Epilepsy & Behavior | 2021

Process-oriented and personalized psychotherapeutic care for epilepsy: Interim results of a feasibility study

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nThere is great scientific and clinical interest in the effective integration of psychological treatments into comprehensive epilepsy care to optimize treatment outcomes and psychosocial functioning in people with epilepsy. Stepped care is a promising approach to accommodate personalized psychotherapeutic care in academic and regular outpatient settings. It aims at providing patients with the most adequate treatment duration, number of sessions, and treatment method while systematically monitoring their treatment processes.\n\n\nMETHODS\nThis is an uncontrolled feasibility study of process-oriented and personalized psychotherapeutic care for epilepsy in a naturalistic setting. The objective of this study was to evaluate individual changes of health-related quality of life (QOLIE-31) and psychiatric comorbidity (BDI-II, BSI) in participants by applying the concept of the reliable change index (RCI) to outcomes that were obtained at baseline and six months after the beginning of the intervention. Additionally, we assessed the relationship between outcome scores, the number of attended sessions, and history of childhood trauma by linear regression models.\n\n\nRESULTS\nTwenty patients [15 women/5 men, median age 48\u202fyears (range: 23-73\u202fyears)] were recruited. The median number of scheduled sessions was 11 (range: 6-22); there were no drop-outs. After psychotherapy quality of life (QOLIE-31), global distress (BSI) and depression (BDI-II) scores improved significantly (p-values: QOLIE-31: 0.03; BSI: 0.01; BDI-II: 0.01). The largest improvements were achieved for the emotional well-being subscale of the QOLIE-31 (47%, p-value: 0.02), the global severity index of the BSI (83%), and depression severity (BDI-II) (60%). Linear regression models did not reveal any significant association between interim changes, number of attended treatment sessions, and history of childhood trauma.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nThe results suggest that process-oriented and personalized psychotherapeutic has low attrition and results in improved quality of life and reduced psychiatric symptoms in people with epilepsy. Our findings indicate that responsiveness to psychotherapy is not dependent on the number of attended treatment sessions. Participants with childhood trauma did not need more treatment sessions to achieve an improvement. More research is needed to understand and address mechanisms and precursors of responsiveness to psychotherapy.

Volume 124
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.108313
Language English
Journal Epilepsy & Behavior

Full Text