Background: Cognitive behavioural analysis system of psychotherapy (CBASP) is an effective individual treatment for persistent depressive disorder (PDD), but evidence on group treatment (Group-CBASP) is limited. Our aim was to review the effect of Group-CBASP on self-report depression severity in outpatients with PDD, overall and by age of depression-onset.

Methods: A retrospective chart review study (November 2011-March 2017) in 54 patients with PDD (29 late-onset, 25 early-onset). Patients were previously treated by pharmacotherapy (92.6%), psychotherapy (98.1%) and/or electroconvulsive therapy (11.1%). Group-CBASP involved 24 weekly sessions during 6 months, followed by individual appointments over 6 months. The Inventory of Depressive Symptoms -self rating(IDS-SR) was used at baseline and after 3, 6, 9 and 12 months, computing mean differences and response rates.

Results: The mean IDS-SR score decreased significantly from 39.83 at baseline to 33.78 at 6 months: a decrease from severe to moderate depression after 24 weeks of Group-CBASP, with a medium effect size (Cohen's d = .49). At 12 months, the mean IDS-SR score was 32.81, indicating moderate symptom levels remained. At 6 and 12 months, mean IDS-SR scores were similar among late- versus early-onset patients, but at 12 months response rates were higher among late-onset patients.

Limitations: Although results of our study provide valuable input for future prospective studies, limitations were the use of a retrospective design and the small group size.

Conclusion: Group-CBASP offered to an outpatient population with PDD was associated with clinically relevant decrease in self-reported symptom severity, and with sustained response particularly in patients with late onset of depression.

Practitioner Points: Group-CBASP seems to be a good alternative for CBASP in individual setting. Patients with late age of depression-onset seem to benefit more from Group-CBASP. This study shows that clinical relevant effects of Group-CBASP, followed by individual contacts, remain at least for 6 months. Research on personalizing treatment strategies is needed to improve patient assignment for Group-CBASP.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7692912PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjc.12266DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluated the effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioural Analysis System of Psychotherapy (CBASP) for treating persistent depressive disorder (PDD), focusing on treatment outcomes over 24 weeks.
  • It found that depression severity significantly decreased after 6 months, with income source and absence of certain comorbidities (axis I) being key predictors of a positive treatment response.
  • Despite some individuals not having favorable outcome predictors, a notable percentage still experienced partial improvements, indicating that group-CBASP may benefit those who don't respond well to conventional therapies.
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Background: Cognitive behavioural analysis system of psychotherapy (CBASP) is an effective individual treatment for persistent depressive disorder (PDD), but evidence on group treatment (Group-CBASP) is limited. Our aim was to review the effect of Group-CBASP on self-report depression severity in outpatients with PDD, overall and by age of depression-onset.

Methods: A retrospective chart review study (November 2011-March 2017) in 54 patients with PDD (29 late-onset, 25 early-onset).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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