Preferences for Lisdexamfetamine vs Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Binge-Eating Disorder: Correlates and Outcomes.

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Sydney Yurkow, Valentina Ivezaj, Brian Pittman, Carlos M Grilo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Efficacious treatments for binge-eating disorder (BED) have been identified, but research is lacking regarding patients' treatment preferences and their effects on outcomes. We investigated the frequency and correlates of patients' preferences for 2 distinct BED treatments-cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and lisdexamfetamine (LDX)-and whether preferences predicted and/or moderated outcomes.

Method: In a randomized controlled trial (performed March 2019 to September 2023) testing CBT and LDX for DSM-5- defined BED, 102 participants indicated their preference after treatments were described and prior to beginning treatment. Treatment was randomly assigned (not influenced by preferences). Independent assessors, blinded to treatments and to patients' treatment preferences, performed outcome assessments.

Results: 43.1% (44/102) preferred LDX, 23.5% (24/102) preferred CBT, and 33.3% (34/102) reported no preference. Treatment preference was not significantly associated with any sociodemographic or baseline clinical characteristics. Logistic regression models (for binge-eating remission and attaining ≥5% weight loss) and mixed models (for changes in binge-eating frequency, weight, eating disorder psychopathology, and depression) testing main effects of treatments, main effects of treatment preferences, and their interaction effects converged. No significant interaction effects between treatment and treatment preferences were observed.

Conclusions: In this study comparing CBT and LDX treatments for BED in patients with obesity, participants' preferences for treatments were not associated with their sociodemographic or clinical characteristics and did not moderate treatment outcomes of these 2 effective interventions. Implications for clinical practice and future research are discussed.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03924193.

利地安非他明与认知行为疗法对暴食症的偏好:相关性和结果。
背景:暴饮暴食症(BED)的有效治疗方法已经确定,但缺乏关于患者治疗偏好及其对结果影响的研究。我们调查了患者对两种不同的BED治疗-认知行为治疗(CBT)和利地胺他明(LDX)的偏好的频率和相关性,以及偏好是否预测和/或减缓了结果。方法:在一项随机对照试验(2019年3月至2023年9月进行)中,测试CBT和LDX治疗DSM-5定义的BED, 102名参与者在描述治疗后和开始治疗前表示了他们的偏好。治疗是随机分配的(不受偏好的影响)。独立评估人员对治疗和患者的治疗偏好不知情,进行了结果评估。结果:43.1%(44/102)偏好LDX, 23.5%(24/102)偏好CBT, 33.3%(34/102)无偏好。治疗偏好与任何社会人口学或基线临床特征无显著相关性。Logistic回归模型(暴饮暴食缓解和体重减轻≥5%)和混合模型(暴饮暴食频率、体重、饮食失调精神病理学和抑郁症的变化)检验了治疗的主要效果、治疗偏好的主要效果及其相互作用的趋同。治疗和治疗偏好之间没有观察到显著的相互作用。结论:在这项比较CBT和LDX治疗肥胖患者BED的研究中,参与者对治疗的偏好与他们的社会人口学或临床特征无关,也不会影响这两种有效干预措施的治疗结果。对临床实践和未来研究的意义进行了讨论。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT03924193。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
1.90%
发文量
0
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: For over 75 years, The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry has been a leading source of peer-reviewed articles offering the latest information on mental health topics to psychiatrists and other medical professionals.The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry is the leading psychiatric resource for clinical information and covers disorders including depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, anxiety, addiction, posttraumatic stress disorder, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder while exploring the newest advances in diagnosis and treatment.
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