Alternative Treatment to Reduce Chronicity in OCD: Research Into Brain Response and Adequacy of Treatment (arrIBA)
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder focused on measuring Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Inference Based Approach (IBA), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Personalized care, Neurocognitive working mechanisms of treatment, Non-inferiority, Prediction of treatment efficiency
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Participants
- Referred to one of the participating sites for OCD treatment
- Age 18 or above
- Primary Diagnostic Statistical Manual (DSM)-5 diagnosis of OCD (established by the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5 (SCID)
- Moderate to severe OCD symptoms (expressed as a minimum score of 16 on the Yale Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (YBOCS)
- Not currently using psychotropic medication, or on a stable dose for at least 12 weeks prior to randomisation with no plans to change the dose during the course of the study (this will be monitored during the study)
- If CBT already has been received for OCD, treatment has ended at least 26 weeks before study participation.
Controls
- Age 18 or above
Exclusion Criteria:
Patients
- Suffering from a current psychotic disorder, organic mental disorder, substance use disorder or mental retardation
- No sufficient command of the Dutch language
Patients will be asked if they are willing to participate in the imaging study as well, including brain scans pre- and posttreatment. The selection will continue until 86 eligible participants are included for the MRI part of the study. Additional exclusion criteria apply for this sub study:
- Use of psychotropic medication other than Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor/Selective Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor/clomipramine (e.g. antipsychotics). Occasional (not daily, a maximal equivalent of 10 mg. diazepam at a time) use of benzodiazepines/sleeping medication is allowed, if the participant is willing to tolerate to refrain from use for at least a week before the MRI scanning session, and able to tolerate this period of refrainment.
- Pregnancy
- Iron in the body
- Claustrophobia
- Any known neurological diseases (including epilepsy) or brain surgery
- Head trauma that resulted in unconsciousness for at least 1 hour
- Age 65 or above
- Controls
- Age 65 or above
- Current DSM-5 diagnosis (established by the SCID)
- Personal history of DSM-5 diagnosis, except for depressive or anxiety disorder longer than 12 months ago
- Personal history or current use of psychotropic medication (excluding sporadic use of sedatives/benzodiazepines, not having been used the week prior to participation
- First-degree relative (parent/sibling/child) with OCD or tic-disorder
- Insufficient command of the Dutch language
- Pregnancy
- Iron in the body
- Claustrophobia
- Any known neurological diseases (including epilepsy), or past brain surgery
- Head trauma that resulted in unconsciousness for at least 1 hour
Sites / Locations
- GGz Drenthe
- GGz Centraal
- Pro Persona
- Mondriaan
- GGz InGeest
- Amsterdam UMC, VUmc
- PsyQ Amsterdam
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Experimental
Active Comparator
No Intervention
Inference Based Approach (IBA)
Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT)
No intervention (healthy controls)
The IBA treatment, a focused form of psychotherapy consists of twenty 45-minutes sessions, delivered weekly. The IBA model is based on the assumption that patients with OCD feel the need to perform compulsive acts because they misjudge the actual state of affairs, for example fearing that an appliance is on when it is visibly off. It is assumed that certain reasoning processes lead to these erroneous conclusions and distract the patient's attention from observable reality. IBA teaches patients how to defend themselves against the absorbing and confusing effect of obsessive reasoning processes and how to stay in touch with reality by actively relying on the sensory information of the very moment. As a consequence, the patient realizes that any compulsive act is superfluous and feels able to omit it.
In the control condition, the patients will receive twenty 45-minutes sessions of CBT consisting of self-guided exposure in vivo with response prevention (ERP) and cognitive therapy (CT), both standardized according to evidence-based session-by-session protocols, containing standardized forms for exercises and homework assignments.
The healthy control group will receive no intervention.