Development and Pilot Testing of a Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Digital Service for Body Dysmorphic Disorder

Sabine Wilhelm, Hilary Weingarden, Jennifer L Greenberg, Thomas H McCoy, Ilana Ladis, Berta J Summers, Aleksandar Matic, Oliver Harrison, Sabine Wilhelm, Hilary Weingarden, Jennifer L Greenberg, Thomas H McCoy, Ilana Ladis, Berta J Summers, Aleksandar Matic, Oliver Harrison

Abstract

Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) has a severe presentation and chronic course when untreated. Although effective BDD treatments exist, most individuals do not have access to them. We therefore developed and pilot tested the first smartphone-delivered individual cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) treatment for adults with BDD. The digital service was developed via user-centered design, integrating input from engineering, design, and psychology experts, plus BDD patient consultants. We conducted a 12-week open pilot trial (N = 10) to describe preliminary results for feasibility, acceptability, and treatment outcome. Attrition rates (0%) and feedback on usability and satisfaction indicated that smartphone-based CBT for BDD may be feasible, acceptable, and satisfactory. Initial results suggest that smartphone-based CBT for BDD may hold promise for improving BDD symptom severity, BDD-related insight, functional impairment, and quality of life, as scores from baseline to posttreatment improved with large-to-very large effects; depression improved with a medium effect. Ninety percent of participants were responders at posttreatment and 3-month follow-up. Smartphone-based CBT for BDD may have strong potential as a standardized, low cost, and accessible treatment for this debilitating illness. A test of efficacy is merited as a next step, using a well-powered, randomized control trial design.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03221738.

Keywords: app; body dysmorphic disorder; cognitive-behavioral therapy; digital health; smartphone.

Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Source: PubMed

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