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Published in final edited form as:
J Consult Clin Psychol. 2010 June ; 78(3): 312–321. doi:10.1037/a0018915.
Cognitive-Behavioral Guided Self-Help for the Treatment of
Recurrent Binge Eating
Ruth H. Striegel-Moore,
Wesleyan University
G. Terence Wilson,
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Lynn DeBar,
Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente NorthWest
Nancy Perrin,
Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente NorthWest
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Frances Lynch,
Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente NorthWest
Francine Rosselli, and
Wesleyan University
Helena C. Kraemer
Stanford University
Abstract
Objective—Despite proven efficacy of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for treating eating
disorders with binge eating as the core symptom, few patients receive CBT in clinical practice. Our
blended efficacy-effectiveness study sought to evaluate whether a manual-based guided self-help
form of CBT (CBT-GSH), delivered in 8 sessions in a Health Maintenance Organization setting over
a 12-week period by masters level interventionists, is more effective than treatment as usual (TAU).
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Method—In all, 123 individuals (mean age = 37.2, 91.9% female, 96.7% non-Hispanic White) were
randomized, including 10.6% with bulimia nervosa (BN), 48% with Binge Eating Disorder (BED),
and 41.4% with recurrent binge eating in the absence of BN or BED. Baseline, post-treatment, and
6- and 12 month follow-up data were used in intent-to-treat analyses. At 12-month follow-up, CBTGSH resulted in greater abstinence from binge eating (64.2%) than TAU (44.6%, Number Needed
to Treat = 5), as measured by the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE, Fairburn & Cooper, 1993).
Secondary outcomes reflected greater improvements in the CBT-GSH group in dietary restraint (d
= .30), eating-, shape-, and weight concern (d’s = .54, 1.01, .49) (measured by the EDE-Questionnaire,
respectively, Fairburn & Beglin, 2008), depression (d = .56) (Beck Depression Inventory, Beck,
Steer, & Garbin, 1988), and social adjustment (d = .58) (Work and Social Adjustment Scale, Mundt,
Marks, Shear, & Greist, 2002), but not weight change.
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Ruth Striegel-Moore, Department of Psychology, Wesleyan University,
Middletown, CT 06459. rstriegel@wesleyan.edu.
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Striegel-Moore et al.
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Conclusions—CBT-GSH is a viable first-line treatment option for the majority of patients with
recurrent binge eating who do not meet diagnostic criteria for BN or anorexia nervosa.
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Keywords
binge eating; cognitive behavior therapy; guided self-help; effectiveness
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Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) has been shown to be an effective treatment for bulimia
nervosa (BN) and binge eating disorder (BED) (Brownley, Berkman, Sedway, Lohr, & Bulik,
2007; Shapiro et al., 2007; Wilson, Grilo, & Vitousek, 2007) and has been recommended as
the psychological treatment of choice for these disorders (Wilson & Shafran, 2005). Yet, only
a minority of patients receives this treatment (Currin, et al., 2007; Mussell et al., 2000) and,
indeed, only a minority of individuals receives any mental health treatment specifically
targeting the eating disorder (Grilo et al., 2008; Mond, Hay, Rodgers, & Owen, 2007; StriegelMoore et al., 2008; Striegel-Moore, Leslie, Petrill, Garvin, & Rosenheck, 2000) despite strong
evidence of psychosocial and health impairments associated with these disorders (Lewinsohn,
Striegel-Moore, & Seeley, 2000; Mond & Hay, 2007; Mond, Hay, Rodgers, & Owen, in
press; Striegel-Moore, Seeley, & Lewinsohn, 2003). Numerous barriers have been described
that may explain underutilization of mental health services in general, and the recommended
treatment (CBT) in particular (Cachelin & Striegel-Moore, 2006; Sysko & Walsh, 2008; Wang
et al., 2005).
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Experts have noted the dearth of clinicians trained in delivery of CBT treatment as well as the
intensity or cost of CBT which requires 20 50-minute sessions to be provided over a period of
five months (Fairburn, 2008; Wilson, Wilfley, Agras, & Bryson, in press). To ensure costeffective allocation of scarce treatment resources, experts have called for a “stepped care”
approach to the treatment of eating disorders with less intensive treatments as the first step and
more intensive treatments reserved for those who fail to respond (Perkins, Murphy, Schmidt,
& Williams, 2006; Wilson, Vitousek, & Loeb, 2000). Several studies have shown that brief,
readily disseminable guided self-help approaches based on cognitive behavioral principles
(CBT-GSH) have been shown to be effective in the treatment of both BN (e.g., Banasiak,
Paxton, & Hay, 2007; Mitchell et al., 2006) as well as BED (e.g., Grilo & Masheb, 2005;
Wilson et al., in press). The superiority of CBT-GSH for BED over behavioral weight loss
(BWL) treatment in the later two studies provides evidence of the specificity of its effects.
Specifically, in a randomized clinical trial of 90 individuals with BED, Grilo and Masheb
(2005) found that CBT-GSH had significantly higher treatment completion rates (indicating
greater acceptability) and abstinence from binge eating rates (indicating greater efficacy) than
BWL. Similarly, a randomized clinical trial comparing the efficacy of a 10-session CBT-GSH
program and a 20-session BWL program for the treatment of BED found significantly greater
abstinence from binge eating in CBT-GSH (Wilson et al., in press).
Efficacy studies on CBT-GSH have focused on BN and BED primarily in specialty treatment
settings (Wilson et al., 2007) even though a majority of patients with eating disorders are
identified and treated in primary care settings (Hoek & van Hoeken, 2003; Striegel-Moore et
al., 2008). Moreover, evidence suggests that lay individuals believe that eating disorders should
be treated in a primary care setting (Mond & Hay, 2008; Mond, Hay, Rodgers, Owen, &
Beumont, 2004b). By providing guidance from highly educated therapists (PhD candidates or
therapists with graduate degrees) working in tertiary treatment centers with extensive local
expertise in the treatment of eating disorders, the existing studies have not yet fully explored
the possibility of expanding the availability of CBT-GSH by offering this treatment via less
educated therapists. As a step toward effectiveness research, we evaluated CBT-GSH delivered
in a primary care setting by master level counselors with no prior experience in the treatment
of eating disorders.
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Most patients presenting for treatment do not meet criteria for either BN or BED (Fairburn et
al., 2007); to date, however, clinical trials have required presence of full syndrome eating
disorders. One of the major reasons for not meeting full syndrome criteria is a lower binge
frequency than the required minimum average of two episodes a week for three consecutive
months for BN or two days a week for six consecutive months in the case of BED, yet emerging
evidence suggests that individuals who engage in regular binge eating even if at a lesser
frequency report significant clinical impairment or distress (Wilson & Sysko, in press). In the
present study, patients were included if they met our research definition of “recurrent binge
eating” which required a minimum average of one “objective bulimic episode” (OBE) a week
during the preceding three months with no gaps of two or more weeks between binge eating
episodes. This threshold is consistent with recent studies that have shown that even at the lower
frequency level, binge eating is associated with elevated levels of psychological distress
(Striegel-Moore et al., 2000) or indicators of impairment such as “days out of role” (Mond &
Hay, 2007).
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Lack of recognition of the eating behavior as symptomatic and lack of information about
available or appropriate treatment options are yet further barriers to seeking treatment
(Cachelin, Rebeck, Veisel, & Striegel-Moore, 2001; Mond & Hay, 2008; Mond, Hay, Rodgers,
Owen, & Beumont, 2004a). As described in detail in a previous report (DeBar et al., 2009),
the present study utilized a recruitment procedure more typically found in epidemiological
studies than in treatment trials. Specifically, rather than relying solely on advertisements or
public service announcements for finding participants, the present study invited members of a
health maintenance organization to complete a brief eating disorder screener (and, if screen
positive, a confirmatory interview) and enter the trial portion of the study if found to suffer
from an eating disorder involving binge eating as the core behavioral symptom. Hence,
outreach extended to individuals who might not themselves have identified their eating
behavior as in need of treatment and who, therefore, might not have responded to a clinical
trial study announcement seeking participants.
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The principal aim of the present study was to conduct a blended efficacy-effectiveness trial
testing the acceptability and efficacy of CBT-GSH for the treatment of eating disorders with
recurrent binge eating as a core symptom in the context of a “real world” setting of a health
maintenance organization (HMO) by comparing CBT-GSH to treatment as usual (TAU). A
majority of individuals in the United States receive their health care in a managed care setting
(Claxton et al., 2008). We selected TAU as a credible alternative to CBT-GSH because in the
HMO members have access to a wide range of health promotion and treatment interventions
related to weight and eating management as well as more general mental health concerns. Our
design was also intended to examine the cost effectiveness of CBT-GSH and those results are
the subject of a separate report (Lynch et al., 2009). We hypothesized that participants
randomized to receive CBT-GSH would be more likely than those randomized to TAU to
achieve abstinence from binge eating (primary outcome) and demonstrate significantly greater
improvements in eating related psychopathology and psychosocial functioning (secondary
outcomes).
Method
Participants and Recruitment
Participants were 123 health plan members (91.9% female, 96.7% white, and 3.3% Hispanic)
with a mean age of 37.20 (SD = 7.78) and mean BMI of 31.27 (SD = 6.23). Most (82.1%)
reported completing at least some college. A majority of participants (n = 72) met fullsyndrome criteria for an eating disorder (bulimia nervosa (BN) n = 13; BED n = 59) and seven
participants met the “lead symptom” criterion of binge eating on average at least twice a week
with no gaps longer than two weeks but missed one of the remaining symptoms required for
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full syndrome diagnosis of BN (n = 1) or BED (n = 6). Eight participants reported binge eating
on average at least twice a week but missed more than one criterion for a diagnosis of either
BN or BED. Thirty-six participants reported recurrent binge eating at a minimum average
frequency of once a week for the preceding three months.
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A detailed report of our recruitment approach has been published (Debar et al., 2009). The
CONSORT diagram (Figure 1) shows the flow of participants from screening to randomization
into the trial. In brief, recruitment initially involved mailings to a random sample of male and
female health plan members between 18 and 35 for an epidemiological study on eating habits
and body image (Striegel-Moore, Rosselli, et al., in press). To permit an unbiased examination
of the psychometric properties of the screening instrument used for case finding, until we
reached a predetermined number (100) of screen positive respondents, the study invitation did
not mention the clinical trial and participants who met inclusion trial criteria (N = 29) were
consented for the clinical trial upon completion of the baseline assessment. Later mailings
specifically recruited for the clinical trial and targeted female health plan members up to age
50; also, posters and brochures advertising the study were distributed in HMO clinics to
supplement these latter mailed recruitment efforts. These latter efforts yielded 95 additional
patients. Except for gender (a greater proportion of the patients recruited via the
epidemiological phase than via the recruitments advertising the trial were male) no differences
were found on demographic characteristics or eating disorder diagnosis when comparing the
two recruitment approaches.
All participants underwent a two-stage case finding procedure involving initial screening
followed by a confirmatory diagnostic interview by study staff unaware of the screening status
(Striegel-Moore, Perrin, et al., in press). Excluded from sampling were individuals with
diagnostic codes indicative of severe cognitive impairment or psychosis, individuals currently
being treated for cancer, women who were pregnant or had given birth in the past four months,
and approximately 100 plan members whose records indicated an a priori opt-out from any
study participation. Additional exclusion criteria (as determined during the diagnostic
assessment) were a current diagnosis of anorexia nervosa and severe obesity (BMI > 45). The
study was approved by all participating institutions’ human subjects review boards. The trial
was registered online with the National Institutes of Health National Library of Medicine
(http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT00158340).
Intervention
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Efron’s procedure (Efron, 1971) stratifying on purging status and gender was used to randomize
participants into TAU or CBT-GSH. Participants were permitted to avail themselves of the full
treatment resources offered through the HMO during the course of the study and all service
use was recorded. Following randomization, all participants were mailed a flyer detailing
relevant health plan sponsored services, such as a regularly offered series of classes focused
on non-diet approaches to healthy living and eating. In addition, participants were encouraged
to contact their primary care physician for other potentially appropriate services within the
health plan including visits with a nutritionist or mental health provider. CBT-GSH additionally
involved 8 sessions of CBT-GSH implemented over a 12 week period. The first session lasted
60 minutes; each subsequent session was 20 to 25 minutes in length. The first four sessions
were weekly, the next four at two-week intervals. The treatment was based on Fairburn’s
“Overcoming Binge Eating” (1995). The book’s first part provides user-friendly information
about binge eating; the second part comprises a six step self-help program. The primary focus
is on developing a regular pattern of moderate eating using self-monitoring, self-control
strategies, and problem-solving. To promote maintenance of behavioral change, relapse
prevention is emphasized. We added a module designed to reduce body-checking and body
avoidance in order to explicitly address dysfunctional body shape and weight concerns
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(available on request from GTW). The main role of the therapist is to explain the rationale for
CBT-GSH, develop realistic outcome expectancies, and engage the patient in adhering to the
manual-based program.
Three master’s level therapists with experience in using CBT for depression, but no familiarity
with eating disorders or CBT-GSH for treating binge eating, were trained and subsequently
delivered the CBT-GSH treatment. The therapists had an average of 6 years of post-graduate
clinical experience (range 4-10 years). Initial training was conducted by one of the senior
investigators (GTW) in a three hour workshop. All therapists were required to complete
treatment of two pilot patients and be approved before participating in the study proper. The
therapists received weekly supervision on-site (LD) and participated in biweekly supervision
conference calls as well as on-site supervision meetings three times a year with all three senior
investigators (GWT, LD, RSM) who listened to audio recordings of randomly selected
sessions.
Measures
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All participants were assessed at baseline using all instruments described below and, using
only measures of primary and secondary outcomes, at 12 weeks (post-treatment), 6- and 12
months. Treatment expectancies were measured at week 2. Participants could complete the
screening questionnaire online and receive a $5.00 coffee-house gift card or return the
completed questionnaire by pre-paid envelope without compensation. For all subsequent
assessments, participants were compensated between $10 and $50 (depending on the length of
assessment) for a total compensation of $225 plus a one-time bonus of $50 for participants
completing all assessments.
For all study participants, use of HMO services during the 12 weeks post randomization was
extracted from the electronic medical records and coded into four mutually exclusive
categories: weight related services, eating related services, medications for mental health
problems, and “all other services.” In addition, we coded for “all medications” and this category
included medications for mental health problems.
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Screening Questionnaire—The screening questionnaire collected information on
demographic characteristics and current height and weight and measured eating disorder
symptoms using a modified version of the Patient Health Questionnaire (Spitzer, Kroenke, &
Williams, 1999) eating disorder module (PHQ-ED) which includes binary response items
concerning binge eating and compensatory behaviors. Participants who reported binge eating
at least once per week during the past three months (“screen-positive”) were invited to
participate in further assessment to verify study eligibility. As previously reported, the PHQED had high sensitivity and specificity (Striegel-Moore, Perrin, et al., in press). As evident
from Figure 1, however, a large number of screened participants were found to be “false
positive” cases, supporting the need to conduct the confirmatory diagnostic interviews
described below.
Eating Pathology and Psychiatric Disorders—Screen-positive participants were
interviewed by phone using the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE; Fairburn & Cooper,
1993), 12th edition with text edits from the 14th and 15th editions, to confirm presence of
recurrent binge eating and eating disorder diagnoses based on the 4th edition of the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (American Psychiatric Association, 2000). The
EDE is a widely used semi-structured interview, generating operationally defined, DSM-IV
based, diagnoses of eating disorders and dimensional information about eating behaviors and
related attitudes. EDE items focus on the past 28 days and, for diagnostic items, also on the
past 3 months (BN) or 6 months (BED). Symptoms are measured in terms of their frequency
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(e.g., number of binge eating episodes during the past 28 days) or severity (rated on a scale
from 0 = absent to 6 = highest level of pathology, e.g., extreme overvaluation of weight or
shape). The EDE defines binge eating episodes (also referred to as OBEs) as eating episodes
that involve consuming, in two hours or less, more than what most people would eat under
similar circumstances and experiencing loss of control during the episodes. The reliability and
validity of the EDE have been established in several independent studies and these studies
consistently have supported its use (Fairburn, Cooper & O’Connor, 2008).
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To reduce participant burden, the EDE was edited such that only eating patterns and diagnostic
items were assessed during the telephone interview and items comprising the EDE subscales
(dietary restraint, eating concern, shape concern, and weight concern) were collected via a 22item self-report questionnaire (EDE-Q; Fairburn & Beglin, 1994, 2008). Referring to the past
28 days, the EDE-Q items ask respondents to rate the number of days on which they experienced
symptoms (e.g., “Have you tried to exclude from your diet any foods you like in order to
influence your weight or shape, regardless of whether you have succeeded?”) or rate the
severity of the symptoms (e.g., “How dissatisfied have you been with your weight?”). Ratings
range from 0 (no days; or “not at all”) to 6 (everyday or “markedly,” respectively). Items are
summed across the items comprising each scale and averages are calculated by dividing the
scale total by the number of items. The EDE-Q has been shown to have excellent reliability
and validity except when measuring overeating or binge eating (Fairburn & Beglin, 2008)
which is why the latter was measured by EDE interview.
The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID-I/NP with psychotic screen; First,
Spitzer, Gibbon, & Williams, 2002) was administered at baseline to measure axis I psychiatric
disorders (current and life-time) and the Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) module of the
SCID-II (First, Gibbon, Spitzer, Williams, & Benjamin, 1997) was used to determine presence
(life-time) of BPD.
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All interviews (EDE and SCID) were conducted by telephone by assessors blind to participants
initial screening responses and randomization assignment. Assessor training included the 11hour SCID video series (www.scid4.org), 12 hours of training workshops with an expert SCID
trainer, 20 hours of workshops with an expert EDE trainer, as well as interviews with pilot
participants. For both the SCID and EDE, assessors continued practice interviewers until they
achieved three consecutive interviews with 100% expert agreement. Ongoing biweekly
supervision continued throughout the data collection period. Five percent of the EDE
interviews were randomly selected to be coded by one of the two most experienced assessors
to determine reliability. Inter-rater reliability was very high for EDE diagnoses (kappa = .961)
as well as assessment of OBE days (ICC = .997) and number of OBEs (ICC = .999) during the
past 28 days.
Psychosocial functioning—Self-report was used to assess depression, using the 21-item
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI; Beck, Steer, & Garbin, 1988), and functional impairment,
using the 5-item Work and Social Adjustment Scale (WSAS; Mundt, Marks, Shear, & Greist,
2002).
Data analyses
Comparisons between the TAU and intervention groups at baseline were conducted using chisquare and t-tests. Multilevel modeling with HLM6.0 was used to test for differences between
the TAU and intervention groups across time for the primary and secondary outcomes. A
quadratic model for time (baseline, 12, 26, 52 weeks) was used to capture nonlinear change
across time. Therefore two parameters, linear slope and quadratic slope, characterize the change
across time. The linear slope describes the initial rate of change and the quadratic slope reflects
the degree to which the change slowed (or increased) over time. Both slope parameters are
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estimated simultaneously in the model. Multilevel modeling allows the inclusion of all
participants regardless of missing data across time consistent with an intent-to-treat approach.
Number needed to treat (NNT) effect sizes were computed for the primary outcome (Kraemer
& Kupfer, 2006). In the context of this study, NNT answers the question: “How many more
patients would need to be treated with CBT-GSH in order to avoid one more failure (i.e., patient
continues to binge eat) that would have occurred had the patient been treated as usual”? For
the secondary outcomes, Cohen’s d (Cohen, 1988) was computed using change from baseline
to 52 weeks. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used for additional analyses to
examine the relationship between abstinence over time and BMI. Using baseline measures, we
conducted exploratory analyses to identify potential nonspecific predictor or moderator
variables, including demographic characteristics, type or severity of eating disorder
symptomatology, baseline BMI and “weight suppression” (i.e., the difference between current
and highest adult BMI; Carter, McIntosh, Joyce, & Bulik, 2008; Lowe, 1993), comorbid
psychiatric disorders (any comorbid disorder or total number, as well as Borderline Personality
Disorder), self-reported depression, and treatment expectancies.
Results
Preliminary Analyses
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We verified that the TAU and CBT-GSH groups did not differ at baseline, suggesting that
randomization created initially equivalent groups. Specifically, as shown in Table 1, the groups
did not differ at baseline on age, gender, BMI, education, race, ethnicity, depression, EDE
diagnosis, presence of borderline personality disorder, Axis I disorder without eating disorder,
or major depressive disorder.
Table 2 illustrates that the proportion of participants utilizing health services during the 12
weeks following randomization did not differ significantly between the two groups in terms
of use of services to treat an eating related problem, a weight related problem, use of
prescription medications for mental health, use of any prescription medications, or all other
health services (excluding the aforementioned categories). Weight-related services included
participation in health education weight management and healthy eating group classes as well
as individual visits with health plan nutritionists.
Acceptability and Treatment Expectancies
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The majority of the CBT-GSH group (71.2%) attended all 8 sessions, 74.6% attended at least
7 sessions and 81.4% attended at least 6 sessions. The mean number of sessions attended was
6.75 (SD = 2.39) and only 11.9% attended 2 or fewer sessions. There were minimal missing
data with 83.7% of the total sample having data on the primary outcome at all 4 time points
(84.4% TAU, 83.1% CBT-GSH), 90.2% with 3 or more time points, and 95.1% with 2 or more
time points. At 52 weeks, 56 of the 64 TAU and 53 of the 59 CBT-GSH patients had data on
the primary outcome.
When asked at session 2 how suitable participants thought their options were for treating binge
eating on a scale from 1 (not at all suitable) to 5 (extremely suitable), the CBT-GSH group
found their options to be significantly more suitable (M = 4.16, SD = 0.65) than the TAU group
(M = 2.71, SD = 1.22), t(82) = 7.09, p < .001, d = 1.25. The CBT-GSH group was also more
confident (1 = not at all confident, 5 = extremely confident) that their treatment options would
be successful (M = 3.78, SD = 0.82) than the TAU group (M = 2.65, SD = 0.98), t(82) = 5.75,
p <.001, d = 1.09. In subgroup analyses for the TAU and CBT-GSH groups, neither question
was predictive of abstinence at 52 weeks (TAU suitable χ2 =0.15, p = .700; TAU confident
χ2 = 2.39, p = .122; CBT-GSH suitable χ2 = 1.68, p = .195; CBT-GSH confident χ2 =1.14, p
= .286).
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Proportion Abstaining from Binge Eating
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The CBT-GSH and TAU groups were significantly different on the pattern of change in the
primary outcome of abstinence from binge eating over time. The improvement in abstinence
was greater for CBT-GSH than TAU, with a greater rate of change from baseline (B = .122,
p < .001) for the CBT-GSH group which also slowed more over time (B= -.002, p < .001) in
comparison to the TAU group (see Figure 2). At 12 weeks, 28.3% of TAU and 63.5% of CBTGSH participants were abstinent from binge eating (χ2 = 13.91, p < .001, NNT = 3), 44.1%
and 74.5% were abstinent from binge eating in the TAU and intervention groups at 26 weeks
(χ2 = 10.42, p < .001, NNT = 3), and at 52 weeks, 44.6% of the TAU group and 64.2% of the
CBT-GSH group were abstinent from binge eating (χ2 =4.17, p < .041, NNT = 5). These group
differences reflected large effects: at six months, for every three patients treated with CBTGSH, one more treatment failure (i.e., the patient would have continued to binge eat) was
avoided (Kraemer & Kupfer, 2006).
Secondary Outcomes
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As shown in Table 3, the two groups differed significantly in the pattern of restraint (B = -.
055, p < .004, d = .30), eating concern (B = -.068, p < .001, d =. 54), shape concern (B = -.045,
p < .038, d = 1.01), and weight concern (B = -.048, p=.017, d = .49): the CBT-GSH group
showed more improvement than TAU over time for each of these subscales. The CBT-GSH
group reported less eating restraint, and fewer eating-, shape-, and weight concerns at the
follow-ups than the TAU group. The CBT-GSH group also showed greater improvement in
depression as measured by the BDI (B = -.330, p < .007, d = .56) and work and social adjustment
as measured by the WSAS (B = .142, p < .038, d = .58). There were no significant differences
in the acceleration or deceleration of the changes over time between the two groups for any of
the secondary outcomes. The two groups did not differ significantly on the change in BMI over
time.
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Because of the apparent absence of a relationship between improvements in BMI in the CBTGSH group compared to TAU, we conducted an unplanned exploratory analysis examining
the effect of abstinence from binge eating on BMI using data from both groups. Participants
were classified as being abstinent at 26 weeks and 52 weeks or not. A group (those who were
abstinent at weeks 26 and 52 versus those who were not abstinent at weeks 26 and 52) by time
(baseline and 52 weeks) repeated measures analysis of variance was conducted with BMI as
the dependent variable. Forty-one individuals were abstinent at both 26 and 52 weeks; fiftyeight individuals were not abstinent at both 26 and 52 weeks or were missing data on abstinence
at one of those time points. The time by group interaction was significant, F(1,97)= 4.44, p < .
038, d = .12 with those who were not abstinent at 26 and 52 weeks showing an increase in BMI
(M = 31.16, SD = 6.77 at baseline; M = 31.82, SD = 7.10 at 52 weeks) and those abstinent at
both time points showing a decline in BMI (M = 31.01, SD = 5.22 at baseline; M = 30.91,
SD = 5.57 at 52 weeks).
Nonspecific predictors and moderators
Exploratory analyses testing for nonspecific predictors or moderators of treatment outcome
were non-significant for age, education, income, number of binge eating episodes at baseline,
eating disorder diagnosis (recurrent binge eating, BN, BED), severity of depressed mood (BDI
scores), any or total number of comorbid psychiatric disorders, Borderline Personality
Disorder, baseline BMI or obesity (BMI equal to or greater than 30), and weight suppression
(data available upon request).
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Discussion
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This study examined the acceptability and efficacy of a brief guided self-help program, based
on cognitive-behavioral principles, for the treatment of recurrent binge eating relative to
treatment as usual. Our study employed a randomized clinical trial design yet involved features
more commonly found in effectiveness studies, including delivering the treatment in a primary
care context and by staff with less education than is typical in efficacy studies, and adopting a
broader definition of eating disorders (i.e., allowing for greater variability in diagnoses and
thereby more closely capturing eating disorder cases that might present in routine clinical
practice). As summarized in Table 1, 48% of the sample was diagnosed with BED, 10.6% met
criteria for BN, and 41.6% of the sample met our criteria for recurrent binge eating. Exploratory
moderator analyses failed to show differential treatment effects across eating disorder
diagnoses, yet we caution that the percentage of individuals with BN was too small to detect
differences. Previous research has shown CBT-GSH to be effective both with BED (Wilson
et al., in press) and with BN (Mitchell et al., 2006), yet the latter study awaits replication.
Hence, until further studies are conducted where power is adequate to test efficacy of CBTGSH for the treatment of BN, we conservatively conclude that CBT-GSH is a viable treatment
for recurrent binge eating in individuals who do not meet criteria for BN or anorexia nervosa.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Although the particular outreach approach to health plan members proved highly challenging,
requiring large scale mailings (Debar et al., 2009), once participants agreed to enter the trial,
acceptability of the CBT-GSH program as reflected in attendance rates was high. Dropout was
low and consistent with completion rates reported in other trials providing guided self-help for
the treatment of binge eating disorder which found dropout rates of 10% (Carter & Fairburn,
1998) or 13% (Grilo & Masheb, 2005), respectively. Moreover, participants appeared to agree
with the rationale for CBT-GSH which was presented during the first session: the mean
expectancy rating for the suitability of this treatment for their eating problem (obtained at
session 2) was 4.16 on a scale where 5 was the maximum score. Of note, suitability ratings
were not predictive of treatment outcome. Our design does not permit testing the hypothesis
that suitability ratings would be predictive of relatively greater adherence to CBT-GSH versus
another treatment because our comparison condition, TAU, did not require patients to follow
a specific regimen.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Treatment in this study was delivered by Master’s level therapists with experience in using
CBT for depression. A majority of patients in our study exhibited comorbid psychopathology
(see Table 1). Roughly 60% had a comorbid axis I diagnosis; 15% of the CBT-GSH group
were diagnosed with major depression. Rates of comorbid Borderline Personality Disorder
were low. The level of therapist training and skill necessary for effective administration of
CBT-GSH remains undetermined (Sysko & Walsh, 2008). Inexperienced and unsupervised
health care providers with minimal training in CBT-GSH appear ineffective (Walsh, Fairburn,
Mickley, Sysko, & Parides, 2004). Even if successful CBT-GSH requires specific therapist
selection, training, and supervision, it would still provide a briefer, less costly, and more readily
disseminable intervention to a wider range of health care providers than specialty
psychotherapy (Wilson et al., in press).
The primary aim of our study was to evaluate CBT-GSH against TAU. All participants were
informed about the HMO’s options for treating binge eating. Our data show that most
participants in both conditions utilized health services during the 12 weeks following
randomization and thus had opportunity to request specific services for their eating problem.
The large number of participants receiving psychotropic medications (typically antidepressants
and, to a lesser degree anxiolitics) speaks to the considerable level of distress or comorbid
psychopathology in this sample. Yet, as shown in Table 2, only few participants were treated
specifically for an eating disorder outside the context of the CBT-GSH treatment condition.
J Consult Clin Psychol. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 June 1.
Striegel-Moore et al.
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Similar to services offered in most health care settings, treatment for eating disorders within
the health plan largely consisted of nonspecific case management rather than the provision of
evidence based CBT treatment for eating disorders. Indeed, several previous studies have
documented the infrequent use of care targeted specifically to treating the eating disorder
(Striegel-Moore et al., 2008;Striegel-Moore et al., 2000).
The post-treatment and one year follow-up abstinence rates from binge eating (our primary
outcome variable) for CBT-GSH of 63% and 64% respectively are consistent with findings
from recent research on the efficacy of CBT-GSH for the treatment of BED. For example,
Wilson et al. (in press) obtained rates of 58% and 60% at post-treatment and one year followup. Moreover, favorable results were also observed for several of the secondary outcomes,
including improvements on measures of eating related psychopathology (specifically, eating-,
weight- and shape concerns, and restraint), as well as on measures of depression and functional
impairment.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
The effect size estimates for abstinence from binge eating further underscore the clinical
significance of our results. For every three patients (at 6 months) or 5 patients (at 12 months)
treated with CBT-GSH, one more failure (i.e., a patient who did not achieve abstinence) was
observed in TAU. Even though CBT-GSH lost some of its superiority over TAU over time
(NNT decreased from 3 at post-treatment and 6-month follow-up to 5 at 12-months), this
relative decline in superiority is modest. Moreover, we note that the relative decline in
superiority appeared to occur because of improvements in the TAU group rather than because
of a loss of earlier gains in the CBT-GSH group. The cost effectiveness of CBT-GSH relative
to TAU is the subject of a separate report (Lynch et al., 2009). The results also compare
favorably with outcomes for BED of specialty psychological therapies such as manual-based
CBT and IPT (Wilson et al., 2007). As such, they add to the accumulating evidence that
recurrent binge eating can be effectively treated with a brief and easily disseminable treatment.
NIH-PA Author Manuscript
Similar to studies of CBT or CBT-GSH for the treatment of BED (Grilo & Masheb, 2005;
Wilson et al., in press), a population where overweight or obesity is common and weight loss
therefore a desirable treatment outcome (Wilfley, Bishop, Wilson, & Agras, 2007), our study
found that CBT-GSH had no significant effect on weight. In part this may reflect the fact that
the intervention does not target weight loss (although we point out that participants in the Grilo
and Masheb (2005) study also did not lose significant amounts of weight in the BWL
condition). An unplanned post-hoc analysis found a small effect for BMI when comparing
participants who had achieved abstinence from binge eating versus those who had not. Of note,
the latter group experienced a slight weight gain over the course of the study. This finding is
consistent with data from a longitudinal study of women with bulimia nervosa or binge eating
who were found to gain weight at an accelerated rate compared to healthy women (Fairburn
et al., 2003).
Several limitations need to be considered. These include the insufficient power for testing
predictors or moderators of treatment outcome. Surprisingly, we did not find a significant
predictor effect of negative affect (defined by BDI scores) given previous studies in which high
negative affect predicted a poorer treatment response (Masheb & Grilo, 2008; Stice, Bohon,
Marti, & Fischer, 2008). Another limitation was the demographic homogeneity of our sample.
Men or individuals representing ethnic minority populations have been shown to suffer from
binge eating disorders (Alegria, et al., 2007; Cachelin & Striegel-Moore, 2006; Hudson, Hiripi,
Pope, & Kessler, 2007; Taylor, Caldwell, Baser, Faison, & Jackson, 2007), yet few men or
Hispanic individuals were included in our sample despite outreach efforts and the availability
of assessment and intervention materials in Spanish language for Hispanic health plan members
(the largest ethnic minority group in the HMO’s geographic area).
J Consult Clin Psychol. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 June 1.
Striegel-Moore et al.
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The strengths of the study include the health maintenance organization setting, the use of the
EDE, good retention of patients in the sample through follow-up, and a broader sample of
patients (including many with EDNOS) than more narrowly defined BED or BN samples from
previous studies of CBT-GSH. As such, we have provided novel findings for the
disseminability of evidence based CBT-GSH.
Acknowledgments
Supported by MH066966 (to principal investigator R.S.M.) from the National Institutes of Health and by the National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and the National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
(awarded to Kaiser Foundation Research Institute). The contents of this study are solely the responsibility of the authors
and do not necessarily represent the official of the NIH, NIMH, NIDDK, or the Kaiser Foundation Research Institute.
Trial registry name: Guided Self-Help Treatment for Binge Eating Disorders (BEST)
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Figure 1.
Participant flow across all phases of the study
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Figure 2.
Abstinence rates at post-treatment, 6-month, and 12-month follow-up
Note: TAU and GSH-CBT are significantly different at each follow-up time point (Weeks 12
& 26 p<.001: Week 52 p=.041)
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Table 1
Baseline Characteristics of Study Sample by Treatment
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TAU (N=64)
CBT-GSH (N=59)
Test statistic
p-value
Mean age (SD) in years
36.64 (7.92)
37.81 (7.64)
-.834a
.406
Gender (female): % (n)
92.2% (59)
91.5% (54)
.018b
.893
Education (some college or more): % (n)
79.7% (51)
84.7% (50)
.535b
.465
Race (White): % (n)
95.3% (61)
98.3% (58)
.874b
.331
3.1% (2)
3.4% (2)
.007b
.934
.459b
.928
Ethnicity (Hispanic): % (n)
Eating Disorder (ED) Diagnosis
Bulimia Nervosa purging: % (n)
4.7% (3)
5.1% (3)
6.3% (4)
5.1% (3)
Binge Eating Disorder: % (n)
45.3% (29)
50.8% (30)
Recurrent Binge Eating: % (n)
43.8% (28)
39.0% (23)
4.7% (3)
1.7% (1)
.915b
.633
Axis I Disorder w/o ED: % (n)
60.9% (39)
59.3% (35)
.033b
.855
Major Depressive Disorder: % (n)
10.9% (7)
15.3% (9)
.523b
.770
EDE-Q Restraint: M (SD)
2.74 (1.39)
2.60 (1.44)
.568a
.571
EDE-Q Eating Concern: M (SD)
3.58 (1.19)
3.51 (1.29)
.300a
.765
EDE-Q Shape Concern: M (SD)
4.67 (0.94)
4.84 (0.94)
-1.025a
.308
EDE-Q Weight Concern: M (SD)
4.10 (1.81)
4.20 (1.01)
-.508a
.612
Beck Depression Inventory: M (SD)
18.63 (8.32)
19.63 (7.71)
-.679a
.499
Work and Social Adjustment: M (SD)
17.37 (7.24)
17.28 (7.13)
.068a
.946
Body Mass Index: M (SD)
30.88 (6.71)
31.68 (5.70)
-.710a
.479
Bulimia Nervosa nonpurging: % (n)
Borderline Personality Disorder: % (n)
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Note. TAU = Treatment as Usual. CBT-GSH = Guided Self-Help Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. EDE-Q = Eating Disorder Examination
Questionnaire.
a
t-test.
b
chi-square test.
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Table 2
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Health Services Use Among Participants in the 12 Weeks Following Randomization by Health Services Category
and Treatment
TAU (N=64)
CBT-GSH (N=59)
Chi-square
p-value
Weight related services
4.7%
1.7%
0.874
0.350
Eating disorder related services
10.9%
5.1%
1.408
0.235
Medications for mental health
45.3%
47.5%
0.057
0.812
All medications
71.9%
81.4%
1.532
0.216
All other health services
64.1%
64.4%
0.002
0.968
Health Services Category
Note. TAU = Treatment as Usual. CBT-GSH = Guided Self-Help Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.
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Table 3
Baseline M (SD)
Week 12 M (SD)
Week 26 M (SD)
Week 52 M (SD)
p-value
Effect Size
.004
.30
<.001
.54
.038
1.01
.017
.49
.038
.58
.770
.16
EDE-Q Restraint
TAU
2.74 (1.39)
2.08 (1.51)
2.07 (1.44)
1.92 (1.39)
CBT-GSH
2.60 (1.44)
1.48 (1.38)
1.27 (1.16)
1.35 (1.24)
Striegel-Moore et al.
Secondary Outcomes by Treatment and Assessment Time
J Consult Clin Psychol. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 June 1.
EDE-Q Eating Concerns
TAU
3.58 (1.19)
2.31 (1.51)
2.21 (1.57)
2.10 (1.37)
CBT-GSH
3.51 (1.29)
1.43 (1.43)
1.24 (1.35)
1.36 (1.44)
EDE-Q Shape Concerns
TAU
4.67 (0.94)
3.86 (1.36)
3.79 (1.53)
3.91 (1.42)
CBT-GSH
4.84 (0.94)
3.23 (1.63)
3.09 (1.66)
3.13 (1.64)
EDE-Q Weight Concerns
TAU
4.10 (1.81)
3.36 (1.31)
3.26 (1.52)
3.23 (1.49)
CBT-GSH
4.20 (1.01)
2.70 (1.43)
2.60 (1.45)
2.64 (1.52)
Beck Depression Inventory
TAU
18.63 (8.32)
14.63 (9.23)
13.77 (9.64)
13.94 (9.16)
CBT-GSH
19.74 (7.68)
10.54 (8.37)
9.23 (7.78)
10.76 (8.42)
Work and Social Adjustment
TAU
17.37 (7.24)
14.53 (7.13)
12.17 (7.04)
13.15 (7.71)
CBT-GSH
17.28 (7.13)
9.57 (5.79)
9.79 (6.38)
8.86 (5.27)
TAU
30.88 (6.71)
30.91 (6.87)
30.85 (7.16)
31.50 (7.33)
CBT-GSH
31.74 (5.67)
31.10 (5.79)
31.04 (5.73)
31.38 (5.50)
Body Mass Index
Note: CBT-GSH = Guided Self-Help Cognitive Behavioral Therapy; EDE-Q = Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire; p-value is for differences between the groups in change over time; effect sizes are
Cohen’s d
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