Interpersonal problems as predictors of therapeutic alliance and symptom improvement in cognitive therapy for depression

Fritz Renner, Robin B Jarrett, Jeffrey R Vittengl, Marna S Barrett, Lee Anna Clark, Michael E Thase, Fritz Renner, Robin B Jarrett, Jeffrey R Vittengl, Marna S Barrett, Lee Anna Clark, Michael E Thase

Abstract

Background: The degree to which interpersonal problems of depressed patients improve over the course of cognitive therapy (CT) and relate to the quality of the therapeutic alliance and to symptom improvement, remains unclear.

Methods: We analyzed data of adult outpatients (N=523) with major depressive disorder participating in a clinical trial to determine the factor structure of the Inventory of Interpersonal Problems-Circumplex (IIP-C) and to relate the observed factor scores to the quality of the therapeutic alliance and symptom improvement over the course of CT. Patients received 16-20 sessions protocol (50-60 min each) of individual CT according to the treatment manual by Beck et al. (1979).

Results: We found a three-factor structure (interpersonal distress, agency, and communion) of interpersonal problems. Interpersonal distress decreased (d=.90), but interpersonal style did not change substantively during CT (communion d=.03; agency d=.14). High initial agency scores related negatively to the therapeutic alliance (β=-.12), whereas high initial communion scores related positively to the therapeutic alliance (β=.15). Elevated pre-treatment interpersonal distress scores were related to both weaker therapeutic alliances (β=.13) and higher symptom levels throughout treatment (β=.10).

Limitations: All patients in this study had recurrent MDD and it is therefore uncertain whether the results would generalize to patients with other psychiatric disorders.

Conclusions: This study supports the use of the IIP-C as a comprehensive measure of patients' interpersonal style and interpersonal distress. The IIP-C measured before CT showed some predictive validity with respect to therapeutic alliance measured at the midpoint and therapy outcome. The clinical importance of these findings is discussed.

Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Angular placement of factor loadings for the Inventory of Interpersonal Problems – Circumplex Version pre- and post-treatment Note. N = 510; Numbers on the x-axis and y-axis represent factor loadings for factor 1 (distress).
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Predominant interpersonal style and mean general distress before and after acute-phase cognitive therapy Note. N = 356; Numbers on the x-axis and y-axis represent standardized general distress scores, with scores above 1 representing clinical significant distress.
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Change in depressive symptom severity over the course of CT predicted by IIP general distress and IIP agency Note. Upper graph shows significant interaction between time moment and distress for the low and high distress group. Lower graph shows marginally significant interaction between time and agency for the low and high agency groups.

Source: PubMed

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