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Mediators of change in cognitive behavior therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy for eating disorders: a secondary analysis of a transdiagnostic randomized controlled trial

Mediators of change in cognitive behavior therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy for eating disorders: a secondary analysis of a transdiagnostic randomized controlled trial
Mediators of change in cognitive behavior therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy for eating disorders: a secondary analysis of a transdiagnostic randomized controlled trial
Objective: understanding the mechanisms of action of psychological treatments is a key first step in refining and developing more effective treatments. The present study examined hypothesized mediators of change of enhanced cognitive behavior therapy (CBT-E) and interpersonal psychotherapy for eating disorders (IPT-ED).

Method: a series of mediation studies were embedded in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing 20 weeks of CBT-E and IPT-ED in a transdiagnostic, non-underweight sample of patients with eating disorders (N = 130) consecutively referred to the service. Three hypothesized mediators of change in CBT-E (regular eating, weighing frequency, and shape checking) and the key hypothesized mediator of IPT-ED (interpersonal problem severity) were studied.

Results: the data supported regular eating as being a mediator of the effect of CBT-E on binge-eating frequency. The findings were inconclusive regarding the role of the other putative mediators of the effects of CBT-E; and were similarly inconclusive for interpersonal problem severity as a mediator of the effect of IPT-ED.

Discussion: this research highlights the potential benefits of embedding mediation studies within RCTs to better understand how treatments work. The findings supported the role of regular eating in reducing patients' binge-eating frequency. Other key hypothesized mediators of CBT-E and IPT-ED were not supported, although the data were not inconsistent with them. Key methodological issues to address in future work include the need to capture both behavioral and cognitive processes of change in CBT-E, and identifying key time points for change in IPT-ED.
0276-3478
Sivyer, Katy
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Allen, Elizabeth
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Cooper, Zafra
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Bailey-Straebler, Suzanne
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O'Connor, Marianne E.
317ccb23-7af7-484f-a6d0-2abaed43cb67
Fairburn, Christopher G.
b975f7bd-3f74-4a6f-9673-fa5fe0a882ee
Murphy, Rebecca
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Sivyer, Katy
c9831d57-7d6b-4bb6-bb3c-770ea7f9b116
Allen, Elizabeth
f1c36c88-c544-4b21-8b42-885299740718
Cooper, Zafra
5156dab4-eb78-4148-b313-7d2a563aa13e
Bailey-Straebler, Suzanne
32caa120-1c05-4ff0-9633-0804798c7e41
O'Connor, Marianne E.
317ccb23-7af7-484f-a6d0-2abaed43cb67
Fairburn, Christopher G.
b975f7bd-3f74-4a6f-9673-fa5fe0a882ee
Murphy, Rebecca
9ccc46be-a15d-4eea-887e-a16a8d88fc4d

Sivyer, Katy, Allen, Elizabeth, Cooper, Zafra, Bailey-Straebler, Suzanne, O'Connor, Marianne E., Fairburn, Christopher G. and Murphy, Rebecca (2020) Mediators of change in cognitive behavior therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy for eating disorders: a secondary analysis of a transdiagnostic randomized controlled trial. The International Journal of Eating Disorders. (doi:10.1002/eat.23390).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: understanding the mechanisms of action of psychological treatments is a key first step in refining and developing more effective treatments. The present study examined hypothesized mediators of change of enhanced cognitive behavior therapy (CBT-E) and interpersonal psychotherapy for eating disorders (IPT-ED).

Method: a series of mediation studies were embedded in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing 20 weeks of CBT-E and IPT-ED in a transdiagnostic, non-underweight sample of patients with eating disorders (N = 130) consecutively referred to the service. Three hypothesized mediators of change in CBT-E (regular eating, weighing frequency, and shape checking) and the key hypothesized mediator of IPT-ED (interpersonal problem severity) were studied.

Results: the data supported regular eating as being a mediator of the effect of CBT-E on binge-eating frequency. The findings were inconclusive regarding the role of the other putative mediators of the effects of CBT-E; and were similarly inconclusive for interpersonal problem severity as a mediator of the effect of IPT-ED.

Discussion: this research highlights the potential benefits of embedding mediation studies within RCTs to better understand how treatments work. The findings supported the role of regular eating in reducing patients' binge-eating frequency. Other key hypothesized mediators of CBT-E and IPT-ED were not supported, although the data were not inconsistent with them. Key methodological issues to address in future work include the need to capture both behavioral and cognitive processes of change in CBT-E, and identifying key time points for change in IPT-ED.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 October 2020
Published date: 5 November 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 469619
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469619
ISSN: 0276-3478
PURE UUID: b0a9c878-f69c-4741-9f41-5b9542161226
ORCID for Katy Sivyer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4349-0102

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Date deposited: 21 Sep 2022 16:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:45

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Contributors

Author: Katy Sivyer ORCID iD
Author: Elizabeth Allen
Author: Zafra Cooper
Author: Suzanne Bailey-Straebler
Author: Marianne E. O'Connor
Author: Christopher G. Fairburn
Author: Rebecca Murphy

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