Cognitive-behavioural group treatment for a range of functional somatic syndromes: randomised trial.

Andreas Schröder, Emma Rehfeld, Eva Ornbøl, Michael Sharpe, Rasmus W Licht, Per Fink
Author Information
  1. Andreas Schröder: Research Clinic for Functional Disorders and Psychosomatics, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark. andreas.schroeder@aarhus.rm.dk

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Many specialty-specific functional somatic syndrome diagnoses exist to describe people who are experiencing so-called medically unexplained symptoms. Although cognitive-behavioural therapy can be effective in the management of such syndromes, it is rarely available. A cognitive-behavioural therapy suitable for group treatment of people with different functional somatic syndromes could address this problem.
AIMS: To test the efficacy of a cognitive-behavioural therapy (Specialised Treatment for Severe Bodily Distress syndromes, STreSS) designed for patients with a range of severe functional somatic syndromes.
METHOD: A randomised controlled trial (clinicaltrials.gov, NCT00132197) compared STreSS (nine 3.5 h sessions over 4 months, n = 54) with enhanced usual care (management by primary care physician or medical specialist, n = 66). The primary outcome was improvement in aggregate score on subscales of the 36-item Short Form Health Survey (physical functioning, bodily pain and vitality) at 16 months.
RESULTS: Participants receiving STreSS had a greater improvement on the primary outcome (adjusted mean difference 4.0, 95% CI 1.4-6.6, P = 0.002) and on most secondary outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: In the management of functional somatic syndromes, a cognitive-behavioural group treatment was more effective than enhanced usual care.

Associated Data

ClinicalTrials.gov | NCT00132197

Grants

  1. G0300876/Medical Research Council

MeSH Term

Adult
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Female
Health Status
Humans
Male
Somatoform Disorders
Syndrome
Treatment Outcome

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0functionalsomaticcognitive-behaviouralsyndromestherapymanagementgrouptreatmentSTreSS=careprimarypeopleeffectiverangerandomisedtrial4monthsnenhancedusualoutcomeimprovement0BACKGROUND:Manyspecialty-specificsyndromediagnosesexistdescribeexperiencingso-calledmedicallyunexplainedsymptomsAlthoughcanrarelyavailablesuitabledifferentaddressproblemAIMS:testefficacySpecialisedTreatmentSevereBodilyDistressSyndromesdesignedpatientssevereMETHOD:controlledclinicaltrialsgovNCT00132197comparednine35hsessions54physicianmedicalspecialist66aggregatescoresubscales36-itemShortFormHealthSurveyphysicalfunctioningbodilypainvitality16RESULTS:Participantsreceivinggreateradjustedmeandifference95%CI14-66P002secondaryoutcomesCONCLUSIONS:Cognitive-behaviouralsyndromes:

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