4.6 Article

Transdiagnostic Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Depression and Anxiety Disorders in Cardiovascular Disease Patients: Results From the CHAMPS Pilot-Feasibility Trial

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.741039

Keywords

depression; major depression (MDD); anxiety; anxiety disorders; cardiovascular disease; coronary heart disease; randomized controlled trial; cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)

Categories

Funding

  1. National Heart Foundation of Australia Vanguard Grant [100593]
  2. Menzies Foundation Allied Health Scholars Grant [AHS_004]
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (Neil Hamilton Fairley-Clinical Overseas Fellowship) [1053578]

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The aim of the study is to pilot the use of Unified Protocol (UP) for the treatment of depression and anxiety disorders in cardiovascular disease (CVD) patients and evaluate its feasibility. Results indicate that the transdiagnostic cognitive behavioral therapy intervention is acceptable for CVD patients with depression or anxiety disorders, but there were challenges in recruiting participants with current disorders and distress. Larger trials are needed to determine the effectiveness of this intervention in populations with CVD and depression or anxiety disorders.
Objective: The aim of the Cardiovascular Health in Anxiety and Mood Problems Study (CHAMPS) is to pilot the Unified Protocol (UP) for the transdiagnostic treatment of depression and anxiety disorders in patients recently hospitalized for cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) and evaluate the feasibility. Methods: The present study is a controlled, block randomized pragmatic pilot-feasibility trial incorporating qualitative interview data, comparing UP (n = 9) with enhanced usual care (EUC, n = 10). Eligible trial participants had a recent CVD-cause admission and were above the severity threshold for depression or anxiety denoted by Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) total scores >= 10 and/or Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) total scores >= 7 respectively on two occasions, and met criteria for one or more depression or anxiety disorders determined by structured clinical interview. Study outcomes were analyzed as intention-to-treat using linear mixed models and qualitative interview data were analyzed with content analysis. Results:Quantitative and qualitative measured indicated acceptability of the transdiagnostic CBT intervention for CVD patients with depression or anxiety disorders. Satisfaction with UP was comparable to antidepressant therapy and higher than general physician counseling. However, there were difficulties recruiting participants with current disorders and distress on two occasions. The UP was associated with a reduction in total number of disorders determined by blinded raters. Linear mixed models indicated that a significantly greater reduction in anxiety symptoms was evident in the UP group by comparison to the EUC group (GAD-7, p between groups = 0.011; Overall Anxiety Severity and Impairment Scale, p between groups = 0.013). Results favored the UP group by comparison to EUC for change over 6 months on measures of physical quality of life and harmful alcohol use. There was no difference between the two groups on changes in depression symptoms (PHQ-9), stress, metacognitive worry beliefs, physical activity, or adherence. Discussion:In conclusion, this feasibility trial indicates acceptability of transdiagnostic CBT intervention for CVD patients with depression or anxiety disorders that is tempered by difficulties with recruitment. Larger trials are required to clarify the efficacy of transdiagnostic depression and anxiety disorder CBT in populations with CVDs and depressive or anxiety disorders.

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