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The goal of the proposed research is to determine the extent to which Positive Affect Treatment (PAT), a novel treatment targeting reward mechanisms, can effectively target the psychological reward deficits that maintain anorexia nervosa (AN), and thus improve clinical symptoms.
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Anorexia Nervosa is a serious disorder associated with high medical and psychiatric morbidity, poor quality of life, and the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric illness. Although many individuals with AN ultimately achieve remission, this process of recovery is slow, with only about 1/3 of individuals recovering in the first decade of illness, and is not always associated with an enhanced quality of life. Further, a substantial portion of those with AN do not recover; 20-30% of affected individuals maintain a chronic illness course or die prematurely. Interventions that enhance the probability of long-term remission from adult AN are lacking. Efficacious outpatient treatments have not been identified and, although inpatient treatment can restore healthy weight, up to 50% of patients with AN relapse within a year of discharge. This paucity of effective treatment may be due to existing interventions not targeting key mechanisms of the disorder. Advances in neuroscience have contributed promising insights about the processes that promote AN symptoms. However, these findings have not been adequately integrated into treatment for AN. It is critical that future treatment development utilize emerging research on the mechanisms of AN to develop more effectively targeted interventions. The goal of the proposed research is to determine the extent to which Positive Affect Treatment (PAT), a novel treatment targeting reward mechanisms, can effectively target the psychological reward deficits that maintain anorexia nervosa (AN), and thus improve clinical symptoms. To this end, we propose a small, randomized, wait-list controlled pilot trial of PAT adapted for AN (PAT-AN) to achieve the following aims: To asses the feasibility and acceptability of PAT-AN among individuals with AN and to obtain initial data regarding the potential efficacy of PAT-AN compared to waitlist control on measures of clinical outcome and putative reward mechanisms in AN to inform a future larger randomized, controlled trial of this intervention.
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DSM-5 diagnosis of AN (established by the adapted MINI)
Ability to read and speak in English
Involvement in ongoing oversight with a primary physical or mental health provider as defined by:
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25 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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