| Literature DB >> 32372291 |
Oswald D Kothgassner1, Anna Felnhofer2.
Abstract
Anxiety disorders are one of the most prevalent mental disorders in children and adolescents which may effectively be treated by several forms of exposure therapy. An emerging approach to exposure is virtual reality exposure therapy (VRET), but a literature search synthesis focusing specifically on the use of VRET in children and adolescents is still lacking. This systematic review sets out to provide an overview concerning VRET for the treatment of anxiety disorders in this age group. Four published trials covering an overall sample of 100 participants between the ages of 8 and 16 years were found during a systematic literature search and were included in the current review. Results reveal that participants show clinical improvements regarding anxiety symptoms after VRET. Nevertheless, the high potential of virtual reality as a tool for treating children and adolescents with anxiety disorders is contrasted by a considerable lack of controlled trials. Despite the evidence of VRET in adult samples, there is a need for more research with younger cohorts in order to be able to support this promising field of application.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety disorders; Exposure treatment; Specific phobia; Virtual reality; Youth
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32372291 PMCID: PMC8245387 DOI: 10.1007/s40211-020-00349-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr ISSN: 0948-6259
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart of screening, exclusion and inclusion criteria. VRET virtual reality exposure therapy, ASD autism spectrum disorder
Characteristics of the four studies included in the systematic review and one feasibility study
| Study | Population | Control | Main outcome for review | Age in years | Female % | Treatment duration | Eligibility | SOE | Main results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gutiérrez-Maldonado et al. (2009) [ | RCT, WL | School-based fears (IME), General fears questionnaire (FSSC-R) | 18 | 18 | 10 to 15 | 63.9 | 8 sessions | Moderate | VRET was able to reduce the severity of reported school-based fears and showed better outcomes than WL (r = 0.64 for pre–post treatment comparison) | ||
| VRET has no influence on general self-reported anxiety | |||||||||||
| St-Jacques et al. (2010) [ | RCT, IVE | Spider Phobia (SPBQ, BAT) | 17 | 14 | 8 to 15 | 83.9 | 5 sessions | Moderate | VRET showed comparable reductions in the self-reported fear of spiders as IVE (η2 = 0.56 for pre–post treatment comparison) | ||
| Differences between both conditions concerning BAT are reported at baseline (pre-measure) | |||||||||||
| VRET did not increase motivation toward treatment | |||||||||||
| Reported some adverse effects (children reported that they got “stuck in the headset”) | |||||||||||
| Kahlon et al. (2019) [ | Pre–Post evaluation, no control | Public Speaking Anxiety (PSAS) | 27 | N/A | 13 to 16 | 78.0 | 90 min single session | Moderate | VRET showed significant decrease in self-reported Public Speaking Anxiety compared to pre-treatment (Cohens d = 1.53) | ||
| Only small increase in heart rate during exposure | |||||||||||
| Servera et al. (2019) [ | Pre–Post evaluation, no control | Fear of Darkness (EMO) | 6 | N/A | 8 to 12 | 50.0 | 6 to 8 sessions | Low | Overall, VRET significantly reduced the fear of darkness reported by proxy compared to pretreatment baseline level (r = 0.50) | ||
| VRET did not work in 1/3 of participants | |||||||||||
| Parrish et al. (2016) [ | Feasibility Study, without evaluation, comparing SAD to Non-SAD | 21 | 20 | 13 to 18 | 65.9 | N/A | N/A | VRET appears feasible for adolescents with SAD | |||
| Adolescents with SAD showed differences to non-SAD regarding SUDs during public speaking | |||||||||||
VRET virtual reality exposure therapy, BAT Behavioral Approach Test, EMO Escala de Evaluación del Miedo a la Oscuridad/Assessment Scale of Fear of Darkness, FSSC‑R Fear Survey Schedule for Children—Revised, IME School-Related Fears Inventory, IVE In vivo exposure treatment, LSAS Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale for Children and Adolescents, PSAS Public Speaking Anxiety Scale, SPBQ Spider Phobia Beliefs Questionnaire, SOE Strength of Evidence, SUDS Subjective Units of Distress Scale, WL Waiting list, RCT randomized controlled trial
Fig. 2Risk of bias assessment [10, 11, 21, 23]. + low risk of bias (green), +/− moderate risk of bias (yellow), − high risk of bias (red)