The purpose of this study is to examine the efficacy of 50 mg of d-cycloserine in comparison to placebo (a pill containing no medication) for improving the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) in reducing symptoms associated with social anxiety disorder. In addition, the study will examine whether the effectiveness of d-cycloserine depends on the timing of the pill administration (i.e., 1- hour before the session or immediately after the session) as well as the success of the CBT therapy sessions. The investigators hypothesize that the tailored post-session DCS administration condition will outperform the other conditions (pre-session DCS, placebo, and non-tailored post-session DCS). This will be evidenced by short- and long-term improvements in social anxiety severity.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
152
D-cycloserine is a medication thought to be associated with fear extinction.
Sugar pill
This will be a 5-session version of a group CBT protocol with 4-6 patients and 2 therapists per group emphasizing repeated exposure practices. Session 1 involves an introduction and orientation to the CBT model. Sessions 2-5 emphasize repeated exposure tasks, which consist of role-play activities to confront fearful situations in a group setting while disputing cognitive distortions (coupled with the fading of safety behaviors). At the conclusion of each exposure session, patients will be encouraged to continue to apply home-practice strategies (such as giving speeches in front of a mirror). Continued practice of the interventions will be considered part of treatment, and patients will be asked to refrain from alternative treatment for four weeks following completion of the last treatment session.
Rush University Medical Center
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Boston University
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
University of Texas at Austin
Austin, Texas, United States
Social Anxiety Symptom Severity
The main outcome was a composite Z-score from the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS) and the Social Phobic Disorders Severity and Change Form (SPD-SC Form). "The Composite Z-score of the LSAS and SPD-SC Form indicates the number of standard deviations away from the mean. A Z-score of 0 is equal to the mean of a reference population. Negative numbers indicate values lower symptom severity and positive numbers indicate higher symptom severity. The LSAS is a 24-item scale that measures fear and avoidance in social and performance situations within the last week, using 0 (no fear/never avoids) to 3 (severe fear/usually avoids) scale. LSAS scores range from 0-144 with higher scores indicated worse outcomes. The SPD-S is the Clinical Global Impression Scale27 adapted for SAD, which instructs evaluators to use a 7-point scale (1=normal, not at all ill; 7=among the most extremely ill patients) to index the severity of social anxiety.
Time frame: Assessments took place at multiple time points from baseline to 3-month follow-up. The three-month is reported
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