Abstract

Metacognitive therapy (MCT) has been shown to be a promising treatment approach for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). The changeability of metacognitions by (metacognitive) treatment and its relevance to treatment outcome is, however, still unclear. The current study investigates, (1) if treatment with MCT or exposure and response prevention (ERP) in a randomized-controlled pilot trial (n = 24 patients with OCD) changes OCD-specific metacognitions of thought fusion beliefs, beliefs about rituals and stop signals, and (2) if these changes are relevant for the treatment outcome in terms of patient- and therapist-rated OCD symptoms. ANOVA with pretest, posttest and follow-up scores could show that all three metacognitions significantly decreased during both treatments. Regarding thought fusion beliefs, a significant interaction effect indicated a higher decrease after MCT than ERP treatment. In hierarchical regression analyses, changes in stop signals from pre- to post-treatment significantly predicted patient-rating OCD symptoms at post-treatment and follow-up at 3 months after treatment. These changes were even predictive of post-treatment outcome after controlling for general metacognitions and dysfunctional cognitive beliefs. These findings support the assumption that metacognitions can change during both treatments and that changes in stop signals might be relevant for the treatment outcome on the symptom level in OCD.

Highlights

  • Metacognitive therapy (MCT) [1] has been suggested as one promising treatment approach for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) [2]

  • There was a significant effect of the group x time interaction for the outcome variable of thought fusion beliefs, with the MCT treatment condition showing a stronger effect in reducing thought fusion beliefs than exposure with response prevention (ERP)

  • The results showed that both MCT and ERP significantly reduced all three OC-specific metacognitions

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Summary

Introduction

Metacognitive therapy (MCT) [1] has been suggested as one promising treatment approach for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) [2]. Pilot and single case studies found support for the efficacy for MCT for OCD [e.g., [3, 4]]. In a routine clinical service, MCT applied as a group treatment was found to be effective in OCD, with higher clinical response rates than a group cognitive behavior therapy [6]. We recently reported results of a controlled pilot study showing that MCT was effective as the gold standard for treatment of OCD, exposure with response prevention (ERP) in reducing OCD symptoms [7]. MCT required less treatment time than ERP in this study

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