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Main Authors: Madison Aitken, Sharon A.S. Neufeld, Clement Ma, Ian M. Goodyer
Format: Artículo Open Access
Published: Wiley 2025
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Online Access:https://acamh.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jcpp.14175
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author Madison Aitken
Sharon A.S. Neufeld
Clement Ma
Ian M. Goodyer
author_facet Madison Aitken
Sharon A.S. Neufeld
Clement Ma
Ian M. Goodyer
Madison Aitken
Sharon A.S. Neufeld
Clement Ma
Ian M. Goodyer
collection Wiley Open Access
contents Dynamics of depression symptoms in adolescents during three types of psychotherapy and post‐treatment follow‐up Madison Aitken Sharon A.S. Neufeld Clement Ma Ian M. Goodyer Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry Background According to the network theory of mental disorders, psychopathology emerges from symptoms that causally influence one another and create interconnections and feedback loops that maintain atypical mental states. Analysis of symptom networks during and following psychotherapy may provide clues to some of the mechanisms through which change occurs. Youth with depression are an important population in which to better understand psychotherapy mechanisms because current evidence‐based interventions for this population show only modest effects. Methods Participants were adolescents with major depressive disorder ( N  = 465; ages 11–17; 75% female) in a randomized controlled trial comparing cognitive behavioral therapy, short‐term psychoanalytical psychotherapy, and brief psychosocial intervention (IMPACT, ISRCTN83033550). Eleven self‐reported depression symptoms were used to compute two longitudinal networks: (1) treatment phase, using baseline, 6 and 12 weeks data; and (2) follow‐up phase, using 36, 52, and 86 weeks data. Results During the treatment phase, all depression symptoms were interconnected. Symptoms of insomnia and fatigue showed the highest outstrength centrality (ability to predict other symptoms over time). In contrast, few symptoms were interconnected during the post‐treatment phase except worthlessness, which had the highest outstrength centrality. Allowing network parameters to differ across the three treatment types improved model fit during the treatment phase and revealed that symptoms with the highest outstrength centrality varied by treatment type. Conclusions Individual symptoms may make key contributions to subsequent depressive psychopathology in adolescents. Longitudinal network analysis reveals that insomnia and fatigue predict other symptoms, allowing for consideration of specific mechanisms associated with depression treatment. The findings further suggest that negative cognitions about the self may emerge as a central putative cognitive vulnerability in those with a history of depression. Our exploratory findings also suggest that the three therapies (cognitive behavioral therapy, short‐term psychoanalytical psychotherapy, and brief psychosocial intervention) may have achieved equifinality in part through different mechanisms. 10.1111/jcpp.14175 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jcpp.14175
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publishDate 2025
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spellingShingle Dynamics of depression symptoms in adolescents during three types of psychotherapy and post‐treatment follow‐up
Madison Aitken
Sharon A.S. Neufeld
Clement Ma
Ian M. Goodyer
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
Dynamics of depression symptoms in adolescents during three types of psychotherapy and post‐treatment follow‐up Madison Aitken Sharon A.S. Neufeld Clement Ma Ian M. Goodyer Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry Background According to the network theory of mental disorders, psychopathology emerges from symptoms that causally influence one another and create interconnections and feedback loops that maintain atypical mental states. Analysis of symptom networks during and following psychotherapy may provide clues to some of the mechanisms through which change occurs. Youth with depression are an important population in which to better understand psychotherapy mechanisms because current evidence‐based interventions for this population show only modest effects. Methods Participants were adolescents with major depressive disorder ( N  = 465; ages 11–17; 75% female) in a randomized controlled trial comparing cognitive behavioral therapy, short‐term psychoanalytical psychotherapy, and brief psychosocial intervention (IMPACT, ISRCTN83033550). Eleven self‐reported depression symptoms were used to compute two longitudinal networks: (1) treatment phase, using baseline, 6 and 12 weeks data; and (2) follow‐up phase, using 36, 52, and 86 weeks data. Results During the treatment phase, all depression symptoms were interconnected. Symptoms of insomnia and fatigue showed the highest outstrength centrality (ability to predict other symptoms over time). In contrast, few symptoms were interconnected during the post‐treatment phase except worthlessness, which had the highest outstrength centrality. Allowing network parameters to differ across the three treatment types improved model fit during the treatment phase and revealed that symptoms with the highest outstrength centrality varied by treatment type. Conclusions Individual symptoms may make key contributions to subsequent depressive psychopathology in adolescents. Longitudinal network analysis reveals that insomnia and fatigue predict other symptoms, allowing for consideration of specific mechanisms associated with depression treatment. The findings further suggest that negative cognitions about the self may emerge as a central putative cognitive vulnerability in those with a history of depression. Our exploratory findings also suggest that the three therapies (cognitive behavioral therapy, short‐term psychoanalytical psychotherapy, and brief psychosocial intervention) may have achieved equifinality in part through different mechanisms. 10.1111/jcpp.14175 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title Dynamics of depression symptoms in adolescents during three types of psychotherapy and post‐treatment follow‐up
topic Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
url https://acamh.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jcpp.14175