive CBT, medication, and psychosocial rehabilitation | 11 | 29.6 (3.7) → 16.9 (5.1) | NA | BDD showed similar patterns of response to OCD. |
| Neziroglu et al | Open trial | DSM-III-R | 25.1 ± 10.3 years; 58.8% | 5 sessions per week, 90 minutes each (total 20 sessions) | Intensive CBT | 17 | 25.7 (NA) → 12.0 (NA) | OCD was present in 94% of this sample. Over 75% of the patients had more than four Axis II diagnoses | |
| McKay et al | Open trial | DSM-III-R | 31.2 ± 4.7 years; 60% | 5 sessions per week 90 minutes each (total NA) | ERP | 10 | 31.1 (NA) → 9.1 (NA) | Exposure was either in vivo or in imagery | |
| Geremia and Neziroglu | Open trial | DSM-IV | 31.2 ± 4.5 years; 50% | 2 sessions per week, 75 minutes each (total 30 sessions) | CT | 4 | 25.2 (4.3) → 11.0 (3.9) | NA | High levels of compliance to assignments (100%) contrasts with the low compliance rates in the strictly behavioral treatment protocol |
| Wilhelm et al | Open trial | DSM-IV | 32.2 ± 4.6 years; 58% | 1–2 sessions per week, 60 minutes each (total 18–22 sessions) | Modular CBT | 12 | 32.9 (4.1) → 18.1 (11.7) | More than 80% of those who began modular CBT completed it |
Abbreviations: BDD, body dysmorphic disorder; NA, not available; CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; CBGT, group cognitive behavioral therapy; CT, cognitive therapy; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; n, number of patients; OCD, obsessive-compulsive disorder; OCS, obsessive-compulsive symptoms.