4.7 Article

Changes in Automatic Threat Processing Precede and Predict Clinical Changes with Exposure-Based Cognitive-Behavior Therapy for Panic Disorder

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 73, Issue 11, Pages 1064-1070

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2013.02.005

Keywords

Antidepressants; anxiety; cognitive-behavior therapy; emotional information processing; mechanisms of action; panic disorder

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council, United Kingdom
  2. p1vital
  3. Servier
  4. Eli-Lilly
  5. Astra Zeneca
  6. MRC [G0501223] Funding Source: UKRI
  7. Medical Research Council [G0501223] Funding Source: researchfish

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Background: Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is an effective treatment for emotional disorders such as anxiety or depression, but the mechanisms underlying successful intervention are far from understood. Although it has been a long-held view that psychopharmacological approaches work by directly targeting automatic emotional information processing in the brain, it is usually postulated that psychological treatments affect these processes only over time, through changes in more conscious thought cycles. This study explored the role of early changes in emotional information processing in CBT action. Methods: Twenty-eight untreated patients with panic disorder were randomized to a single session of exposure-based CBT or waiting group. Emotional information processing was measured on the day after intervention with an attentional visual probe task, and clinical symptoms were assessed on the day after intervention and at 4-week follow-up. Results: Vigilance for threat information was decreased in the treated group, compared with the waiting group, the day after intervention, before reductions in clinical symptoms. The magnitude of this early effect on threat vigilance predicted therapeutic response after 4 weeks. Conclusions: Cognitive behavioral therapy rapidly affects automatic processing, and these early effects are predictive of later therapeutic change. Such results suggest very fast action on automatic processes mediating threat sensitivity, and they provide an early marker of treatment response. Furthermore, these findings challenge the notion that psychological treatments work directly on conscious thought processes before automatic information processing and imply a greater similarity between early effects of pharmacological and psychological treatments for anxiety than previously thought.

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