The current study seeks to test differences between a single-session large-group format of standard exposure, enhanced exposure, and a control condition in treating anxiety sensitivity. It is hypothesized that 1) participants assigned to either exposure condition will evidence greater reductions in anxiety sensitivity from pre-treatment to posttreatment relative to those in the control condition; 2) participants assigned to the enhanced exposure condition will evidence greater reductions in anxiety sensitivity from pre-treatment to posttreatment relative to those in the standard exposure condition. The investigators will test putative moderators and mechanisms of action. Prior to initiating the study for purposes of data analyses, the investigators will pilot study procedures during Spring 2020.
Anxiety sensitivity (AS), or the fear of anxiety and related sensations, represents an individual difference variable implicated in the risk and maintenance of anxiety and related disorders. Best conceptualized as an amplification factor, AS, when elevated, interacts with changes in bodily sensations (e.g., racing heart, sweating, dizziness) to produce fear. Exposure therapy involves repeated confrontation to feared cues to help individuals reestablish a sense of safety around these cues. Exposure therapy is a transdiagnostic treatment strategy that has shown to be efficacious across anxiety and related disorders. Symptom induction exercises (e.g., spinning, voluntary hyperventilation, straw breathing, using a tongue depressor) are useful for providing exposure to benign bodily sensations (e.g., dizziness, racing heart, breathlessness, choking), allowing individuals with elevated AS to learn that, while perhaps uncomfortable, these sensations are not harmful, but safe. In an effort to increase the access to exposure therapy, Margraf and colleagues developed a large-group one-session exposure therapy protocols involving brief psychoeducation followed by either observation or participation in exposure practice for fears of various cues, including spiders, dental procedures, and blood, injuries and injections. Initial testing indicates feasibility and shows that individuals participating in these protocols evidence significant improvement in anxiety symptoms. The current study involves the development and testing of a large-group one-session exposure therapy protocol designed to target AS. The investigators will compare two variants of the protocol and include a general stress reduction protocol as a control condition (CONTROL). The first variant (STANDARD) is a standard protocol, modeled after those developed by Margraf and colleagues, that includes a combination of psychoeducation (about the nature and \[exposure\] therapy of anxiety sensitivity) and interoceptive exposure therapy modeling and practice. The second variant (ENHANCED) is identical to the first but also includes post-exposure practice processing aimed at facilitating threat reappraisal (i.e., safety learning). All interventions will be delivered in large-group format (N ≥ 25 participants) by a team of clinicians (N = 3) trained in the delivery of exposure therapy. In an effort to improve the quality of research on exposure therapy, another central aim of this study is to examine the feasibility of an exposure therapy consortium. The investigators have established a network of research sites (N=11) with expertise in exposure therapy. With UT as the coordinating site, the investigators propose to implement the study protocol at each of these sites, allowing us to obtain the data needed to examine replication and the identification of predictors, moderators and mediators of treatment effects.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
399
The standard intervention will include an orientation and psychoeducation phase, an exposure practice phase consisting five repeated trials per each of the three exposure exercises, and a post-exposure exercise. The post-exposure exercise will involve completing a set of questions regarding the exercises and the group experience.
Stress management training (SMT) is designed to help people better cope with feelings of anxiety that accompany high levels of anxiety sensitivity. SMT will involve group instruction in healthy ways to experience and cope with stress whenever difficult situations arise. Participants will teach participants ways to maintain a healthy lifestyle, targeting things like nutrition, exercise, and sleep hygiene. This intervention will also involve progressive muscle relaxation training.
The enhanced intervention will include an orientation and psychoeducation phase, an exposure practice phase consisting five repeated trials per each of the three exposure exercises, and a processing exercise. The post-processing exercise will involve completing a set of questions that will highlight harm expectancy violations.
The University of Colorado at Boulder
Boulder, Colorado, United States
The University of Miami
Miami, Florida, United States
Boston University
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
The University of Mississippi
Oxford, Mississippi, United States
The University of Texas at Austin
Austin, Texas, United States
University of New South Wales
Kensington, Australia
Curtin University
Perth, Australia
Philipps-Universität Marburg
Marburg, Hesse, Germany
Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Bochum, Ruhr Region, Germany
Technische Universität Dresden
Dresden, Saxony, Germany
...and 2 more locations
Anxiety Sensitivity
The primary outcome is Anxiety Sensitivity at the posttreatment endpoint. Anxiety Sensitivity will be measured with the Anxiety Sensitivity Index-3 scale (ASI-3; 0-72, lower scores mean better outcome).
Time frame: 1 day
Change in Anxiety Sensitivity
Pretreatment to follow-up change in Anxiety Sensitivity as indexed by scores on the Anxiety Sensitivity Index-3 scale (ASI-3; 0-72, lower scores mean better outcome)
Time frame: 1 month
Depression
Pretreatment to follow-up change in Depressed Mood as indexed by scores on the Patient Health Questionnaire-8 scale (PHQ-8; 0-24, lower scores mean better outcome)
Time frame: 1 month
Anxiety
Pretreatment to follow-up change in Anxiety as indexed by scores on the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 scale (GAD-7; 0-21, lower scores mean better outcome)
Time frame: 1 month
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