articleJournal of Child Psychology and PsychiatrySep 25, 2008GREEN OA

Cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety in children with autism spectrum disorders: a randomized, controlled trial

University of California, Los Angeles

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Children with autism spectrum disorders often present with comorbid anxiety disorders that cause significant functional impairment. This study tested a modular cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) program for children with this profile. A standard CBT program was augmented with multiple treatment components designed to accommodate or remediate the social and adaptive skill deficits of children with ASD that could pose barriers to anxiety reduction. METHOD: Forty children (7-11 years old) were randomly assigned to 16 sessions of CBT or a 3-month waitlist (36 completed treatment or waitlist). Therapists worked with individual families. The CBT model emphasized behavioral experimentation, parent-training, and school consultation. Independent evaluators blind to treatment condition conducted structured diagnostic interviews and parents and children completed anxiety symptom checklists at baseline and posttreatment/postwaitlist.

Results

In intent-to-treat analyses, 78.5% of the CBT group met Clinical Global Impressions-Improvement scale criteria for positive treatment response at posttreatment, as compared to only 8.7% of the waitlist group. CBT also outperformed the waitlist on diagnostic outcomes and parent reports of child anxiety, but not children's self-reports. Treatment gains were maintained at 3-month follow-up.

Citation impact

648
total citations
FWCI
11.29
Percentile
100%
References
46
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Anxiety
  • Autism
  • Psychology
  • Clinical psychology
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Autism spectrum disorder
  • Multiple baseline design
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