Overview

Treatment of Hypochondriasis With CBT and/or SSRI

Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2011-12-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
This study will compare the effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy, antidepressant medication, and a combination of the two for treating hypochondriasis.
Phase:
Phase 1/Phase 2
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Collaborator:
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Treatments:
Fluoxetine
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria

- Meets DSM-IV criteria for hypochondriasis; ascertained by Structured Diagnosis for
Hypochondriasis module of SCID-I, and meets a hypochondriasis severity rating of at
least "moderate".

- Drug free for 6 weeks of all psychoactive or investigational medications (seven weeks
for fluoxetine).

- Approval from treating physician if concomitant psychoactive medications need to be
withdrawn prior to study participation.

- English fluency and literacy.

Exclusion Criteria

- Pregnant or nursing mothers and women of childbearing potential who are not taking
adequate birth control precautions.

- Any of the following Axis I mental disorders: chronic pain syndrome, schizophrenia,
schizoaffective disorder, delusional disorder, bipolar disorder, alcohol abuse or
dependence disorder (current or within the last six months), or substance abuse or
dependence disorder (current or within the last twelve months). Patients with other
comorbid psychiatric disorders are eligible based on the following three criteria:
hypochondriasis must be the predominant presenting disorder; patient can not have a
major co-morbid psychiatric disorder rated as "severe" on the Clinical Global
Impressions Scale (CGI Scale); and patients can not have a co-morbid psychiatric
disorder that causes significant functional impairment (significant functional
impairment will be defined as an impairment that interferes in a marked way with
expected role functioning, vocational and/or interpersonal).

- Suicidality within the last 6 months as established by a score of 9 or more on the
suicidality module of the MINI Plus.

- Symptom-contingent pending litigation, disability compensation, or workers'
compensation proceedings

- Major medical illness expected to worsen significantly, lead to hospitalization, or
likely to prove fatal in the next six months, established with the Cumulative Illness
Rating Scale (CIRS); Stable, chronic medical illness is not an exclusion criterion

- Not able to withdraw from concomitant psychoactive medications or currently taking
necessary other medication that might interact adversely with fluoxetine:

- Clinically important abnormalities in ECG, laboratory tests (including thyroid
function) or physical examination. "Clinically important" abnormalities are those that
signify a treatment intervention is needed or a medical abnormality has not been
sufficiently addressed. Patients with medical problems that are stable and chronic are
eligible, but patients with medical problems that are unstable, acute, or inadequately
evaluated will be excluded. A current electrocardiogram is required for all patients
with symptoms suggestive of cardiac disease, including chest pain, dyspnea,
palpitations, or lightheadedness; if no current electrocardiogram exists, the study
will obtain one.

- History of severe side effects associated with fluoxetine or noncompliance with prior
CBT for hypochondriasis

- Previous adequate trial of either fluoxetine (eight weeks of which two weeks were at a
minimum dose of 60 mg/day) or CBT for hypochondriasis (at least four sessions
specifically targeting hypochondriacal symptoms) will be excluded, regardless of prior
response. Inability to ambulate or mobility restrictions that prohibit frequent travel
to the hospital for treatment and evaluation.