Cognitive Remediation Therapy for Adolescents With Anorexia Nervosa



Status:Completed
Conditions:Psychiatric, Psychiatric
Therapuetic Areas:Psychiatry / Psychology
Healthy:No
Age Range:12 - 18
Updated:2/8/2019
Start Date:August 2016
End Date:November 16, 2017

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An Investigation of Cognitive Remediation Therapy as an Inpatient Intervention for Adolescents With Anorexia Nervosa

The purpose of the current study is to investigate the role of Cognitive Remediation Therapy
(CRT) as a pre-treatment intervention for adolescents who are hospitalized for Anorexia
Nervosa (AN). The primary aims are to determine if CRT can result in greater treatment
engagement post-discharge, increased rate of weight gain post-discharge, reduction in symptom
accommodation, and increased behavioral flexibility in adolescents and parents.

Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a severe psychiatric condition; the hallmark features are low body
weight and difficulties gaining weight. We are in need of new methods to jump start
treatment, while targeting relevant processes in individuals with AN.

Study Design:

This is a randomized controlled trial looking to address these concerns, with a focus on
three distinct aims:

1. To evaluate the feasibility and acceptability (by patients and staff) of CRT in a
medical hospitalization setting.

2. Compare the impact of CRT to CRT + Teach the Parent on adolescent treatment engagement
post-discharge, rate of weight gain post-discharge, and reduction of symptom
accommodation.

3. To evaluate cognitive and behavioral flexibility 6 months post-discharge.

Setting/Participants:

Participants will be 60 adolescents with AN or subclinical AN (and their parents).
Adolescents will be hospitalized for treatment of AN and intervention will occur on an
inpatient basis. Follow-up will be outpatient.

Study Interventions and Measures:

The current study will investigate the impact of intensive CRT (one sessions/day) delivered
during in hospital for medical stabilization. Shortly after admission to hospital,
adolescents will be randomly assigned to one of the following conditions: Treatment as usual
(TAU), CRT+Contact Control (known as "Family Fun Time" or FFT) and CRT + Teach the Parent.
Psychosocial, neurocognitive, and behavioral measures will be collected throughout the study.
Follow-up will continue for 6 months post-discharge.

Description of Investigational Intervention:

CRT is an adjunctive intervention focusing on the development of meta-cognition: Teaching
individuals to think about how they think. It involves presenting individuals with a variety
of tasks requiring increasingly complex mental abilities. These include sorting tasks where
rules change, geometric figures, illusions, reversing sequences of numbers and letters, and
finding various routes on a map.

CRT's focus is mainly on process, instead outcome, and has three main goals:

1. Improve brain function by exercising and increasing connections in the brain

2. Encourage individuals to think about their thinking style

3. Encourage individuals and families to spend time away from thinking about the eating
disorder

Inclusion Criteria:

1. Adolescent is between 12-18 years of age and living at home, parent or primary
caregiver willing to participate in condition they are randomized into

2. Adolescent meets diagnostic criteria of anorexia nervosa (either restricting or
binge/purge subtype), or sub threshold AN according to Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual-5 criteria

3. Consent of all family members who will be participating in treatment

4. Adolescent is not currently receiving outpatient treatment for the eating disorder

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Caregiver or adolescent with a co-morbid diagnosis of psychotic disorder, substance
dependence, substance abuse, or bi-polar disorder

2. caregiver or adolescent with diagnosis of mental retardation, pervasive developmental
disorder, or autism spectrum disorder

3. Adolescent with a diagnosis of feeding or eating concerns not elsewhere classified
with the primary symptoms of bingeing and purging, binging without compensatory
behaviors or spitting food or with restricting patterns

4. Adolescent with diagnosis of avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder.

5. Adolescent or caregiver with acute suicide risk.

6. Concurrent psychosocial treatment for another condition

7. Adolescent or parent not fluent in English
We found this trial at
1
site
South 34th Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
 215-590-1000
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Since its start in 1855 as the nation's first hospital devoted...
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from
Philadelphia, PA
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