| Literature DB >> 32055067 |
Ajit Avasthi1, Swapnajeet Sahoo1, Sandeep Grover1.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32055067 PMCID: PMC7001360 DOI: 10.4103/psychiatry.IndianJPsychiatry_774_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Psychiatry ISSN: 0019-5545 Impact factor: 1.759
Meta-analyses of studies on cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis in patients with psychosis
| Author, year | Number of studies included | Sample size | Results | Remarks/limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBTp studies focusing on positive symptoms | ||||
| Gould | Seven RCTs | 340 | The mean effect size for change in psychotic symptoms from pre- to post-treatment was 0.65 (95% CI: 0.56±0.71) 6-month post term outcome in four studies: Combined mean effect size −0.93 | The authors did not take the sample size into consideration while calculating the effect size |
| Rector and Beck 2001[ | Seven RCTs | 383 | Group contrast analysis in six of the seven studies demonstrated a large effect size in favor of CBT (mean weighted effect size=0.91) | Two out of seven studies which showed large effect size in favor of CBT were not blinded |
| Pilling | Eight RCTs | 393 | CBTp produced significant improvements in mental state in four RCTs (pooled fixed-effect odds ratio=0.27; 95% CI=0.15-0.49) compared to all other treatments | Outcome was defined slightly differently in each of the studies |
| Zimmerman | 14 RCTs | 1484 | Compared to adjunctive measures, CBT showed significant reduction in positive symptoms (mean effect size 0.37) and patients with acute psychotic episode benefited more compared to chronic condition (effect size of 0.57 vs. 0.27) | Number of potentially modifying variables not examined |
| Jauhar | 30 | 2991 | The pooled effect size for overall symptoms was 0.33 (95% CI 0.47-0.19); pooled effect size for positive symptoms was 0.25 (95% CI: 0.37-0.13) | Nonsignificant effects on positive symptoms in a relatively large set of 21 masked studies were found, thereby questioning its effectiveness |
| Hazell | Ten studies on low-intensity CBTp (6-15 sessions) | 631 | Significant between-group effects (CBTp vs. TAU) were found on the symptoms of psychosis, at post-intervention (effect size=0.46) and follow-up (effect size=0.40) | This meta-analysis found low-intensity CBTp with less number of sessions (16+ sessions) can be recommended |
| Lincoln and Peters, 2018[ | Four RCTs: delusions | 228 | Higher effect size in CBT group in both RCTs on delusions and hallucinations; five of seven studies | Marked heterogeneity of studies was found |
| Eight RCTs: Hallucinations | 588 | Demonstrated maintenance of gains achieved during follow-up | Only three RCTS were powered adequately and others were pilot trials | |
| Jauhar | 31 | 3145 | The pooled effect size for 31 studies of negative symptoms was 0.14 (95% CI: 0.26-0.01; | Heterogeneous studies were included ( |
| Velthorst | 30 | 1312 | Beneficial effect of conventional CBT seen in older studies was not supported by more recent studies | Studies included were not specifically designed to address negative symptoms |
CBTp – Cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis; CI – Confidence interval; CBT – Cognitive behavioral therapy; RCTs – Randomized controlled trials; TAU – Treatment as usual
Clinical situation for the use of cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis in patients with psychotic disorders
| Chronic phase of schizophrenia: Existing literature suggests robust evidence of effectiveness of CBTp interventions for treatment-resistant positive psychotic symptoms but negligible efficacy for negative symptoms, when used as an adjunct to routine pharmacological therapy |
| CRS: CBTp can have some benefits at the end of treatment but no sustained effects in the long term |
| Prepsychotic phase (prodromal phase/UHR/ARMS): Limited evidence to suggest routine recommendation of CBTp in prodromal phase/UHR/ARMS |
| First-episode psychosis : Current evidence suggest CBTp interventions to be useful in patients with first-episode psychosis when used as an adjunct to routine pharmacological therapy and can aid in the improvement of symptoms, medication adherence, improving self-esteem, and developing insight about illness. However, further studies are required before advocating CBTp routinely to all patients with first-episode psychosis |
| For patients not taking antipsychotics: Some effects; less studies to make any recommendations |
| Acute phase of schizophrenia: Current evidence does not support CBTp interventions in acute psychotic episode |
CRS – Clozapine-resistant schizophrenia; CBTp – Cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis; UHR – Ultra-high risk for psychosis; ARMS – At-risk mental state
Indications of cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis interventions
| Recommended indications of CBTp |
|---|
| Treatment-resistant and treatment-persistent delusions |
| Treatment-resistant auditory hallucinations |
| Residual distressing psychotic symptoms (delusions/hallucinations) |
| Depressive and anxiety symptoms secondary to psychotic symptoms |
| Prominent negative symptoms |
| Prodromal phase of psychosis |
| Subjects at high risk of developing psychosis (siblings and children of patients with psychotic disorders) |
| First-episode psychosis |
| Improve the understanding and insight into the psychotic experiences |
| Improve coping with residual psychotic symptoms |
| Reduce distress and degree of conviction/preoccupation associated with psychotic symptoms; improve self-esteem of the patient |
| Maintain the improvement achieved and relapse prevention |
CBTp – Cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis
Figure 1Indications for cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis
Assessment and evaluation for cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis
| Comprehensive assessment of patients and caregivers |
| Detailed history of onset of illness, phenomenology of psychotic symptoms, response of these symptoms to medications |
| Current level of symptoms |
| Impact of current level of symptoms on the patient’s functioning in different areas and strategies the patient had developed to cope of with them |
| Current mental state examination |
| Comorbid psychiatric illnesses (anxiety disorders, depression, substance abuse, etc.) to be assessed |
| Comorbid medical illnesses to be assessed |
| Medication adherence |
| Patients’ motivation for nonpharmacological treatment |
| Psychological sophistication |
| IQ and neuropsychological assessment |
| Symptom severity and symptom dimensions |
| Rating of symptom severity by appropriate standard rating scales |
| Level of functioning and domains of impairment |
| Insight |
| Response to therapy |
| Unmet needs of the patient |
| Degree of conviction and preoccupation during the course of therapy |
| Neuropsychological testing (if required) |
| Assessment of caregivers |
| Willingness to bring the patient regularly for the sessions |
Other feasibility issues: finances, time commitment, etc.; IQ – Intelligence quotient
Figure 2Steps for assessment and evaluation for cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis interventions
Components of cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis
| Components | Description |
|---|---|
| Engagement | It includes rapport building and developing a strong therapeutic relationship with the patient with schizophrenia/psychosis |
| Assessment | As mentioned above in Table 4 |
| Psycho-education | Educating about the nature of illness, symptom dimensions, course of the illness, role of medications, issues related to adherence, long-term outcome, etc. |
| Cognitive therapy | It includes analyzing the cognitive schema of the patient, understanding the cognitive errors, and carrying out verbal challenge and cognitive behavioral experiments |
| Helps in improving other secondary symptoms of psychosis such as depressive and anxiety symptoms | |
| Behavioral skills training: Symptom specific | It includes behavioral experiments and behavioral strategies based on the nature of the presenting concern/complaint |
| It includes relaxation training, graded exposure, activity scheduling, distraction techniques, and problem solving | |
| Helps in improving coping with the residual psychotic symptoms | |
| Relapse prevention strategies | It includes identification of early warning signs of relapse and development of plans in response to the indicators of relapse |
Outline of a typical cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis session
| Duration of session can range from at least 15 min to 30 min; sessions may include breaks as per the need in a particular patient |
|---|
| Every session should start by reviewing the patient’s mental state and mood on the day of session and inquiring about mood over the previous week/days or since last session |
| Review the medication adherence |
| Explore the areas addressed in the previous session and ask for feedback from the patient over the past-week experiences |
| Review the homework assignment |
| A structured agenda from the mutually agreed-upon goals is to be focused (problem listed during assessment sessions and preferably be decided in the previous session) |
| The patient is allowed to describe his/her psychotic experiences freely |
| The therapist then emphasizes upon the cognitive model of the specific psychotic symptom by directing or creating a link between predominant mood during the psychotic experience, thoughts, feelings, and behaviors |
| Underlying beliefs are explored by Socratic questioning in an empathetic manner (e.g., |
| These beliefs are then analyzed and linked with the patient’s past and present difficulties |
| The patient is asked to analyze any alternative possible explanations for his/her beliefs. If the patient does not come upon with any explanation, guided nonjudgmental explanations are provided by the therapist, leaving the patient to think to accept or refute the explanation provided |
| Behavioral strategies are explained and homework is assigned to the patient to test his/her beliefs experimentally using the strategies |
| The session should end with summarization of the discussion in the session and asking the patient’s about his/her understanding of the strategies explained to him/her or by asking him/her to enumerate things to do if he/she experiences similar symptoms |
| Focused and limited homework tasks should be given |
| Brief overview of the next session should be provided and the topic to be discussed in the next session should be mutually agreed upon |
Cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis techniques for persistent delusions
| Phase | Techniques/steps to be used |
|---|---|
| Assessment phase (initial sessions) | The therapist should try to understand the patient’s life as a whole, not just focusing on the delusions |
| Evaluate the past life events and patient’s reaction to them | |
| Explore the predelusional beliefs by inquiring into daydreams, fantasies, and usual perceptions about others/self/society | |
| Assessment phase (later sessions) | Inquire about proximal events/antecedents critical to the onset of the delusions |
| Inquire about the triggering events of the delusions in the current scenario (such as walking in the market and sensations in the legs) | |
| Consequences - emotional (anger/irritability/sadness/fear) and behavioral (avoidance/acting out/confronting with others) to be assessed | |
| Interventional phase (initial sessions) | After assessing and interpreting patient’s delusional beliefs and past and current events, gently probe for the evidence regarding the delusions by asking questions such as |
| Possible alternative explanations are asked: | |
| The patient is allowed to interpret any alternative explanations. Further, ask about the level of surety, which the patient has for his/her previous beliefs and alternative explanations | |
| Give explanation about the falsity of his/her assumptions | |
| Allow the patient to agree or refute the therapist’s explanation | |
| Similar practice sessions are carried out till the patient understands the link between thoughts, beliefs, and behaviors | |
| Homework assignments are given to list down similar experiences and analyze them | |
| Interventional phase (later sessions) | Gradually, the patient is educated about the cognitive model and the role of cognitive biases and distortions (such as jumping into conclusions, selective abstraction, and maximization) |
| The certainty of patient’s beliefs begins to break down, and more balanced and less distressing interpretations are developed | |
| Behavioral experiments are carried out toward the end of the therapy to test the accuracy of the new interpretations and invoke cognitive change to the delusional beliefs[ | |
| It should be taken into account that weakening of delusions is a difficult task and therapists should not be of the mindset that a single brilliantly designed experiment will be effective[ | |
| The focus should be done on achieving small goals slowly |
Cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis techniques for persistent hallucinations
| Phase | Techniques/steps to be used |
|---|---|
| Assessment phase (initial 3-4 sessions) | A thorough assessment of the auditory hallucinations with regard to the frequency, intensity, duration, timing of the day, variability of the voices, interference with work/activities, acting-out behavior, etc. |
| Evaluate the triggering events/places/situations as well as the mood state prior to and during hallucinatory experiences (usually the patients report of hearing more voices when they are stressed or are upset following any interpersonal relationship issues, arguments, facing difficulties at workplace, financial crisis, etc.) | |
| Inquire about the situations/circumstances when voices are not heard/experienced | |
| Shorter sessions are usually done as the exploration could be distressing to some patients | |
| Interventional phase | Motivated the patient to maintain a diary to monitor the triggers, mood states, and voices being experienced throughout the day |
| Encourage the patient to record the voices experienced in their own verbatim. For example, patients may record either few derogatory words being heard frequently, or sentences such as “you are not good,” | |
| Explore the beliefs the patient harbors about the existence of the experienced voices (such as | |
| Employ gentle questioning to elicit alternative view points on the content and belief system of the patient. The approach to challenge the beliefs of the patient with auditory hallucinations is similar to that explained for dealing with delusions | |
| Gradually, the patient starts to self-analyze the situations and his/her thoughts when he/she experiences the hallucinations | |
| Gently attempt to address inconsistencies in belief system and perceptual disturbances experienced without direct challenging. | |
| Care needs be taken not to say things such as | |
| Incorporate behavioral experiments: | |
| Provide information to the patient about the knowledge gained from the assessment phase (about triggering events, maintaining factors, and mood states), i.e., make the patient aware about the situations where and when the voices start and how they diminish (e.g., when patient engages in some conversation, he/she stops hearing the voices). Such examples can be gathered from the patient and can be taught to the patient to employ them when he/she hear the distressing voices. Those who experience commanding voices can be asked to ignore the voices and get busy into activities and to check the consequence. Gradually, patients begin to learn these strategies and distress experienced gets reduced. | |
| Distraction techniques can be suggested to deal with hallucinations. These can include (1) getting busy into some activities, (2) hearing music when they start hearing voices, (3) getting engaged into some conversation, (4) watching a movie/television, and (5) doing any activity which one is more interested/pursing hobbies. | |
| The last goal is to help the patients to work with the content or theme of the hallucinations, i.e., to recognize that the voices are either reflection of their own attitudes about themselves or those they imagine others to have about them.[ |
Figure 3Detail Flowchart/Summary of CBTp interventions