Symptom trajectories in patients with panic disorder in a primary care intervention: Results from a randomized controlled trial (PARADISE)

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Abstract

This analysis aims to identify and characterize symptom trajectories in primary care patients with panic disorder with/without agoraphobia (PD/AG) who participated in a primary care team based training involving elements of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). Growth Mixture Modeling was used to identify different latent classes of change in patients with PD/AG (N = 176) who underwent treatment including CBT elements. We identified three patient classes with distinct similar trajectories. Class 1 (n = 58, mean age: 46.2 years ± 13.4 years, 81% women) consisted of patients with an initially high symptom burden, but symptoms declined constantly over the intervention period. Symptoms of patients in class 2 (n = 89, mean age: 44.2 years ± 14.5 years, 67.4% women) declined rapidly at the beginning, then patients went into a plateau-phase. The third class (n = 29, mean age: 47.0 years ± 12.4 years, 65.5% women) was characterized by an unstable course and had the worse outcome. Our findings show that only a minority did not respond to the treatment. To identify this minority and refer to a specialist would help patients to get intensive care in time.

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Lukaschek, K., Hiller, T. S., Schumacher, U., Teismann, T., Breitbart, J., Brettschneider, C., … Gensichen, J. (2019). Symptom trajectories in patients with panic disorder in a primary care intervention: Results from a randomized controlled trial (PARADISE). Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-43487-x

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