A Novel Psychosocial Intervention for Motivational Negative Symptoms in Schizophrenia: Combined Motivational Interviewing and CBT

Objective:Negative symptoms are a primary cause of disability in schizophrenia for which there are no established pharmacotherapies. This study evaluated a novel psychosocial intervention that combined two evidence-based practices—motivational interviewing and cognitive-behavioral therapy (MI-CBT)—f...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of psychiatry 2023-05, Vol.180 (5), p.367-376
Hauptverfasser: Reddy, L. Felice, Glynn, Shirley M., McGovern, Jessica E., Sugar, Catherine A., Reavis, Eric A., Green, Michael F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective:Negative symptoms are a primary cause of disability in schizophrenia for which there are no established pharmacotherapies. This study evaluated a novel psychosocial intervention that combined two evidence-based practices—motivational interviewing and cognitive-behavioral therapy (MI-CBT)—for the treatment of motivational negative symptoms.Methods:Seventy-nine participants with schizophrenia and moderate to severe negative symptoms were included in a randomized controlled trial comparing the 12-session MI-CBT treatment with a mindfulness control condition. Participants were assessed at three time points through the study period, which included 12 weeks of active treatment and 12 weeks of follow-up. The primary outcome measures were motivational negative symptoms and community functioning; the secondary outcomes included a posited biomarker of negative symptoms: pupillometric response to cognitive effort.Results:Compared with the control group, participants in the MI-CBT group showed significantly greater improvements in motivational negative symptoms over the acute treatment period. Their gains relative to baseline were maintained at follow-up, although the differential benefit relative to control subjects was attenuated. There were nonsignificant effects toward improvements in community functioning and differential change in the pupillometric markers of cognitive effort.Conclusions:The results show that combining motivational interviewing with CBT yields improvements in negative symptoms, a feature of schizophrenia generally thought of as resistant to intervention. Motivational negative symptoms not only responded to the novel treatment, but the gains were maintained over the follow-up period. Implications for future studies and for improving the generalization of the negative symptom gains to daily functioning domains are discussed.
ISSN:0002-953X
1535-7228
DOI:10.1176/appi.ajp.20220243