| Literature DB >> 28066272 |
Didrik Heggdal1, Roar Fosse1, Jan Hammer1.
Abstract
New treatment approaches are needed for patients with severe and composite mental disorders who are resistant to conventional treatments. Such treatment-resistant patients often have diagnoses of psychotic or bipolar disorders or severe personality disorders and comorbid conditions. In this study, we evaluate basal exposure therapy (BET), a novel ward-integrated psychotherapeutic approach for these patients. Central to BET is the conceptualization of undifferentiated existential fear as basic to the patients' problem, exposure to this fear, and the therapeutic platform complementary external regulation, which integrates and governs the totality of interventions throughout the treatment process. BET is administered at a locked-door ward with 6 patient beds and 13.5 full-time employees, including a psychiatrist and 2 psychologists. Thirty-eight patients who had completed BET were included, all but two being female, mean age 29.9 years. Fourteen patients had a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (F20/25), eight had bipolar disorder or recurrent depressive disorder (F31/33), eight had diagnoses in the F40-48 domain (neurotic, stress-related, and somatoform disorders), five were diagnosed with emotionally unstable personality disorder (F60.3), and three patients had other diagnoses. Twenty of the patients (53%) had more than one ICD-10 diagnosis. Average treatment time in BET was 13 months, ranging from 2 to 72 months. Time-series data show significant improvements in symptoms and functioning from enrollment to discharge, with effect sizes at 0.76 for the Dissociation Experience Scale, 0.93 for the Brief Symptom Inventory, 1.47 for the Avoidance and Action Questionnaire, and 1.42 and 1.56, respectively, for the functioning and symptom subscales of the Global Assessment of Functioning Scale. In addition, the patients used significantly less antiepileptic, antipsychotic, anxiolytic, and antidepressant medications at discharge than at treatment enrollment. Patient improvement across treatment was associated with the following duration of time in BET, the successful completions of the exposure component of BET, positive changes in experiential avoidance as measured with the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire, and high symptom levels and low levels of functioning at treatment start. The findings indicate that BET may be a promising inpatient psychotherapeutic approach for previously treatment-resistant patients with severe and comorbid conditions.Entities:
Keywords: basal exposure therapy; evaluation study; self-regulation; severe mental illness; treatment resistance
Year: 2016 PMID: 28066272 PMCID: PMC5165038 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Diagnoses at admission to basal exposure therapy.
| ICD-code | Main diagnosis | Comorbid disorders in subgroup | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| F20/25 | Schizophrenia | 8 | 5 | Alcohol dependence, other psychoactive substance dependence, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), emotionally unstable personality disorder |
| Schizoaffective disorder | 6 | |||
| F31/33 | Bipolar affective disorder | 4 | 7 | Alcohol dependence, poly-substance drug use, social phobias, obsessive-compulsive disorder, PTSD, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, paranoid personality disorder, emotionally unstable personality disorder, personality disorder unspecified, dependent personality disorder, enduring personality change after catastrophic experience, disturbance of activity and attention |
| Recurrent depressive disorder | 4 | |||
| F40–49 | Obsessive–compulsive disorder | 4 | 6 | Major depressive episode, recurrent depressive disorder, phobic anxiety disorders, PTSD, anorexia nervosa, emotionally unstable personality disorder, avoidant personality disorder, personality disorder unspecified, mixed and other personality disorders |
| PTSD or dissociative disorder | 4 | |||
| F60.3 | Emotionally unstable personality disorder | 5 | 2 | Alcohol abuse, major depressive episode, persistent mood (affective) disorders, phobic anxiety disorders, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa |
| Other | 3 |
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Figure 1Changes in Global Assessment of Functioning from enrollment to discharge. Lines are SEs.
Figure 2Changes in Global Severity Index from enrollment to discharge. Lines are SEs.
Figure 3Changes in Dissociation Experience Scale from enrollment to discharge. Lines are SEs.
Figure 4Changes in experiential avoidance (Acceptance and Action Questionnaire) from enrollment to discharge. Lines are SEs.
Figure 5Changes in psychopharmacological treatment from enrollment to discharge. Lines are SEs.
Use of regular medications at admission and discharge.
| ICD-code | Medication type | Admission | Discharge | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F20/25 ( | Antiepileptics | 3 | 0.95 (0.62) | 2 | 0.9 (0.14) |
| Antipsychotics | 12 | 1.62 (1.34) | 9 | 1.0 (0.38) | |
| Anxiolytics | 3 | 2.17 (1.04) | 0 | – | |
| Hypnotics | 3 | 1.67 (0.58) | 0 | – | |
| Antidepressants | 6 | 2.04 (1.25) | 2 | 1 (0) | |
| F31/33 ( | Antiepileptics | 4 | 0.83 (0.45) | 0 | – |
| Antipsychotics | 6 | 0.55 (0.43) | 3 | 0.44 (0.35) | |
| Anxiolytics | 1 | 0.9 (0) | 0 | – | |
| Hypnotics | 0 | – | 0 | – | |
| Antidepressants | 4 | 1.1 (0.57) | 0 | – | |
| F42–44 ( | Antiepileptics | 1 | 2.67 (0) | 0 | – |
| Antipsychotics | 4 | 1.58 (0.68) | 2 | 1.54 (1.0) | |
| Anxiolytics | 1 | 0.3 (0) | 0 | – | |
| Hypnotics | 1 | 1 (0) | 1 | 0.67 (0) | |
| Antidepressants | 6 | 2.21 (1.42) | 3 | 2.93 (1.68) | |
| F60.3 ( | Antiepileptics | 2 | 1.17 (0.71) | 1 | 0.83 (0) |
| Antipsychotics | 4 | 0.85 (0.43) | 3 | 0.9 (0.74) | |
| Anxiolytics | 1 | 0.92 (0) | 0 | – | |
| Hypnotics | 1 | 1 (0) | 1 | 1 | |
| Antidepressants | 3 | 2.25 (0.9) | 0 | – | |
| Other ( | Antiepileptics | 0 | – | 0 | – |
| Antipsychotics | 0 | – | 0 | – | |
| Anxiolytics | 1 | 0.3 | 1 | 0.3 | |
| Hypnotics | 0 | – | 0 | – | |
| Antidepressants | 2 | 0.88 (0.18) | 2 | 0.75 (0.35) | |
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Changes in outcome measures as a function of low and high changes on the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (AAQ).
| Outcome measure | Mean changes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Improvement on AAQ: low | Improvement on AAQ: high | |||
| GAF-S | +6.5 | +21.5 | 3.6 (28) | 0.002 |
| GAF-F | +5.7 | +16.3 | 3.1 (28) | 0.005 |
| BSI: GSI-score | −0.46 | −0.79 | 1.21 (27) | 0.24, ns |
| DES | −11.5 | −13.5 | 0.37 (27) | 0.72, ns |
GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning, symptom (S) and functioning (F) subscales; GSI/BSI, Global Severity Index from the Brief Symptom Inventory; DES, Dissociation Experience Scale.
Changes in outcome measures as a function of low and high completion of the exposure component of basal exposure therapy.
| Outcome measure | Mean changes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low exposure | High exposure | |||
| GAF-S | +9.9 | +19.7 | 2.3 (36) | 0.025 |
| GAF-F | +7.8 | +18.5 | 2.8 (36) | 0.008 |
| BSI: GSI-score | −0.32 | −0.90 | 2.3 (27) | 0.030 |
| DES | −7.5 | −17.3 | 2.0 (27) | 0.055 |
GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning, symptom (S) and functioning (F) subscales; GSI/BSI, Global Severity Index from the Brief Symptom Inventory; DES, Dissociation Experience Scale.
Associations of dissociation (DES) and EA (AAQ) with GAF and GSI at discharge.
| GAF-S | GAF-F | GSI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| DES | |||
| AAQ |
GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning, symptom (S) and functioning (F) subscales; GSI/BSI, Global Severity Index from the Brief Symptom Inventory; DES, Dissociation Experience Scale.
Figure 6Examples of correlations at discharge: AAQ vs. GAF-S and GSI. AAQ, Acceptance and Action Questionnaire; GSI, Global Severity Index from the Brief Symptom Inventory; GAF-S, Global Assessment of Functioning, symptom subscale. Correlations: (A) AAQ vs. GAF-S, r = −0.52. (B) AAQ vs. GSI, r = 0.54.