Improving Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa: Innovation in Psychological Interventions for Regulating Eating



Status:Recruiting
Conditions:Psychiatric, Psychiatric, Eating Disorder
Therapuetic Areas:Psychiatry / Psychology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - Any
Updated:9/16/2018
Start Date:May 2015
End Date:December 2019
Contact:Rowan Hunt, BA
Email:edresearch@drexel.edu
Phone:215-553-7186

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Addressing Weight History to Improve Behavioral Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa

The purpose of the study is to test a novel, acceptance-based behavioral treatment for
bulimia nervosa (BN) in adults. This treatment is a type of individual psychotherapy called
Nutritional Counseling And Acceptance-Based Therapy (N-CAAT) that enhances existing cognitive
behavioral therapy (CBT) for BN by incorporating acceptance-based behavioral strategies and
nutritional counseling to help patients eliminate BN symptoms.

Bulimia nervosa (BN) is an eating disorder characterized by a pattern of binge eating and
compensatory behaviors as well as an overemphasis on body weight and shape in
self-evaluation. BN has a lifetime prevalence rate of 1-3% and is associated with numerous
psychiatric and medical complications. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is regarded as the
gold-standard treatment for BN and the treatment approach with the most empirical support to
date. However, although CBT has accumulated impressive empirical support for its
effectiveness, CBT produces abstinence from binge eating and purging in only 30-50% of
treatment completers. Furthermore, relapse is common and many individuals do not maintain
treatment gains. Innovative treatments that can improve rates of remission among patients
with BN and related disorders are sorely needed for bulimia nervosa and related eating
disorders, particularly for individuals for whom existing treatments fail.

Existing CBT may be enhanced by incorporating acceptance-based behavioral strategies and
nutritional counseling to help patients eliminate BN symptoms. Acceptance-based behavioral
treatments (ABBTs) emphasize "changing what you can and accepting what you can't", which
refers to a focus on learning how to accept and tolerate distressing internal experiences
(e.g., thoughts, emotions, urges, physical sensations) that might not be directly under the
patients' control while choosing to engage in adaptive behavioral choices that are within
their control. Patients may benefit from the provision of more adaptive behavioral strategies
to maintain weight in a healthy range, which is not a primary goal of existing behavioral
treatments. Nutritional counseling (NC), which is designed to promote healthy, non-rigid
dietary restraint and exercise habits, can lead to improvements in weight control that may
also improve disordered eating behaviors. As described above, a primary maintenance factor
for BN is the strict and rigid dieting behavior that triggers urges to binge. Several studies
have indicated that the provision of healthy restraint strategies to patients with BN can
reduce binge eating and purging behaviors, suggesting that this approach can be an effective
treatment alone or in combination with other behavioral techniques.

Study Objectives-

- Test the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of Nutritional Counseling
And Acceptance-based Therapy (N-CAAT) for bulimia nervosa (BN) in a small pilot RCT
trial

- Assess the mechanisms of action to enhance treatment development

- Evaluate the feasibility of recruitment, randomization, retention, assessment
procedures, and implementation of the novel treatment to enhance the probability of
success in subsequent larger RCTs

Inclusion Criteria:

- Meets Diagnostic Statistical Manual(DSM)-5 criteria for Bulimia Nervosa

- Age 18 or above

Exclusion Criteria:

- Body Mass Index (BMI) below 85% of ideal body weight or other medical complications
that prevent ability to engage in outpatient treatment

- Acute suicide risk

- Co-morbid diagnosis of a psychotic disorder, bipolar disorder, or substance dependence

- Diagnosis of mental retardation or a pervasive development disorder

- Current pregnancy
We found this trial at
1
site
3301 Lancaster Avenue
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102
Principal Investigator: Adrienne S Juarascio, PhD
Phone: 215-553-7186
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mi
from
Philadelphia, PA
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