| Literature DB >> 24991926 |
Helga Rodrigues1, Ivan Figueira1, Alessandra Lopes1, Raquel Gonçalves1, Mauro Vitor Mendlowicz2, Evandro Silva Freire Coutinho3, Paula Ventura4.
Abstract
The treatment of anxiety is on the edge of a new era of combinations of pharmacologic and psychosocial interventions. A new wave of translational research has focused on the use of pharmacological agents as psychotherapy adjuvants using neurobiological insights into the mechanism of the action of certain psychological treatments such as exposure therapy. Recently, d-cycloserine (DCS) an antibiotic used to treat tuberculosis has been applied to enhance exposure-based treatment for anxiety and has proved to be a promising, but as yet unproven intervention. The present study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of DCS in the enhancement of exposure therapy in anxiety disorders. A systematic review/meta-analysis was conducted. Electronic searches were conducted in the databases ISI-Web of Science, Pubmed and PsycINFO. We included only randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials with humans, focusing on the role of DCS in enhancing the action of exposure therapy for anxiety disorders. We identified 328 references, 13 studies were included in our final sample: 4 on obsessive-compulsive disorder, 2 on panic disorder, 2 on social anxiety disorder, 2 on posttraumatic stress disorder, one on acrophobia, and 2 on snake phobia. The results of the present meta-analysis show that DCS enhances exposure therapy in the treatment of anxiety disorders (Cohen d = -0.34; CI: -0.54 to -0.14), facilitating the specific process of extinction of fear. DCS seems to be effective when administered at a time close to the exposure therapy, at low doses and a limited number of times. DCS emerges as a potential new therapeutic approach for patients with refractory anxiety disorders that are unresponsive to the conventional treatments available. When administered correctly, DCS is a promising strategy for augmentation of CBT and could reduce health care costs, drop-out rates and bring faster relief to patients.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24991926 PMCID: PMC4081005 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0093519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flow Diagram.
The selected studies.
| NCBT +DCS/PCB+ CBT | Disorder | Demographic Age(mean) % ofwomen | DCS Dose(mg) Time Before CBT | CBT protocol | Results | |
| Storch et al.2007 | 12/12 | OCD | 29.0 ± 9.9 50% | 250 4 hours | 12 weeklysessions of ET | There was no clinically or statistically significant difference between the groups and no difference in remission: 42% (E/RP + DCS) and 58% (E/RP + PCB). There was no difference between groups on CGI: 83% (E/RP + DCS) and 92% (E/RP + PCB) were considered responders. |
| Kushner et al.2007 | 14/11 | OCD | Not shown | 125 Approximately 2 hours | Up to 10 ET, twice weekly | DCS group showed faster reduction of obsession-related fears (Y-BOCS and SUDS). >50% reduction on SUDS in all items of the hierarchy in two sessions earlier than the placebo group. |
| Wilhelm et al.2008 | 10/12 | OCD | Not shown | 100 1 hour | 1 psychoeducational/treatmentplanning session(90 minutes) +10 behavior therapy sessions (60 minutes each) held twice a week | DCS group had significant improvement in OCD symptoms on Y-BOCS compared to placebo group at mid-treatment. There was no statistically significant difference between groups after treatment and at one-month follow-up. |
| Storch et al. 2010 | 15/15 | OCD | 12.2 ± 2.8 63% | 25 mg 1 hour(4–10 sessions) | Ten 60-min CBT sessions | Moderate (72% - CBT + DCS) and small (58% - CBT + PB) effect size on CYBOCS. Moderate effect size on CGI-S, in support of CBT + DCS with a 57% versus 41% symptom reduction. |
| Otto et al., 2010 | 15/12 | Panic Disorder | 35.0 ± 11.0 50% | 50 1 hour(sessions 3–5) | 5 sessions of cognitive-behavior therapy | Better results on PDSS and CGI-S and clinically significant changes (77% DCS vs. 33% PCB). Large effect size. |
| Siegmund et al., 2011 | 20/19 | AgoraphobiaPanic Disorder | 37.85 ± 11.3 (DCS) 37.32 ± 13.0 (PCB) 46% | 50 1 hour | 11 sessions (90 minutes each) of CBT in group | There was no statistical difference between DCS and placebo groups. DCS accelerated reduction of symptoms with in vivo exposure therapy in more severe patients in total score of Panic and Agoraphobia Scale. |
| Hofmann et al. 2006 | 12/15 | Social Anxiety Disorder | 33.70 ± 10∶02 29.62% | 50 1 hour (2 to 5 sessions) | 5 sessions of individual or group therapy exposure | Group receiving DCS reported significant decrease in anxiety and better social outcomes measured by SPAI, LSAS, and CGI-S. |
| Guastella et al. 2008 | 28/28 | Social Anxiety Disorder | 29.0 ± 8.1 63% | 50 1 hour | 5 sessions of group ET | DCS enhanced the exposure therapy. Reductions in GAF, SPAI, LSAS, BFNE and LIS, and improvements maintained at one-month follow-up. |
| Kleine et al. 2012 | 24/21 | PTSD | 36.27 ± 11∶56 (DCS)40.26 ± 11.05 (PCB)Not shown | 50 1 hour | 10 weekly exposure sessions | DCS seems to have enhanced the effects of treatment, but patients who received DCS showed stronger response to therapy. DCS showed greater reduction of symptoms in participants who had more severe pre-treatment PTSD and needed longer treatment. |
| Litz et al. 2012 | 13/13 | PTSD | 32.77 ± 9.85 (DCS)31.62 ± 9.10(PCB) Not shown | 50 30 min(sessions 2–5) | 6 sessions of 60–90 minof exposure therapy | DCS failed to show an overall augmentation effect: 36.4% of the completers in placebo group and 33.3% of those in the DCS condition no longer met criteria for PTSD on CAPS. 50% of the completers met the criteria for status responders: 70% of the placebo group and 30% of the DCS group. |
| Ressler et al. 2004 | 17/10 | Acrophobia | 46.4 ± 2.8 (DCS)44.8 ± 2.3 (PCB) 59.26% | 50/500“Acutely prior to psychotherapy” | 2 sessions of VRE therapy | There was no significant difference between the 50 mg and 500 mg groups. DCS group showed higher percentages of subjects who reported “much improvement” or “very much improvement”. Reductions in number of skin conductance fluctuations and greater improvements in measures of symptoms of acrophobia in the real world and improvements maintained at 3-month follow-up. |
| Tart et al., 2012 | 15/14 | Acrophobia | 29.33 ± 14.67 (DCS)37.71 ± 16.81 (PCB)Not shown | 50 After each session | Two-session protocol VRE | “There was clinical improvement in all outcome measures, but there was no significant statistical difference between the groups on DCS versus placebo. 81.8% of placebo group and 66.7% of DCS responded. 63.5% of placebo group and 60.0% of DCS remitted. |
| Nave et al., 2012 | 10/10 | Snake Phobia | 34.60 ± 12.69 (DCS)39.00 ± 13.91 (PCB)60% | 50 1 hour | Single session ofgraded exposuretherapy | Reduction in both groups on Snake Questionnaire, although DCS group achieved faster reduction in the hierarchy. |
ADIS-IV = Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV; BFNE = Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale; CGI-S = Clinical Global Improvement Severity; CYBOCS = Children’s Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale; DCS = D-cycloserine; ET = exposure therapy; GAF = Global Assessment of Functioning; LIS = Life Interference Scale; LSAS = Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale; PCB = placebo; Y-BOCS = Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale; PDSS = Panic Disorder Severity Scale; SPAI = Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory; PTSD = Post-traumatic Stress Disorder; SUDS = Subjective Unit of Distress Scale.
Figure 2Methodological quality of the included studies (by study).
Figure 3Methodological quality of the included studies (by domain).
Figure 4Forest-plot.