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Symptom Severity at Week 4 of Cognitive-Behavior Therapy Predicts Depression Remission
Affiliation:Oakland Cognitive Behavior Therapy Center and University of California, Berkeley;San Francisco Group for Evidence-Based Psychotherapy and University of California, San Francisco;KU, Leuven, Belgium;Alpert Medical School of Brown University;Temple University;University of Pittsburgh and Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic;Temple University;University of Illinois–Chicago;University of Illinois–Urbana Champaign;University of Wisconsin–Madison;Temple University;University of Alabama;Alexandria University;Virginia Tech;University of Alabama;University of Southern California;Old Dominion University;Virginia Consortium Program in Clinical Psychology;Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Gold Coast Campus;Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Mount Gravatt Campus;Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Gold Coast Campus;University of Coimbra;Landspítali-University Hospital;Emory University
Abstract:Early response has been shown to predict psychotherapy outcome. We examined the strength of the relationship between early response and remission in 82 patients who received naturalistic cognitive-behavior therapy in a private practice setting, and 158 patients who received protocol cognitive therapy in a research setting. We predicted that the relationship between early response and remission would be substantial enough to guide clinical decision making in both samples, and that a simple model of severity at Week 4 of treatment would predict remission as effectively as a more complex change score. Logistic regressions showed that a simple model based on the Week 4 Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) score was as predictive of remission as more complex models of early change. A receiver operating characteristics analysis showed that BDI score at Week 4 was substantially predictive of remission in both the naturalistic and research protocol samples; the area under the curve was .80 and .84 in the naturalistic and protocol samples, respectively. To guide clinical decision making, we identified threshold scores on the BDI corresponding to various negative predictive values (probability of nonremission when nonremission is predicted). Our results indicate that depressed patients who remain severely depressed at Week 4 of cognitive therapy are unlikely to reach remission at the end of relatively brief (maximum 20 sessions) treatment. We discuss implications of our findings for clinical decision making and treatment development.
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