| Literature DB >> 34374966 |
Janina Werz1,2, Ulrich Voderholzer3,4,5, Brunna Tuschen-Caffier6.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Patients with eating disorders (ED) pose a high-risk group regarding relapse. The understanding of factors contributing to a better outcome is much-needed. Therapeutic alliance (TA) is one important, pantheoretical variable in the treatment process, which has shown to be connected with outcome. This review looks into a possible predictive effect of TA on outcome as well as related variables.Entities:
Keywords: Anorexia nervosa; Bulimia nervosa; Eating disorders; Outcome; Systematic review; Therapeutic alliance; Working alliance
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34374966 PMCID: PMC9079014 DOI: 10.1007/s40519-021-01281-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eat Weight Disord ISSN: 1124-4909 Impact factor: 3.008
Fig. 1Flowchart of the screening process
Overview of all included studies
| Citation | Sample | Dx | Treatment | Setting | Gender/main ethnictiy | TA measure/point in time | ED measure | Quality assessment | Outcome associated with TA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accurso et al. [ | 80 | Adults | BN | ICAT CBT-E | Outpatient | 90% female | WAI-SR | Frequency of BPE | Good | Significant positive effect of TA on outcome (after controlling for previous outcome) |
Sessions 2, 8, 14 1 week FU | ||||||||||
| Significant positive effect of outcome on TA (after controlling for previous TA) | ||||||||||
| 21 sessions | 88% white | |||||||||
| Bourion-Bedes et al. [ | 108 | Adolescents | AN | IT SP | Inpatient and outpatient | 94% female | HAQ-CP | Weight, EAT-26 | Good-fair | TA significant predictor of reaching target weight |
| 85 | Parents | |||||||||
| Sessions 3, 6 and at reaching target weight | Significant relationship between TA and less time needed until reaching target weight | |||||||||
| No information about duration of treatment | ||||||||||
| 23 | Therapists | |||||||||
| Brown et al. [ | 65 | Adults | AN | CBT | Outpatient | 99% female | WAI-SR | Weight, EDE-Q, completion | Good-fair | No significant effect of TA on completion or BMI |
| Sessions: mean = 31 | Session 6, end of treatment | Weight gain significantly linked to later TA | ||||||||
| 81% white | ||||||||||
| Constan-tino et al. [ | 220 | Adults | BN | CBT IPT | Outpatient | 100% female | HAQ | EDE, PFF | Good-fair | Significant positive effect of TA on outcome (after controlling for previous outcome); some differences between therapies |
| 19 sessions | ||||||||||
| 77% white | Session 4, 12 | |||||||||
| Significant positive effect of prior symptom change on later TA only in IPT | ||||||||||
| Forsberg et al [ | 38 | Adolescents | AN | FBT | Outpatient | 87% female | WAI-O | Weight, restraint-question from EDE | Fair | No significant effect of parents’ TA while controlling for early recovery |
| Parents | ||||||||||
| 76% white | Session 3, 4 or 5 | |||||||||
| No analyses regarding the influence of adolescents' TA on outcome | ||||||||||
| 24 sessions | ||||||||||
| Forsberg et al. [ | 78 | Adolescents | AN | FBT 24 × 60 min sessions | Outpatient | 91% female | WAI-O | weight, restraint -question from EDE | good | Significant positive effect of TA on outcome measured as “partial remission”—no significant effect on outcome measured as “full remission”; after controlling for early change |
| Session 3, 4 or 5 | ||||||||||
| 76% white | ||||||||||
| AFT 32 × 45 min sessions | ||||||||||
| Hartmann et al. [ | 43 | Adults | BN | PDT | Inpatient/day clinic | 93% female | HAQ | EDI-2, SIAB | Good-fair | No significant effect of TA on remission status |
| Mean duration: 3 months | ||||||||||
| Sessions 3 and every 8th session after | ||||||||||
| Hughes et al. [ | 106 | Adolescents | AN/EDNOS | FBT PFT | Outpatient | 88% female | HRQ | Weight, EDE-I | Fair | Different results for FBT and PFT: FBT: significant difference between groups regarding fathers' TA (higher for early responders) |
| Parents | 18 sessions | Session 3 | ||||||||
| PFT: significant difference between groups regarding patients' TA (higher for early responders) | ||||||||||
| Isserlin and Couturier [ | 14 | Adolescents | AN | FBT | Outpatient | 100% female | SOFTA | Weight, EDE | Fair | Significant positive effect of parents' early TA on weight and patients' early TA on EDE |
| Parents | Sessions: | Session 1, 2, 3, mid-treatment (median: session 8) end of treatment (median: session 12) | Significant difference regarding drop-out dependent on parents' mid- and late-TA | |||||||
| Jordan et al. [ | 56 | Adults | AN | SSCM IPT CBT | Outpatient | 100% female | VTAS-R | Completion | Good-fair | Significant effect of TA on completion (higher TA, less drop-out) |
| Session 1–5 | ||||||||||
| 20 sessions | ||||||||||
| Loeb et al. [ | 81 | Adults | BN | CBT IPT | Outpatient | 100% female | VTAS-R | EDE—purge frequency | Good | No significant effect of TA over time on outcome |
| Session 6, 12,18 | Significant positive effect of early TA on outcome | |||||||||
| 20 sessions | ||||||||||
| No significant effect of symptom change on later TA | ||||||||||
| Marzola et al. [ | 173 | Mixed age SD: 9.7 | AN | PDT | Inpatient emergency admissions | 100% female | WAI-SR | Weight, EDE-Q | Poor in regards to our question | Significant correlation between TA and BMI at discharge (after controlling for baseline BMI) |
| Mean duration: 36 days | 100% white | Discharge | ||||||||
| Pelizzer et al. [ | 62 | Adults | BN/OSFED | CBT | Outpatient | 92% female | WAI-SR | Weight, EDE-Q | Good-fair | No significant effect of early TA change on outcome (high TA at session 1) |
| 87% white | Session 1, 4, 10 | |||||||||
| 10 sessions | ||||||||||
| Pereira et al. [ | 42 | Adolescents | AN | FBT | Outpatient | 91% female | WAI-O | EDE-I, completion | Good-fair | Significant correlation between parents' TA and drop-out |
| Parents | ||||||||||
| 12 months (20 sessions) vs 6 months (10 sessions) | 74% white | Session 6, 16 | Significant correlation between adolescents’ TA and early weight gain | |||||||
| No significant effect of TA on outcome (EDE) | ||||||||||
| Raykos et al. [ | 112 | Adults (> 16 years) | BN | CBT-E | Outpatient | 99% female | HAQ-II | EDE-Q, completion | Good-fair | Significant correlation of TA and outcome |
| No significant predictive effect of TA on completion or outcome | ||||||||||
| 20 sessions | Session 2, 10, 20 | |||||||||
| Rienecke et al. [ | 56 | adolescents (age | AN | FBT | Day program | 93% female | WAI (regarding the whole treatment team) | Weight, EDE-Q, completion | Fair | Significant predictive effect of patients' TA on EDE-Q at discharge |
| Mean duration: 27.6 days | ||||||||||
| No significant effect of TA on completion or weight | ||||||||||
| 93% white | ||||||||||
| Session 2, discharge | no significant effect of parents' TA on outcome | |||||||||
| Sly et al. [ | 90 | Adults | AN | Based on NICE guidelines no further information | Inpatient | 97% female | WAI-S | Completion | Good | Significant predictive effect of early TA on completion |
| 98% white | Week 1, week 4, discharge | |||||||||
| No significant effect of early TA change on completion | ||||||||||
| Sly et al. [ | 90 | Adults | AN | Based on NICE guidelines, no further information | Inpatient | 97% female | WAI-S | Staff-initiated premature discharge vs. patient-initiated premature discharge | Good | No significant effect of TA on reason for drop-out |
| 98% white | Week 1, week 4, discharge | |||||||||
| Stiles-Shields et al. [ | 63 | Adults | SE-AN | CBT-AN SSCM | Outpatient | 100% female | HRQ | Weight, EDE-I | good-fair | Significant predictive effect of early TA on EDE-I subscales at 12-month FU |
| Session 2, 15, 30 | ||||||||||
| No significant effect of early TA on other outcomes | ||||||||||
| 30 sessions | Significant predictive effect of late-TA on weight, EDE global and EDE subscales at discharge and 12-month FU | |||||||||
| Treasure et al. [ | 125 | Adults | BN | CBT ME | Outpatient | 100% female | WAI | Frequency of BPE | Poor in regards to our question | Significant correlation between therapists' TA subscale "task" and outcome |
| Session 4 | ||||||||||
| Therapists | Significant correlation between patients' TA subscales “Task” and “goal” with outcome | |||||||||
| Study on first four weeks of treatment | ||||||||||
| Turner et al. [ | 94 | Adults | Mixed | CBT | Outpatient | 95% female | WAI-SR | EDE-Q (early change) | Good-fair | Marginal significant predictive effect of TA on later change in symptoms |
| 20 sessions (min. 10 sessions, max. 40 sessions) | Significant predictive effect of early change in symptoms on TA | |||||||||
| session 6 | ||||||||||
| van der Kaap-Deeder et al. [ | 53 | Mixed age SD = 5.5; range = 14.6–44.3 | Mixed | Specialized ED treatment, no information on duration | Inpatient | 100% female | WAI-SR subscale bond | EDI-II subscales: drive for thinness, bulimia, body dissatisfaction | Fair | Significant predictive effect of TA on body dissatisfaction (1 year after start of treatment) |
| After 3 months of treatment | ||||||||||
| Waller et al. [ | 93 | Adults | Mixed | CBT-ED | Outpatient | 97% female | WAI-SR | EDE-Q, completion | Good | Significant predictive effect of early change in TA on overall change in EDE-Q |
| 10 sessions | ||||||||||
Session 1, 4, 10 3 months FU | ||||||||||
| No significant predictive effect of TA on completion | ||||||||||
| Waller et al. [ | 44 | Adults | Mixed | CBT | Outpatient | 96% female | WAI-SR | Weight, EDE-Q | Poor in regards to our question | No significant correlation between TA and outcome |
Mean sessions: AN: 34 BN: 19 | ||||||||||
| Session 6 | ||||||||||
| Wilson et al. [ | 120 | Adults | BN | CBT ST (with additional medication or placebo) | Outpatient | 100% female | HRQ | Number of daily BPE, remission, completion | Good-fair | Significant effect of mean TA on remission status |
| Session 5, 12, 20 | ||||||||||
| Significant effect of prior symptom change on TA at session 12 | ||||||||||
| No significant effect of TA on subsequent symptom change | ||||||||||
| 20 sessions | ||||||||||
| Zaitsoff et al. [ | 80 | Adolescents | BN | FBT SIP | Outpatient | 98% female | HRQ | EDE objective binge/purge episodes | Poor in regards to our question | Significant correlation between mid-TA (not late-TA) and outcome in SPT group |
| 20 sessions | 64% white | Session 10, 20 | ||||||||
| No significant correlation between mid- and late-TA and outcome in FBT group |
Not all studies included data on ethnicity, and hence, only for some studies percentages of main ethnicity can be described. Percentages are rounded to integers. AN anorexia nervosa, BN bulimia nervosa, Dx diagnosis, ED eating disorder, AFT adolescent focused therapy, CBT cognitive behavioral therapy, CBT-E/CBT-ED/CBT-AN cognitive behavioral therapy, specialized for eating disorders, FBT family-based therapy, ICAT integrative cognitive-affective therapy, IPT interpersonal therapy, IT individual therapy, ME motivation enhancement, NHLBI National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, PDT psychodynamic therapy, PFT parent focused therapy, SSCM specialist supportive clinical management, SIP supportive individual therapy, ST supportive therapy, TA therapeutic alliance, HAQ/HRQ Helping Alliance/Relationship Questionnaire, HAQ-CP Helping Alliance Questionnaire for Children, Parents and Therapists, SOFTA System for Observing Family Alliances, V-TAS Vanderbilt Therapeutic Alliance Scale-revised, WAI Working Alliance Inventory (s short version, r revised version, o observer version), BPE binge-purging episode, EAT-26 Eating Attitudes Test-26, EDE Eating Disorder Examination (I interview, Q questionnaire), EDI-II Eating Disorder Inventory II, PFF Purge Frequency Form; SIAB Structured Inventory of Anorexic and Bulimic Syndromes