Alexopoulos G S, Arean P
Weill Cornell Institute of Geriatric Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College, White Plains, NY, USA.
Department of Psychiatry at the University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, NY, USA.
Mol Psychiatry. 2014 Jan;19(1):14-9. doi: 10.1038/mp.2013.150. Epub 2013 Nov 26.
A critical task for psychotherapy research is to create treatments that can be used by community clinicians. Streamlining of psychotherapies is a necessary first step for this purpose. We suggest that neurobiological knowledge has reached the point of providing biologically meaningful behavioral targets, thus guiding the development of effective, simplified psychotherapies. This view is supported by the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) Project, which reflects the field's consensus and recognizes the readiness of neurobiology to guide research in treatment development. 'Engage' is an example of such a streamlined therapy. It targets behavioral domains of late-life depression grounded on RDoC constructs using efficacious behavioral strategies selected for their simplicity. 'Reward exposure' targeting the behavioral expression of positive valence systems' dysfunction is the principal therapeutic vehicle of 'Engage'. Its first three sessions consist of direct 'reward exposure', but the therapists search for barriers in three behavioral domains, that is, 'negativity bias' (negative valence), 'apathy' (arousal) and 'emotional dysregulation' (cognitive control), and add strategies targeting these domains when needed. The end result is a structured, stepped approach using neurobiological constructs as targets and as a guide to personalization. We argue that the 'reduction' process needed in order to arrive to simplified effective therapies can be achieved in three steps: (1) identify RDoC constructs driving the syndrome's psychopathology; (2) create a structured intervention utilizing behavioral and ecosystem modification techniques targeting behaviors related to these constructs; (3) examine whether the efficacy of the new intervention is mediated by change in behaviors related to the targeted RDoC constructs.
心理治疗研究的一项关键任务是开发可供社区临床医生使用的治疗方法。为此,简化心理治疗方法是必要的第一步。我们认为,神经生物学知识已经发展到能够提供具有生物学意义的行为靶点的阶段,从而指导有效、简化的心理治疗方法的开发。这一观点得到了研究领域标准(RDoC)项目的支持,该项目反映了该领域的共识,并认可神经生物学已准备好指导治疗开发研究。“参与”疗法就是这种简化疗法的一个例子。它基于RDoC构建,针对晚年抑郁症的行为领域,采用因其简单性而被选择的有效行为策略。针对正性效价系统功能障碍的行为表现的“奖励暴露”是“参与”疗法的主要治疗手段。其前三节包括直接的“奖励暴露”,但治疗师会在三个行为领域寻找障碍,即“消极偏差”(负性效价)、“冷漠”(唤醒)和“情绪失调”(认知控制),并在需要时添加针对这些领域的策略。最终结果是一种结构化的、分阶段的方法,以神经生物学构建为靶点并作为个性化的指导。我们认为,为了实现简化有效的治疗方法所需的“简化”过程可以通过三个步骤来完成:(1)识别驱动该综合征精神病理学的RDoC构建;(2)利用行为和生态系统改变技术创建一种结构化干预措施,针对与这些构建相关的行为;(3)检查新干预措施的疗效是否通过与目标RDoC构建相关行为的改变来介导。