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Neural Markers of Treatment Mechanisms and Prediction of Treatment Outcomes in Social Anxiety
Sponsor: Boston University Charles River Campus
Summary
The purpose of this clinical trial is to answer the question: can the investigators predict which adults with social anxiety disorder (SAD) will successfully respond to treatment? To answer this question, the investigators plan to recruit 190 adult participants who experience extreme forms of social anxiety to undergo brain imaging before and after 12 weeks of group cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Adults in the SAD group who do not respond enough to group CBT may be offered the opportunity to complete an additional 12 weeks of individual CBT while receiving SSRI medication (sertraline, see below) for SAD. Data collected from participants who experience anxiety will be compared to a group of 50 participants with little or no social anxiety, who will serve as a comparison group.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 50 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
240
Start Date
2023-05-26
Completion Date
2027-06-30
Last Updated
2025-02-19
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Group CBT for Social Anxiety Disorder
Initial CBT will consist of 12 weekly, 2.5-hour group sessions. Later sessions (after session 7) become more individualized as the exposure practices are tailored to the individual participant's concerns. Most often, the exposures are completed outside the group environment. Session content includes various cognitive behavioral strategies tailored to SAD, such as psychoeducation, examining and challenging cognitive distortions, and exposure exercises.
Sertraline
Non-responders will initiate sertraline at baseline (week 0) with 25 mg/day followed by a dose increase to 50 mg/day at week 1, 100 mg at week 4, 150 mg at week 6, and 200 mg at week 8. Upward dose titration may be slowed and the dose decreased if necessary due to side effects, but the clinician will attempt to titrate all symptomatic participants up to 200 mg/day if tolerated by week 8, with the last dose increase allowed at week 10. Participants will be assessed at each visit by the study psychiatrist for purposes of dose titration and monitoring. Symptomatic participants unable to reach 200 mg/day of sertraline due to side effects will be maintained in the trial if they are on at least 50 mg/day by week 8; all symptomatic participants will be titrated to their maximally tolerated dose (\< 200 mg/day sertraline). Any participant unable to tolerate sertraline will be discontinued and referred for clinical treatment.
Individual CBT for Social Anxiety Disorder
Participants who show no or only partial response to the initial group CBT will continue with an individual, tailored form of CBT plus adjunctive SSRI. The format of CBT will include
Locations (1)
Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders at Boston University
Boston, Massachusetts, United States