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Early Change Trajectories in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Binge-Eating Disorder
Authors:Anja Hilbert  Stephan Herpertz  Stephan Zipfel  Brunna Tuschen-Caffier  Hans-Christoph Friederich  Andreas Mayr  Ross D. Crosby  Martina de Zwaan
Affiliation:University of Leipzig Medical Center;Ruhr-University Bochum;Medical University Hospital Tuebingen;University of Freiburg;University of Düsseldorf;University of Erlangen-Nuremberg;Neuropsychiatric Research Institute, Fargo, ND;Hannover Medical School
Abstract:Rapid response is considered the most well-established outcome predictor across treatments of binge-eating disorder (BED), including cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). This study sought to identify latent trajectories of early change in CBT and compare them to common rapid response classifications. In a multicenter randomized trial, 86 adults with BED (DSM-IV) or subsyndromal BED provided weekly self-reports of binge eating over the first 4 weeks of CBT, which were analyzed to predict binge eating, depression, and body mass index at posttreatment, 6-, and 18-month follow-up. Using latent growth mixture modeling, three patterns of early change—including moderate and low decreasing—as well as low stable binge eating were identified, which significantly predicted binge-eating remission at 6-month follow-up. Other classifications of rapid response based on Receiver Operating Characteristics curve analyses or on the literature (≥ 10% reduction in binge eating at week 1, ≥ 70% reduction in binge eating at week 4) only predicted posttreatment remission or overall depression, respectively. Latent change trajectories, but not other rapid response classifications, predicted binge-eating frequency over time. A fine-grained analysis of change over the first 4 weeks of CBT for BED revealed different trajectories of early change in binge eating that led to an improved prediction of binge-eating outcome, compared to that of common rapid response classifications. Thorough monitoring of early change trajectories during treatment may have clinical utility.
Keywords:binge-eating disorder  eating disorder  psychotherapeutic processes  cognitive behavior therapy  prediction
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