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Comparing the effectiveness and predictors of cognitive behavioural therapy-enhanced between patients with various eating disorder diagnoses

Authors :
Bernou Melisse
Jack Dekker
Elske van den Berg
Margo de Jonge
Eric F. van Furth
Jaap Peen
Edwin de Beurs
Neurology
Other Research
Source :
The Cognitive Behaviour Therapist, 15:e20. Cambridge University Press (CUP), Cognitive Behaviour Therapist, 15:e20. Cambridge University Press, The Cognitive Behaviour Therapist, 15. CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2023.

Abstract

Cognitive behaviour therapy-enhanced (CBT-E) is an effective treatment for non-underweight patients with eating disorders. Its efficacy and effectiveness is investigated mostly among transdiagnostic samples and remains unknown for binge eating disorder. The aim of the present study was to assess several treatment outcome predictors and to compare effectiveness of CBT-E among adult out-patients with bulimia nervosa (n=370), binge eating disorder (n=113), and those with a restrictive food pattern diagnosed with other specified feeding and eating disorders (n=139). Effectiveness of CBT-E was assessed in routine clinical practice in a specialised eating disorders centre. Eating disorder pathology was measured with the EDEQ pre- and post-treatment, and at 20 weeks follow-up. Linear mixed model analyses with fixed effect were performed to compare treatment outcome among the eating disorder groups. Several predictors of treatment completion and outcome were examined with a regression analysis. No predictors for drop-out were found, except the diagnosis of bulimia nervosa. Eating disorder pathology decreased among all groups with effect sizes between 1.43 and 1.70 on the EDE-Q total score. There were no differences in remission rates between the three groups at end of treatment or at follow-up. Eating disorder severity at baseline affected treatment response. The results can be generalised to other specialised treatment centres. No subgroup of patients differentially benefited from CBT-E supporting the transdiagnostic perspective for the treatment of eating disorders. Longer-term follow-up data are necessary to measure persistence of treatment benefits. Key learning aims (1) What is the effectiveness of CBT-E among patients suffering from binge eating disorder? (2) Does any subgroup of patients suffering from an eating disorder differentially benefit from CBT-E? (3) What factors predict treatment response?

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1754470X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Cognitive Behaviour Therapist, 15:e20. Cambridge University Press (CUP), Cognitive Behaviour Therapist, 15:e20. Cambridge University Press, The Cognitive Behaviour Therapist, 15. CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....93ae2243923027220df414f4fdccba64