Predicting Treatment Failure in Regular Care Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Depression and Anxiety Using Only Weekly Symptom Measures

Objective: Therapist guided Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavior Therapy (ICBT) is effective, but as in traditional CBT, not all patients improve, and clinicians generally fail to identify them early enough. We predict treatment failure in 12-week regular care ICBT for Depression, Panic disorder an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of consulting and clinical psychology 2020-04, Vol.88 (4), p.311-321
Hauptverfasser: Forsell, Erik, Isacsson, Nils, Blom, Kerstin, Jernelöv, Susanna, Ben Abdesslem, Fehmi, Lindefors, Nils, Boman, Magnus, Kaldo, Viktor
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container_end_page 321
container_issue 4
container_start_page 311
container_title Journal of consulting and clinical psychology
container_volume 88
creator Forsell, Erik
Isacsson, Nils
Blom, Kerstin
Jernelöv, Susanna
Ben Abdesslem, Fehmi
Lindefors, Nils
Boman, Magnus
Kaldo, Viktor
description Objective: Therapist guided Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavior Therapy (ICBT) is effective, but as in traditional CBT, not all patients improve, and clinicians generally fail to identify them early enough. We predict treatment failure in 12-week regular care ICBT for Depression, Panic disorder and Social anxiety disorder, using only patients' weekly symptom ratings to identify when the accuracy of predictions exceed 2 benchmarks: (a) chance, and (b) empirically derived clinician preferences for actionable predictions. Method: Screening, pretreatment and weekly symptom ratings from 4310 regular care ICBT-patients from the Internet Psychiatry Clinic in Stockholm, Sweden was analyzed in a series of regression models each adding 1 more week of data. Final score was predicted in a holdout test sample, which was then categorized into Success or Failure (failure defined as the absence of both remitter and responder status). Classification analyses with Balanced Accuracy and 95% Confidence intervals was then compared to predefined benchmarks. Results: Benchmark 1 (better than chance) was reached 1 week into all treatments. Social anxiety disorder reached Benchmark 2 (>65%) at week 5, whereas Depression and Panic Disorder reached it at week 6. Conclusions: For depression, social anxiety and panic disorder, prediction with only patient-rated symptom scores can detect treatment failure 6 weeks into ICBT, with enough accuracy for a clinician to take action. Early identification of failing treatment attempts may be a viable way to increase the overall success rate of existing psychological treatments by providing extra clinical resources to at-risk patients, within a so-called Adaptive Treatment Strategy. What is the public health significance of this article? The study suggests that clinically actionable predictions of treatment failure in ongoing therapist guided Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavior Therapy can be made halfway through a 12-week long treatment using patient ratings on symptom severity as the only predictor. This means that such predictions could be performed with very simple methods, which would enable clinicians to monitor progress and use an adaptive treatment strategy for patients who are not benefitting from treatment.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/ccp0000462
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We predict treatment failure in 12-week regular care ICBT for Depression, Panic disorder and Social anxiety disorder, using only patients' weekly symptom ratings to identify when the accuracy of predictions exceed 2 benchmarks: (a) chance, and (b) empirically derived clinician preferences for actionable predictions. Method: Screening, pretreatment and weekly symptom ratings from 4310 regular care ICBT-patients from the Internet Psychiatry Clinic in Stockholm, Sweden was analyzed in a series of regression models each adding 1 more week of data. Final score was predicted in a holdout test sample, which was then categorized into Success or Failure (failure defined as the absence of both remitter and responder status). Classification analyses with Balanced Accuracy and 95% Confidence intervals was then compared to predefined benchmarks. Results: Benchmark 1 (better than chance) was reached 1 week into all treatments. Social anxiety disorder reached Benchmark 2 (&gt;65%) at week 5, whereas Depression and Panic Disorder reached it at week 6. Conclusions: For depression, social anxiety and panic disorder, prediction with only patient-rated symptom scores can detect treatment failure 6 weeks into ICBT, with enough accuracy for a clinician to take action. Early identification of failing treatment attempts may be a viable way to increase the overall success rate of existing psychological treatments by providing extra clinical resources to at-risk patients, within a so-called Adaptive Treatment Strategy. What is the public health significance of this article? The study suggests that clinically actionable predictions of treatment failure in ongoing therapist guided Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavior Therapy can be made halfway through a 12-week long treatment using patient ratings on symptom severity as the only predictor. 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We predict treatment failure in 12-week regular care ICBT for Depression, Panic disorder and Social anxiety disorder, using only patients' weekly symptom ratings to identify when the accuracy of predictions exceed 2 benchmarks: (a) chance, and (b) empirically derived clinician preferences for actionable predictions. Method: Screening, pretreatment and weekly symptom ratings from 4310 regular care ICBT-patients from the Internet Psychiatry Clinic in Stockholm, Sweden was analyzed in a series of regression models each adding 1 more week of data. Final score was predicted in a holdout test sample, which was then categorized into Success or Failure (failure defined as the absence of both remitter and responder status). Classification analyses with Balanced Accuracy and 95% Confidence intervals was then compared to predefined benchmarks. Results: Benchmark 1 (better than chance) was reached 1 week into all treatments. Social anxiety disorder reached Benchmark 2 (&gt;65%) at week 5, whereas Depression and Panic Disorder reached it at week 6. Conclusions: For depression, social anxiety and panic disorder, prediction with only patient-rated symptom scores can detect treatment failure 6 weeks into ICBT, with enough accuracy for a clinician to take action. Early identification of failing treatment attempts may be a viable way to increase the overall success rate of existing psychological treatments by providing extra clinical resources to at-risk patients, within a so-called Adaptive Treatment Strategy. What is the public health significance of this article? The study suggests that clinically actionable predictions of treatment failure in ongoing therapist guided Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavior Therapy can be made halfway through a 12-week long treatment using patient ratings on symptom severity as the only predictor. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Accuracy
Anxiety
Anxiety disorders
Behavior modification
Classification
Clinicians
Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive Behavior Therapy
Cognitive behavioral therapy
Cognitive-behavioral factors
ehealth
Female
Human
Internet
Internet interventions
Major Depression
Male
Medical screening
Mental depression
Online Therapy
Panic attacks
Panic Disorder
Panic disorders
Patients
Prediction
Psychiatry
Psychology
Psykologi
Social anxiety
Symptoms
treatment failure
title Predicting Treatment Failure in Regular Care Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Depression and Anxiety Using Only Weekly Symptom Measures
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