| Literature DB >> 32206586 |
Ahsan Nazeer1, Finza Latif2, Aisha Mondal2, Muhammad Waqar Azeem3, Donald E Greydanus4.
Abstract
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) can be found in about 4% of the general population and is characterized by various compulsions and obsessions that interfere with the person's quality of life from a mild to severe degree. The following discussion reflects on current concepts in this condition, including its epidemiology and etiologic underpinnings (behavioral, neurological, immunological, gastroenterological, as well as genetic). The interplay of PANS and PANDAS are included in this review. In addition, the core concepts of OCD diagnosis, differential diagnosis, and co-morbidities are considered. It is stressed that the quality of life for persons with pediatric OCD as well as for family members can be quite limited and challenged. Thus, principles of management are presented as a guide to improve the quality of life for these persons as much as possible. 2020 Translational Pediatrics. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Obsessions; co-morbidities; compulsions; diagnosis; psychological therapy; quality of life; selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32206586 PMCID: PMC7082239 DOI: 10.21037/tp.2019.10.02
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Pediatr ISSN: 2224-4336
Evidence for psychotherapy treatments for pediatric OCD
| Authors, country, year | N | Outcome measures | Subjects | Study design, duration | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Therapy | |||||
| March, USA, 1998, ( | 112 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 7–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD and CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to pill placebo, CBT, sertraline, or CBT and sertraline combination for 12 weeks | The CBT, sertraline, and combination group had a statistically significant response over placebo group. Combination treatment was more efficacious than either only CBT or only sertraline. Results of CBT alone group did not differ significantly from sertraline alone group |
| Williams, UK, 2010, ( | 21 | CY-BOCS | Male and female outpatients ages 9–18 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD | 10 sessions of manualized cognitive behavioral treatment with a 12-week waiting list. Assessments completed at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months | The group who received treatment improved more than the comparison group who waited for 3 months. The original waitlist group subsequently received the same treatment and made similar gains |
| Frequency/duration | |||||
| Storch, USA, 2007, ( | 40 | CYBOCS, remission status, CGI-S, CGI-I | Male and female outpatients ages 7–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD and CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to 14 sessions of either weekly or daily family-based CBT. Symptoms were evaluated before treatment, immediately after treatment, and at 3 months post-treatment | Daily and weekly CBT were equally effective with no statistical differences seen during follow-up and improvements in symptoms maintained over time |
| Bolton, UK, 2011, ( | 96 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 8–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD | Randomized to full CBT course (12 sessions with therapist), brief CBT course (5 sessions with therapist, use of a therapist-guided workbook), or waitlist control group for 12 weeks | Compared to the waitlist group, both treatment groups experienced a statistically significant improvement in symptoms. Between the two treatment groups, there were no significant differences. At 14-week follow-up, improvement in symptoms was maintained |
| Torp, Norway, 2015, ( | 50 | CYBOCS, remission status | Male and female outpatients ages 7–17, DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD who did not respond to initial 14-week course of individual CBT | Randomized to sertraline or ongoing CBT for an additional 16 weeks | No significant difference between the treatments (P=0.351). In CBT group, 50.0% response rate. In sertraline group, 45.4% response rate |
| Family involvement | |||||
| Piacentini, USA, 2011, ( | 71 | CY-BOCS, CGI-I, Child Obsessive Compulsive Impact Scale-Revised (COIS-R) | Male and female outpatients ages 8–17 at pediatric OCD specialty clinic; primary DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD with CY-BOCS >15, on no medication | Randomized to 12 sessions of family CBT (FCBT) or PRT (psychoeducation + relaxation training) for 14 weeks | FCBT group had remission rate of 43%, while PRT remission rate was 18% |
| Peris, USA, 2013, ( | 21 | CGI-I | Male and female patients ages 8-17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD with CY-BOCS >15 and “high levels of family distress” defined by scales of measure for level of family cohesion, conflict, and blame | Randomized to individual child CBT (with weekly parent check-ins) or Positive Family Interaction Therapy (PFIT), which was structured as individual child CBT with six additional family sessions focused on family dynamics. Both treatments delivered for 12 weeks | Both treatment groups reported high level of satisfaction. 95% of the PFIT family sessions were attended by both parents. Patients in individual CBT only experienced a 40% response rate on their CGI-I, while those in PFIT arm experienced a 79% response rate. Improvement in symptoms was maintained at 3-month follow-up for both groups |
| Reynolds, UK, 2013, ( | 50 | CYBOCS | Male and female patients ages 12–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD | Randomized to individual CBT (with parental involvement in three sessions) or “parent-enhanced CBT” with parental involvement at all sessions. Treatments were delivered for 14 sessions | Both groups demonstrated improvement in OCDsymptoms |
| Group format | |||||
| Barrett, Australia, 2004, ( | 77 | The Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for Children-Parent version (ADIS-P), The National Institute of Mental Health Global Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (NIMH GOCS), CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 7-17, with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD, on stable medication regimen or no medications | Randomized to individual CBFT, group CBFT, or a 4- to 6-week waitlist control condition. Assessments completed pre- and post-treatment, 3-month follow-up, and 6-month follow-up | Individual CBFT demonstrated 88% response rate |
| Asbahr, Brazil, 2005, ( | 40 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 9–17 years old with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD with NIMH GOCS >7 | Randomized to receive group CBT or sertraline. Group CBT was manual-based program lasting 12 weeks. Assessments completed pre-treatment, during treatment, and post-treatment (1, 3, 6, and 9 months following treatment) | Both Group CBT and sertraline conditions had significant improvement CY-BOCS total scores (both groups: P<0.001) at conclusion of treatment. Those in group CBT experienced a significantly lower rate of symptom relapse at the 9-month follow-up compared to those in sertraline group |
| Telephone and web-based format | |||||
| Storch, USA, 2011, ( | 31 | CY-BOCS, CGI-I, remission status | Male and female patients ages 7–16 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD and CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to family-based CBT provided through web-camera (W-CBT) or waitlist control. Assessments performed before treatment, after treatment, and at 3-month follow-up | Those receiving W-CBT had statistically significant improvements in all outcome measures over those in waitlist control group. 56% of W-CBT |
| Turner, UK, 2014, ( | 72 | CYBOCS | Male and female outpatients ages 11–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD | Randomized to telephone-based or in-person CBT with exposure and response prevention for 14 sessions | There was no significant difference in response rate between the two groups at post-treatment (90.6% for in-person |
| Age of participants | |||||
| Freeman, USA, 2012, ( | 127 | CGI-I, CY-BOCS. | Male and female outpatients ages 5–8, with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD with CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to FB-RT (family-based relaxation training) or FB-CBT (family-based CBT) with exposure and response prevention for 14 weeks | At 14 weeks, 72% of FB-CBT participants and 41% of FB-RT participants were scored as much improved or very much improved based on CGI-I |
| Variations on CBT format | |||||
| Merlo, USA, 2010, ( | 16 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 6–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD with CY-BOCS >16 who were already participating in intensive family-based CBT for OCD | Randomized to CBT plus motivational interviewing (MI) or CBT plus extra psychoeducation (PE) sessions | Average CY-BOCS score for the CBT + MI group was significantly lower than the CBT + PE group at 4 weeks, but at post-treatment, these scores were not significantly different |
CY-BOCS, Children’s Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale; CGI-S, Clinical Global Impression-Severity scale; CGI-I, Clinical Global Impression -Improvement scale; NIMH GOCS: The National Institute of Mental Health Global Obsessive-Compulsive Scale; CBFT, cognitive-behavioral family therapy.
Evidence for pharmacological treatments for pediatric OCD
| Authors, country, year | N | Outcome measures | Gender, ages | Study design, duration | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clomipramine | |||||
| DeVeaugh-Geiss, USA, 1992, ( | 60 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 10–17 with DSM-III diagnosis of OCD with CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to 8-week trial of clomipramine | Average decrease in CY-BOCS of 37% of clomipramine |
| de Haan, Holland, 1998, ( | 22 | CY-BOCS and Leyton Obsessional Inventory-Child Version (LOI-CV) | Male and female patients ages 8–18 with DSM-III diagnosis of OCD | Randomized to behavior therapy or clomipramine (mean dose of 2.5 mg/kg) for 12 weeks. Behavior therapy involved weekly sessions of exposure and response prevention | Participants in behavior therapy arm had 59.9% mean improvement from baseline CY-BOCS total compared to 33.4% in clomipramine group. No significant difference on the LOI-CV between the two treatments |
| Fluoxetine | |||||
| Riddle, USA, 1992, ( | 14 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 8–15 with DSM-III diagnosis of OCD and CGI-S >4 | Randomized to fixed dose of fluoxetine (20 mg daily) or placebo. Study lasted 20 weeks with crossover at 8 weeks | At 8 weeks, fluoxetine treatment group had an average decrease in CY-BOCS total score of 44% compared to 27% in placebo group |
| Geller, USA, 2001, ( | 103 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 7–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD and CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to fluoxetine (10 mg daily x 2 weeks, then 20 mg daily) or placebo. At 4 weeks and at 7 weeks, fluoxetine dose was increased by 20 mg daily for non-responders | Fluoxetine group had a significant reduction in OCD severity over the placebo group. Fluoxetine and placebo groups had a similar rate of discontinuation due to adverse effects |
| Liebowitz, USA, 2002, ( | 43 | CY-BOCS, CGI-I | Male and female patients ages 6–18 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD and CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to fluoxetine or placebo for 8 weeks. Responders continued treatment for an additional 8-week maintenance period | No statistical difference in CY-BOCS at 8 weeks, but by 16 weeks, fluoxetine group had significantly lower CY-BOCS compared to placebo. At 16 weeks, 57% of fluoxetine and 27% of placebo patients were much or very much improved per CGI-I scale. No patients withdrew from the study due to adverse effects |
| Fluvoxamine | |||||
| Neziroglu, USA, 2000, ( | 10 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 10–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD | All patients started on fluvoxamine for 10 weeks. After initial 10 weeks, patients randomized to continue on fluvoxamine alone or continue on fluvoxamine and receive 20 sessions of behavioral therapy. Both groups received treatment for 1 year | By week 10, 80% patients had significant improvement on CY-BOCS. Patients in combination treatment demonstrated significantly more improvement |
| Riddle, USA, 2001, ( | 14 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 8–17 with DSM-III diagnosis of OCD and CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to fluvoxamine (50–200 mg/day) or placebo for 10 weeks. At 6 weeks, non-responders could choose to withdraw from double-blind phase and enter open-label trial of fluvoxamine | Significant difference in percentage of responders (defined as 25% or greater reduction in CY-BOCS)—42% of fluvoxamine group |
| Paroxetine | |||||
| Geller, USA, 2004, ( | 203 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients aged 7–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD | Randomized to Paroxetine (10–50 mg/day) | −8.78 |
| Sertraline | |||||
| March, USA, 1998, ( | 187 | CY-BOCS. NIMH GOCS. CGI-S. CGI-I | Male and female patients ages 6–17 with DSM-III diagnosis of OCD and GOCS >7 | Randomized to sertraline (up to 200 mg daily) or placebo. Sertraline dose was titrated during the first 4 weeks of treatment, then sertraline recipients were maintained on the same dose for an additional 8 weeks | Sertraline patients had significantly greater improvement compared to placebo patients on all measures—on CY-BOCS (adjusted mean, −6.8 |
| March, USA, 2006, ( | 112 | CY-BOCS | Male and female patients ages 7–17 with DSM-IV diagnosis of OCD and CY-BOCS >16 | Randomized to pill placebo, CBT, sertraline, or combined CBT and sertraline for 12 weeks | The CBT, sertraline, and combination group had a significantly significant response over the placebo group. Combination treatment was more efficacious than either only CBT or only sertraline. Results of CBT alone group did not differ significantly from sertraline alone group |
CY-BOCS, Children’s Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale; CGI-S, Clinical Global Impression-Severity scale; CGI-I, Clinical Global Impression-Improvement scale; NIMH GOCS, The National Institute of Mental Health Global Obsessive-Compulsive Scale.