Vogel Emily N, Singh Simar, Accurso Erin C
PGSP-Stanford PsyD Consortium, Palo Alto University, Palo Alto, CA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
J Eat Disord. 2021 Oct 18;9(1):131. doi: 10.1186/s40337-021-00461-1.
Eating disorders have serious psychological and physical consequences. Current evidence-based treatments for adolescents with eating disorders have modest effects, underscoring the need to improve current treatment approaches. Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) and dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) have been proposed as alternative treatment options, with burgeoning research in this area. This review aims to summarize and critically analyze the current literature on the feasibility, acceptability, effectiveness, and efficacy of CBT and DBT for adolescent eating disorders, and then proposes areas of future research.
PsycINFO and PubMed were searched using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses guidelines to identify studies examining the feasibility, acceptability, effectiveness and/or efficacy of CBT or DBT for adolescent eating disorders.
Eligible studies (N = 50; CBT: n = 40, DBT: n = 10) indicated that both treatments are reasonably feasible, acceptable, and possibly effective for adolescent eating disorders across diagnoses and levels of care, though efficacy trials are lacking.
CBT and DBT demonstrate promise as alternatives to family-based approaches for adolescent eating disorders. Adequately powered trials to establish the effectiveness and efficacy of CBT and DBT are needed, particularly ones that compare these treatments against other leading approaches. Despite high rates of relapse and likelihood for severe and enduring illness, there is a dearth of evidence-based treatment options for adolescents with eating disorders. Potentially viable but less well-studied treatments for adolescents with eating disorders include cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) and dialectical behavior therapy (DBT). This systematic review of CBT and DBT for adolescent eating disorders focuses on feasibility (i.e., how easy it was to implement the treatment), acceptability (i.e., how well the intervention was received by patients and therapists), effectiveness (i.e., how well the intervention performed under routine, real-world circumstances), and efficacy (i.e., how well the intervention performed in highly-controlled research settings). This review concludes that research supports the feasibility and acceptability of these approaches, as well as preliminary evidence of their effectiveness. However, the field is lacking studies that systematically compare CBT and DBT to other evidence-based approaches. Recommendations to advance research on CBT and DBT for adolescent eating disorders are provided, including a call for efficacy studies that clarify their performance compared to other leading approaches.
饮食失调会产生严重的心理和生理后果。目前针对青少年饮食失调的循证治疗效果有限,这凸显了改进现有治疗方法的必要性。认知行为疗法(CBT)和辩证行为疗法(DBT)已被提议作为替代治疗选择,且该领域的研究正在迅速发展。本综述旨在总结并批判性地分析当前关于CBT和DBT治疗青少年饮食失调的可行性、可接受性、有效性和疗效的文献,进而提出未来的研究方向。
按照系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目指南,检索了PsycINFO和PubMed数据库,以识别考察CBT或DBT治疗青少年饮食失调的可行性、可接受性、有效性和/或疗效的研究。
符合条件的研究(N = 50;CBT:n = 40,DBT:n = 10)表明,尽管缺乏疗效试验,但这两种治疗方法对于不同诊断和护理水平的青少年饮食失调患者而言,在合理程度上是可行、可接受的,并且可能有效。
CBT和DBT有望成为青少年饮食失调基于家庭治疗方法的替代方案。需要开展有足够样本量的试验来确定CBT和DBT的有效性和疗效,尤其是将这些治疗方法与其他主要方法进行比较的试验。尽管复发率很高,且存在严重和持续性疾病的可能性,但针对青少年饮食失调患者,循证治疗方案仍然匮乏。对青少年饮食失调患者而言,潜在可行但研究较少的治疗方法包括认知行为疗法(CBT)和辩证行为疗法(DBT)。这项针对青少年饮食失调的CBT和DBT的系统综述聚焦于可行性(即实施治疗的难易程度)、可接受性(即患者和治疗师对干预措施的接受程度)、有效性(即在常规现实环境中干预措施的实施效果)和疗效(即在高度控制的研究环境中干预措施的实施效果)。本综述得出结论,研究支持这些方法的可行性和可接受性,以及它们有效性的初步证据。然而,该领域缺乏将CBT和DBT与其他循证方法进行系统比较的研究。文中提供了推进青少年饮食失调的CBT和DBT研究的建议,包括呼吁开展疗效研究,以阐明它们与其他主要方法相比的表现。