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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2010 Jun;48(6):449-58.
doi: 10.1016/j.brat.2010.01.006. Epub 2010 Feb 4.

Moderators of continuation phase cognitive therapy's effects on relapse, recurrence, remission, and recovery from depression

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Moderators of continuation phase cognitive therapy's effects on relapse, recurrence, remission, and recovery from depression

Jeffrey R Vittengl et al. Behav Res Ther. 2010 Jun.

Abstract

About half of patients who respond to acute-phase cognitive therapy (CT) for major depressive disorder (MDD) will relapse/recur within 2 years; continuation-phase CT lowers this risk. We analyzed demographic, clinical, cognitive, social-interpersonal, and personality variables to clarify which patients continuation-phase CT helps to avoid relapse and recurrence and achieve remission and recovery. Participants had recurrent MDD, responded to acute-phase CT, were randomized to 8 months of continuation-phase CT (n = 41) or assessment control (n = 43), and were assessed 16 additional months (Jarrett et al., 2001). Consistent with an underlying risk-reduction model, continuation-phase CT was helpful for responders to acute-phase CT with greater risk and/or dysfunction as follows: Younger patients with earlier MDD onset who displayed greater dysfunctional attitudes and lower self-efficacy; personality traits suggesting low positive activation (e.g., reduced energy, enthusiasm, gregariousness); and transiently elevated depressive symptoms late in acute-phase CT and residual symptoms after acute-phase CT response. We emphasize the need for replication of these results before clinical application.

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Conflict of interest statement

All authors report that they have no financial interests related to the research reported here.

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