Treatment of every child with anxiety disorder begins with the question of which treatment to start first. Both fluoxetine and CBT have strong empirical support, but few studies have compared their initial effectiveness head-to-head, and none has investigated what to do if the treatment tried first isn't working well-whether to optimize the treatment already begun or to add the other treatment. Aims of the study: 1. The study will assess whether beginning with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) or fluoxetine medication is more effective in improving youth-rated anxiety symptoms over the 24-week intervention 2. If the initial intervention fails to induce clinical remission by week 12, the study will assess whether optimizing the initial treatment modality alone, or adding the other modality to the first, yields better symptom improvement by week 24 3. The study will assess whether one sequence of treatment modalities - i.e., CBT followed by optimized CBT; CBT followed by optimized CBT+ medication; medication followed by optimized medication; medication followed by optimized medication + CBT -- is significantly better or worse than predicted from the two main effects 4. The study will assess the stability of treatment response for ≥12 months following completion of the 24-week trial
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
316
This will be a single-blind SMART design of 24 weeks duration that will employ two sequential levels of randomization, one in each of two 12-week stages of the study. In Stage 1, participants will be randomized 1:1 to receive 12 weeks of the medication fluoxetine in upward-titrated dosages. In Stage 2, also 12 weeks in duration, participants who remit during the first 12 weeks of treatment will continue maintenance-level therapy with fluoxetine. All participants who do not remit will be randomized (1:1) to either (1) optimization of fluoxetine (increasing the dose of fluoxetine as tolerated), or (2) optimization of fluoxetine and addition of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT).
This will be a single-blind SMART design of 24 weeks duration that will employ two sequential levels of randomization, one in each of two 12-week stages of the study. In Stage 1, participants will be randomized 1:1 to receive 12 weeks of weekly CBT implemented with Coping Cat (CC). In Stage 2, also 12 weeks in duration, participants who remit during the first 12 weeks of treatment will continue maintenance-level therapy with CBT. All participants who do not remit will be randomized (1:1) to either (1) optimization of CBT (intensifying exposure practice and skills review), or (2) optimization of CBT and addition of the medication fluoxetine.
Children's Hospital Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
Youth - SCARED (Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders)
Patient ratings of anxiety symptom severity. Possible range of scores is 0-82, with higher scores indicating greater severity.
Time frame: Week 24
Parent - SCARED (Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders)
Parent ratings of anxiety symptom severity. Possible range of scores is 0-82, with higher scores indicating greater severity.
Time frame: Week 24
Youth - Child Anxiety Impact Scale (CAIS)
Patient ratings of anxiety functional impairment. Possible range of scores is 0-81, with higher scores indicating greater impact.
Time frame: Week 24
Parent - Child Anxiety Impact Scale (CAIS)
Parent ratings of anxiety functional impairment. Possible range of scores is 0-81, with higher scores indicating greater impact.
Time frame: Week 24
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