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About
Brief Summary: This study will compare the effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), lisdexamfetamine (LDX), and the combination of CBT and LDX for the treatment of binge-eating disorder in patients with obesity. This is an acute treatment comparing CBT or LDX alone or in combination.
Full description
Obesity is a heterogeneous problem and research has highlighted the particular significance of a subgroup with binge-eating disorder (BED), the most prevalent formal eating disorder. This study examined the effectiveness of two leading but distinct treatments - lisdexamfetamine (LDX) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) - alone and in combination, for BED in patients with obesity. LDX is the first and only FDA-approved medication for the treatment of BED and has demonstrated short-term effectiveness relative to placebo. CBT is the best-established psychological treatment, has demonstrated short-term effectiveness and "treatment specificity" (i.e., superiority to a variety of control and active treatments), has shown longer-term superiority to fluoxetine, and longer-term durability of outcomes. N=180 participants with BED and obesity will be randomly assigned to one of three interventions, CBT alone, LDX alone, or CBT combined with LDX. This RCT will provide new findings regarding the relative effectiveness of LDX, CBT, and combined CBT+LDX for patients with obesity and BED. No such study has been performed.
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141 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Valentina Ivezaj, Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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