Exposure therapy in a virtual environment: Validation in obsessive compulsive disorder

•Virtual exposures elicit comparable anxiety profiles to real-world in OCD patients.•HTC Vive hardware allowed patients to interact dynamically with the environment.•Subjective anxiety and psychophysiological measures were consistent.•Engagement in exposure tasks were higher for virtual, as compared...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of anxiety disorders 2021-05, Vol.80, p.102404-102404, Article 102404
Hauptverfasser: Cullen, Alison J., Dowling, Nathan L., Segrave, Rebecca, Carter, Adrian, Yücel, Murat
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Virtual exposures elicit comparable anxiety profiles to real-world in OCD patients.•HTC Vive hardware allowed patients to interact dynamically with the environment.•Subjective anxiety and psychophysiological measures were consistent.•Engagement in exposure tasks were higher for virtual, as compared to real-world.•The therapeutic alliance can be maintained during virtual reality sessions. Exposure and response prevention (ERP) is the current first-line psychological treatment for Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). However, substantial inter-individual variability exists in treatment outcomes, including inadequate symptom improvements, and notable refusal and attrition rates. These are driven, in part, by impracticalities in simulating intrusive thoughts within clinical settings. Virtual reality (VR) offers the potential of overcoming these limitations in a manner that allows for finely controlled anxiety-provoking scenarios to be created within supportive clinical settings. To validate the potential of VR for treating contamination-based OCD, 22 patients undertook a VR ERP session and a matched session of the current gold-standard of in vivo ERP. In VR, patients were immersed within a contamination environment that permitted flexible delivery of customisable, graded exposure tasks. The VR environment utilised HTC Vive hardware, to allow for patients to both interact with, and physically move through the environment. Subjective and objective measures of distress were recorded, including heart and respiration rates. These measures indicate virtual and in vivo ERP sessions provoke consistent anxiety profiles across an exposure hierarchy. Virtual exposure was advantageous for engagement and adherence to tasks, and the therapeutic alliance was upheld. VR is a promising mechanism for ERP in contamination OCD.
ISSN:0887-6185
1873-7897
DOI:10.1016/j.janxdis.2021.102404