| Literature DB >> 27611692 |
Ioana A Cristea1,2, Robin N Kok3,4,5,6, Pim Cuijpers5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Cognitive bias modification (CBM) interventions, presumably targeting automatic processes, are considered particularly promising for addictions. We conducted a meta-analysis examining randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of CBM for substance addiction outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27611692 PMCID: PMC5017662 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0162226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart of selection and inclusion process, following the PRISMA statement.
Selected characteristics of included studies of cognitive bias modification interventions.
| Study | Population | Nrand | CBM | Control | Conc Tx | Addiction Measures | Bias measure | D | Ns | FU |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attwood, 2008 | Smokers (≥ 5 cig/day) | 55 | ABM (VPT) | ABM (attend smoking) | - | QSU-B; Craving VAS | VPT | L | 1 | - |
| Begh, 2015 | Smokers trying to quit (≥10 cig/day) | 119 | ABM (VPT) | No cont | NP | MPSS-C; MPSS-M; CO-verified abstinence | VPT; PST | C | 4 | 1,2, 3& 6 mths |
| Boendermaker, 2015 Study 1 | Regular drinkers | 77 | Inhibition (Go/No Go) (original/gamified/social | No cont | - | Alcohol use (TFLB) | Alcohol Go/No Go | L/H | 3 | - |
| Cox, 2015 | Drinkers (≥14 units/wk-women; ≥21 units/wk-men) | 148 | AACTP | No training | - | DRQ (MWD; ATWD); SIP | Stroop Task | L | 4 | 3&6 mths |
| Eberl, 2013 | Alcohol dependent inpatients (CIDI) | 509 | A-AAT | No training | TAU (CBT) | Relapse (DGSS-4) | A-AAT | C | 12 | 1 year |
| Field, 2005 | Drinkers (≥14 units/wk-women; ≥21 units/wk-men) | 40 | ABM (VPT) | ABM (attend alcohol) | - | DAQ; Urge to drink VAS | VPT | L | 1 | - |
| Field, 2007 | Drinkers (≥14 units/wk-women; ≥21 units/wk-men) | 60 | ABM (VPT) | No cont: ABM (attend alcohol) | - | DAQ; Urge to drink VAS | VPT; PST; FICBT; SRCT | L | 1 | - |
| Field, 2009 | Smokers (≥ 1 cig/wk) | 72 | ABM (VPT) | No cont; ABM (attend) | - | QSU-B; Urge to smoke VAS | VPT; PST | L | 1 | - |
| Houben, 2011 | Drinkers (≥10 units/wk-women; ≥12 units/wk-men) | 52 | Inhibition (Go/No Go) | Go/No Go (alcohol for go) | Alcohol use (TFLB) | IAT | L | 1 | - | |
| Houben, 2012 | Drinkers (≥10 units/wk-women; ≥12 units/wk-men) | 57 | Inhibition (Go/No Go) | Go/No Go (alcohol for go) | - | Alcohol use (TFLB) | SRCT; SST; IAT | L | 1 | - |
| Kerst, 2014 | Smokers (≥10 cig/day) | 65 | ABM (VPT) | No cont | - | QSU; Cig/day (diary); CO (ppm); Cotinine saliva (ng/ml) | VPT | H | 21 | - |
| Jones, 2013 St 1 | Drinkers (≥14 units/wk-women; ≥21 units/wk-men) | 90 | Inhibition (SST) | Inhibition (SST) (neutral); Disinhibition (SST no stop) | - | Alcohol use (TFLB); AAAQ | SST | L | 1 | - |
| Lindgren, 2015 St 1 | Drinkers (1 heavy drink ep≥ 4–5 drinks past mth) | 295 | A-AAT (original/general ident/personalized ident) | No cont (original/general ident/personalized ident) | - | ACQ-SF-R; Intention to drink | A-AAT | L | 2 | - |
| Lindgren, 2015 St 2 | Drinkers (AUDIT > 8) | 288 | A-AAT (original/general ident/personalized ident) | No cont (original/general ident/personalized ident) | - | ACQ-SF-R; Intention to drink | A-AAT | L | 2 | - |
| Lopes, 2014 | Smokers trying to quit (≥5 cig > 30 days) | 67 | ABM (VPT) | No cont; ABM+No cont | Group CBT | QSU-B; FTND; Cig/day; CO(ppm) | VPT | L | 3 | 1, 6, & 12 mths |
| McGeary, 2014 | Drinkers (AUDIT > 8) | 31 | ABM (VPT) | No cont | - | DHQ (1 item) | VPT | L+H | 9 | - |
| McHugh, 2010 | Smokers (≥10 cig/day for 1 year) | 64 | ABM (VPT) | No cont | - | QSU-B | VPT | L | 1 | - |
| Schoenmakers, 2007 | Drinkers (> 20 units/wk; ≥ 1 binge drinking ep in last 2 wks) | 106 | ABM (VPT) | No cont | - | Craving VAS | VPT; FICBT | L | 1 | - |
| Schoenmakers, 2010 | Alcohol dependent inpatients (DSM-IV) | 43 | ABM (VPT) | Categorization task | CBT | DAQ; Relapse | VPT | C | 5 | 3 mths |
| Wiers CE, 2014 | Alcohol dependent inpatients (MINI) | 36 | A-AAT | No cont | - | DAQ; AAAQ | A-AAT | C | 6 | - |
| Wiers RW, 2010 | Drinkers (AUDIT > 8) | 42 | A-AAT | A-AAT (approach) | - | Urge to drink (Likert) | A-AAT | L | 1 | - |
| Wiers RW, 2011 | Alcohol dependent inpatients (CIDI) | 214 | A-AAT (explicit/implicit) | No cont; WL | TAU (CBT) | Craving (Likert); Relapse (DGSS-4) | A-AAT | C | 4 | 1 yr |
| Wiers RW, 2015 | Drinkers (AUDIT > 8) | 314 | A-AAT (100% /90% /explicit 100%); AACTP | No cont | - | Craving VAS; AAAQ; Drinks/day (TFLB) | A-AAT | H | 4 | 1 &2 mths |
| Wittekind, 2015 | Smokers ( | 257 | AAT; mAAT | WL | - | CQSS; FTND; CDS-12; OCSS | - | H | 1 | - |
| Woud, 2015 | Drinkers (AUDIT > 8) | 74 | CBM-I | CBM-I (alcohol) | - | Alcohol use (TFLB); Urge to drink (Likert) | Similarity ratings | L | 3 | - |
Note.
a St, study
b Cig, cigarette; Wk, Week; Mths, Months; CIDI, Composite International Diagnostic Interview; AUDIT, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test; ep, episode; DSM-IV, Diagnostic and Statistic Manual IV; MINI, Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview;
c Nrand, Number randomized
d CBM, cognitive bias modification; ABM, attention bias modification; VPT, Visual Probe Task; AACTP, Alcohol Attention Control Training Program; SST, Stop-Signal Task; ident, identity; A-AAT, Alcohol Approach-Avoidance Task; mAAT, modified Approach-Avoidance Task; CBM-I, cognitive bias modification for interpretation;
e ABM, attention bias modification; No cont, No Contingency; SST, Stop-Signal Task; ident, identity; A-AAT, Alcohol Approach-Avoidance Task; WL, Waitlist; CBM-I, cognitive bias modification for interpretation;
f Conc Tx, Concurrent Therapy; NP, Nicotine Patch; TAU, treatment as usual; CBT, cognitive behavior therapy
g QSU-B, Questionnaire of Smoking Urges-Brief; VAS, Visual Analogue Scale; MPSS (C/M), Mood and Physical Symptoms Score (Craving/Mood); DRQ, Drinking Record Questionnaire; MWD, mean weekly drinking; ATWD, atypical weekly drinking; SIP, Short Index of Problems; DGSS-4, German Society for Addiction Research and Adddiction Medicine-4; DAQ, Desires for Alcohol Questionnaire; TFLB, Timeline Follow-Back Questionnaire; CO (ppm),expired alveolar carbon monoxide; AAAQ, Alcohol Approach Avoidance Questionnaire; ACQ-SF-R, Alcohol Craving Questionnaire—Short Form—Revised questionnaire; FTND, Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence; DHQ, Drinking Habits Questionnaire; CQSS, Commitment to Quitting Smoking Scale; CDS-12, Cigarette Dependence Scale-12; OCSS, Obsessive Compulsive Smoking Scale
h VPT, Visual Probe Task; A-AAT, Alcohol Approach-Avoidance Task; PST, Pictorial Stroop Task; IAT, Implicit Association Test; FICBT, Flicker-Induced Change Blindness Task; SRCT, Stimulus-Response Compatibility Task; SST, Stop-Signal Task
i D, Delivery; L, Laboratory; H, Home; C, Clinic;
j Ns, Number of sessions;
k FU, Follow-up; Mth, month.
Fig 2Risk of bias graph: review authors' judgments about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
Effects of CBM interventions, compared to control, at posttest and follow-up, for addiction outcomes.
| Variable | n | 95% CI | I2 | I2 95% CI | NNT | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24 | 0.08 | -0.02 to 0.18 | 0 | 0~40 | 21.74 | ||
| One ES per study (only highest) | 24 | 0.11 | 0.009 to 0.20 | 0 | 0~40 | 16.13 | |
| One ES per study (only lowest) | 24 | 0.05 | -0.05 to 0.15 | 0 | 0~40 | 35.71 | |
| Established outcome measures only | 21 | 0.09 | -0.02 to 0.20 | 0 | 0~41 | 20 | |
| Comparisons with increase bias interventions excluded | 18 | 0.04 | -0.07 to 0.15 | 0 | 0~44 | 45.45 | |
| Studies of CBM combined with another intervention | 4 | 0.06 | -0.16 to 0.28 | 7 | 0~70 | 29.41 | |
| Addiction type Alcohol | 17 | 0.10 | -0.01 to 0.22 | 0 | 0~45 | 17.86 | 0.459 |
| Smoking | 7 | 0.02 | -0.15 to 0.20 | 0 | 0~58 | 83.33 | |
| Sample type Consumers | 20 | 0.08 | -0.03 to 0.19 | 0 | 0~42 | 21.74 | 0.979 |
| Patients | 4 | 0.07 | -0.19 to 0.34 | 30 | 0~76 | 25 | |
| Delivery setting | 15 | 0.07 | -0.06 to 0.21 | 0 | 0~46 | 25 | 0.999 |
| Home | 4 | 0.07 | -0.15 to 0.28 | 0 | 0~68 | 25 | |
| Clinic | 4 | 0.07 | -0.19 to 0.34 | 30 | 0~76 | 25 | |
| Bias targeted | 7 | 0.07 | -0.08 to 0.23 | 0 | 0~58 | 25 | 0.437 |
| Attentional | 12 | 0.03 | -0.12 to 0.18 | 0 | 0~50 | 62.5 | |
| Inhibition | 4 | 0.23 | -0.04 to 0.50 | 0 | 0~68 | 7.69 | |
| Number of sessions Single | 11 | 0.07 | -0.07 to 0.21 | 0 | 0~51 | 25 | 0.867 |
| Multiple | 13 | 0.09 | -0.05 to 0.22 | 0 | 0~49 | 20 | |
| 18 | 0.05 | -0.06 to 0.16 | 0 | 0~44 | 35.71 | ||
| One ES per study (only highest) | 18 | 0.08 | -0.03 to 0.20 | 2 | 0~44 | 21.74 | |
| One ES per study (only lowest) | 18 | 0.02 | -0.09 to 0.14 | 0 | 0~44 | 83.33 | |
| Established outcome measures only | 14 | 0.05 | -0.09 to 0.19 | 0 | 0~49 | 35.71 | |
| Comparisons with increase bias interventions excluded | 14 | 0.02 | -0.11 to 0.14 | 0 | 0~47 | 83.33 | |
| Studies of CBM combined with another intervention | 4 | 0.03 | -0.32 to 0.38 | 56 | 0~83 | 62.5 | |
| Addiction type Alcohol | 12 | 0.07 | -0.07 to 0.20 | 0 | 0~50 | 25 | 0.798 |
| Smoking | 6 | 0.03 | -0.22 to 0.28 | 27 | 0~71 | 62.5 | |
| Sample type Consumers | 14 | 0.05 | -0.08 to 0.19 | 0 | 0~47 | 35.71 | 0.908 |
| Patients | 4 | 0.03 | -0.32 to 0.38 | 56 | 0~83 | 62.5 | |
| Delivery setting Laboratory | 12 | 0.06 | -0.09 to 0.21 | 0 | 0~50 | 29.41 | 0.972 |
| Home | 2 | 0.02 | -0.35 to 0.39 | 0 | N/Ai | 83.33 | |
| Clinic | 4 | 0.03 | -0.32 to 0.38 | 56 | 0~83 | 62.5 | |
| Bias targeted | 6 | 0.10 | -0.07 to 0.28 | 0 | 0~61 | 17.86 | 0.36 |
| Attentional | 10 | -0.01 | -0.19 to 0.16 | 11 | 0~58 | ||
| Number of sessions Single | 8 | 0.04 | -0.15 to 0.22 | 0 | 0~56 | 45.45 | 0.895 |
| Multiple | 10 | 0.05 | -0.10 to 0.21 | 10 | 0~57 | 35.71 | |
| 7 | 0.18 | 0.03 to 0.32 | 0 | 0~58 | 9.80 | ||
| One ES per study (only highest) | 7 | 0.18 | 0.04 to 0.32 | 0 | 0~58 | 9.80 | |
| One ES per study (only lowest) | 7 | 0.16 | 0.02 to 0.31 | 0 | 0~58 | 11.11 | |
| Established outcome measures only | 7 | 0.18 | 0.04 to 0.32 | 0 | 0~58 | 9.80 | |
| Studies of CBM combined with another intervention | 5 | 0.19 | 0.04 to 0.34 | 0 | 0~64 | 9.43 | |
| Addiction type Alcohol | 5 | 0.18 | 0.03 to 0.33 | 0 | 0~64 | 9.80 | 0.933 |
| Smoking | 2 | 0.16 | -0.23 to 0.56 | 0 | N/Ai | 11.11 | |
| Sample type Consumers | 3 | 0.09 | -0.28 to 0.46 | 0 | 0~73 | 20 | 0.608 |
| Patients | 4 | 0.19 | 0.04 to 0.34 | 0 | 0~68 | 9.43 | |
| Bias targeted Approach | 3 | 0.20 | 0.04 to 0.36 | 0 | 0~73 | 8.93 | 0.565 |
| Attentional | 4 | 0.10 | -0.20 to 0.40 | 0 | 0~68 | 17.86 |
Note.
a All results are reported with Hedges g, using a random effects model
b The p levels in this column indicate whether the difference between the ESs in the subgroups is significant (significant results are marked with italic)
c Attwood et al., 2008; Field et al., 2005; Houben et al., 2011; Houben et al., 2012; WiersRW et al., 2010; Woud et al., 2015
d Begh et al., 2015; Lopes et al., 2014; Schoenmakers et al., 2010; Wiers et al., 2011
e Subgroup analysis were conducted using a mixed effects model.
f One study (Boendermarker et al. 2015 Study 1) gave participants a choice between home and laboratory delivery
g One study (Woud et al., 2015) used a different type of CBM (CBM for interpretation bias)
h Attwood et al., 2008; Field et al., 2005; WiersRW et al., 2010; Woud et al., 2015
i Confidence intervals around I cannot be calculated if there are fewer than 3 groups
j The subgroups targeting inhibition and respectively interpretation bias only had one study
n = number of trials; NNT = numbers needed to treat; N/A not available. Underlined NNT values indicate negative ES values (the direction of the effect favored the control group)
Fig 3Standardized effect sizes of CBM interventions for addiction (all measures).
Effects of CBM interventions, compared to control, at posttest, for bias outcomes.
| Variable | ncomp | 95% CI | I2 95% CI | p | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 | 0.60 | 0.39 to 0.79 | 64 | 36~77 | ||
| Outliers excluded | 17 | 0.46 | 0.310 to 0.62 | 39 | 0~65 | |
| Comparisons with increase bias interventions excluded | 13 | 0.46 | 0.25 to 0.68 | 58 | 7~76 | |
| Addiction type Alcohol | 14 | 0.59 | 0.37 to 0.80 | 59 | 12~76 | 0.927 |
| Smoking | 5 | 0.61 | 0.08 to 1.15 | 79 | 29–89 | |
| Sample type Consumers | 15 | 0.64 | 0.39 to 0.89 | 69 | 40~80 | 0.324 |
| Patients | 4 | 0.44 | 0.12 to 0.75 | 42 | 0~80 | |
| Delivery setting | 13 | 0.70 | 0.42 to 0.98 | 71 | 43~82 | 0.213 |
| Clinic | 4 | 0.44 | 0.12 to 0.75 | 42 | 0~80 | |
| Bias targeted | 5 | 0.46 | 0.12 to 0.81 | 63 | 0~84 | 0.677 |
| Attentional | 9 | 0.65 | 0.32 to 0.98 | 68 | 18~82 | |
| Inhibition | 4 | 0.70 | 0.13 to 1.27 | 76 | 0~89 | |
| Number of sessions: Single | 9 | 0.86 | 0.53 to 1.18 | 68 | 17~82 | 0.007 |
| Multiple | 10 | 0.35 | 0.16 to 0.53 | 28 | 0~65 |
Note.
a All results are reported with Hedges using a random effects model
b The p levels in this column indicate whether the difference between the ESs in the subgroups is significant (significant results are marked with italic)
c Outliers were defined as studies in the 95% CI was outside the 95% CI of the pooled studies. (Above the 95% CI: Attwood et al., 2008; Jones et al., 2013)
d Attwood et al., 2008; Field et al., 2005; Houben et al., 2011; Houben et al., 2012; Wiers RW et al., 2010; Woud et al., 2015
e Subgroup analysis were conducted using a mixed effects model.
f One study employed delivery at home (Kerst and al., 2014) and another (Boendermarker et al. 2015 Study 1) gave participants a choice between home and laboratory delivery
g One study (Woud et al., 2015) used a different type of CBM (CBM for interpretation bias)
n = number of trials
Fig 4Meta-regression analyses for the effects of low risk of bias score on effects sizes for 1) addiction (all measures), and 2) craving.