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Patterns of Symptom Change in Behaviors and Cognitions During 10-Session Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT-T) for Non-Underweight Eating Disorders


Abstract Little is known about the timing of behavioral versus cognitive change in 10-session cognitive-behavioral therapy for non-underweight eating disorders (CBT-T). We aimed to: (a) evaluate the magnitude of behavioral and cognitive symptom reduction across treatment; and (b) investigate the relation between early behavioral change and subsequent cognitive change. We hypothesized: (a) large and significant reductions in behavioral and cognitive symptoms from pre- to mid-treatment and from pre- to post-treatment; and (b) that early behavioral change would predict subsequent cognitive change over the course of treatment. Patients (N = 63) were offered CBT-T and completed the Eating Disorder-15 on a weekly basis. We used intent-to-treat analyses. For Aim 1, we conducted a series of fixed-effect multilevel models for each outcome variable, accounting for repeated measures (pre-, mid-, and post-treatment) within individuals. For Aim 2, we conducted a linear regression using early behavioral change as the predictor and subsequent cognitive change as the outcome. We observed large and significant reductions in most behavioral and all cognitive symptoms pre- to mid-treatment and pre- to post-treatment. Early changes in behavioral symptoms did not significantly predict subsequent cognitive changes. Behavioral improvements occurred rapidly and were sustained throughout treatment, whereas cognitive changes followed a more gradual trajectory. The absence of a significant predictive relationship between early behavioral change and subsequent cognitive change suggests that these domains may improve independently. Future research should investigate the mechanisms linking behavioral and cognitive changes.
Authors P. Evelyna Kambanis ORCID , Haley Graver ORCID , Lilian P. Palmer ORCID , Casey M. Stern ORCID , Nassim Tabri ORCID , Ashley Dunford ORCID , Helen Burton Murray ORCID , Lauren Breithaupt ORCID , Shirley B. Wang ORCID , Setareh M. Rossman ORCID , Christopher J. Mancuso University of WyomingORCID , Alexandra M. Andrea ORCID , Glenn Waller ORCID , Cathryn M. Freid , Kamryn T. Eddy ORCID , Jennifer J. Thomas ORCID , Kendra R. Becker ORCID
Journal Info Wiley | International Journal of Eating Disorders
Publication Date 4/1/2025
ISSN 0276-3478
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access closed Closed Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/eat.24429
KeywordsKeyword Image Underweight (Score: 0.4263307)