Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Anxiety disorders are common in children and cause substantial impairment in school, in
family relationships, and in social functioning.1,2 Such disorders also predict adult
anxiety disorders and major depression.3-6 Despite a high prevalence (10 to 20%3,7,8)
and substantial morbidity, anxiety disorders in childhood remain underrecognized and
undertreated.1,9 An improvement in outcomes for children with anxiety disorders would
have important public health implications.
In clinical trials, separation and generalized anxiety disorders and social phobia are often
grouped together because of the high degree of overlap in symptoms and the distinction
from other anxiety disorders (e.g., obsessivecompulsive disorder). Efficacious
treatments for these disorders include cognitive behavioral therapy10,11 and the use of
selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs).12,13 However, randomized, controlled
trials comparing cognitive behavioral therapy, the use of an SSRI, or the combination of
both therapies with a control are lacking. The evaluation of combination therapy is
particularly important because approximately 40 to 50% of children with these disorders
do not have a response to short-term treatment with either monotherapy.14,15
Our study, called the ChildAdolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study, was designed to
address the current gaps in the treatment literature by evaluating the relative efficacy of
cognitive behavioral therapy, sertraline, a combination of the two therapies, and a placebo
drug. This article reports the results of short-term treatment.
Methods
The authors designed the study, wrote the manuscript, and vouch for the data gathering
and analysis. Pfizer provided sertraline and matching placebo free of charge but was not
involved in the design or implementation of the study, the analysis or interpretation of
data, the preparation or review of the manuscript, or the decision to publish the results of
the study.
Study Subjects
Children between the ages of 7 and 17 years with a primary diagnosis of separation or
generalized anxiety disorder or social phobia (according to the criteria of the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition, text revision [DSM-IV-
TR]16), substantial impairment, and an IQ of 80 or more were eligible to participate.
Children with coexisting psychiatric diagnoses of lesser severity than the three target
disorders were also allowed to participate; such diagnoses included attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) while receiving stable doses of stimulant and obsessive
compulsive, post-traumatic stress, oppositionaldefiant, and conduct disorders. Children
were excluded if they had an unstable medical condition, were refusing to attend school
because of anxiety, or had tried but had not had a response to two adequate trials of
SSRIs or an adequate trial of cognitive behavioral therapy. Girls who were pregnant or
were sexually active and were not using an effective method of birth control were also
excluded. Children who were receiving psychoactive medications other than stable doses
of stimulants and who had psychiatric diagnoses that made participation in the study
clinically inappropriate (i.e., current major depressive or substance-use disorder;
unmedicated ADHD, combined type; or a lifetime history of bipolar, psychotic, or
pervasive developmental disorders) or who presented an acute risk to themselves or
others were also excluded.
Recruitment occurred from December 2002 through May 2007 at Duke University
Medical Center, New York State Psychiatric InstituteColumbia University Medical
CenterNew York University, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Temple University,
University of California, Los Angeles, and Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. The protocol was approved and monitored by
institutional review boards at each center and by the data and safety monitoring board of
the National Institute of Mental Health. Subjects and at least one parent provided written
informed consent.
Interventions
Cognitive behavioral therapy involved fourteen 60-minute sessions, which included
review and ratings of the severity of subjects' anxiety, response to treatment, and adverse
events. Therapy was based on the Coping Cat program,17,18 which was adapted for the
subjects' age and the duration of the study.19 Each subject who was assigned to receive
cognitive behavioral therapy received training in anxiety-management skills, followed by
behavioral exposure to anxiety-provoking situations. Parents attended weekly check-ins
and two parent-only sessions. Experienced psychotherapists, certified in the Coping Cat
protocol, received regular site-level and cross-site supervision.
Objectives
Study objectives were, first, to compare the relative efficacy of the three active treatments
with placebo; second, to compare combination therapy with either sertraline or cognitive
behavioral therapy alone; and third, to assess the safety and tolerability of sertraline, as
compared with placebo. We hypothesized that all three active treatments would be
superior to placebo and that combination therapy would be superior to either sertraline or
cognitive behavioral therapy alone.
Outcome Assessments
We obtained demographic information, information on symptoms of anxiety, and data on
coexisting disorders and psychosocial functioning using reports from both the subjects
and their parents and from interviews of subjects and parents at the time of screening, at
baseline, and at weeks 4, 8, and 12. The interviews were administered by independent
evaluators who were unaware of study-group assignments.
We used the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV-TR, Child Version,20 to
establish diagnostic eligibility. The categorical primary outcome was the treatment
response at week 12, which was defined as a score of 1 (very much improved) or 2 (much
improved) on the Clinical Global ImpressionImprovement scale,21 which ranges from 1
to 7, with lower scores indicating more improvement, as compared with baseline. A score
of 1 or 2 reflects a substantial, clinically meaningful improvement in anxiety severity.
The dimensional primary outcome was anxiety severity as measured on the Pediatric
Anxiety Rating Scale, computed by the summation of six items assessing anxiety
severity, frequency, distress, avoidance, and interference during the previous week.22
Total scores on this scale range from 0 to 30, with scores above 13 indicating clinically
meaningful anxiety. The Children's Global Assessment Scale23 was used to rate overall
impairment. Scores on this scale range from 1 to 100; scores of 60 or lower are
considered to indicate a need for treatment, and a score of 50 corresponds to moderate
impairment that affects most life situations and is readily observable. Agreement among
the raters was high for anxiety severity (r=0.85) and diagnostic status (intraclass
correlation coefficient=0.82 to 0.88) on the basis of a videotaped review of 10% of
assessments by independent evaluators that were performed at baseline and at week 12.
Adverse Events
Adverse events were defined as any unfavorable change in the subjects' pretreatment
condition, regardless of its relationship to a particular therapy. Serious adverse events
were life-threatening events, hospitalization, or events leading to major incapacity. Harm-
related adverse events were defined as thoughts of harm to self or others or related
behaviors.
All subjects were interviewed at the start of each visit by the study coordinator with the
use of a standardized script. Identified adverse events and harm-related events were then
evaluated and rated by each subject's study clinician. This report presents data on all
serious adverse events, all harm-related adverse events, and moderate and severe (i.e.,
functionally impairing) adverse events that occurred in 3% or more of subjects in any
study group. The data and safety monitoring board of the National Institute of Mental
Health performed a quarterly review of reported adverse events.
Given the greater number of study visits (and hence more reporting opportunities) and the
unblinded administration of sertraline in the combination-therapy group, the test of the
adverse-event profile of sertraline focused on statistical comparisons between sertraline
and placebo and sertraline and cognitive behavioral therapy.
Statistical Analysis
On the basis of previous studies,10-15 we hypothesized that 80% of children in the
combination-therapy group, 60% in either the sertraline group or the cognitive-
behavioral-therapy group, and 30% in the placebo group would be considered to have had
a response to treatment at week 12. We determined that we needed to enroll 136 subjects
in each active-treatment group and 70 subjects in the placebo group for the study to have
a power of 80% to detect a minimum difference of 17% between any two study groups in
the rate of response, assuming an alpha of 0.05 and a two-tailed test with no adjustment
for multiple comparisons.
Analyses were performed with the use of SAS software, version 9.1.3 (SAS Institute).
For categorical outcomes (including data regarding adverse events), treatments were
compared with the use of Pearson's chi-square test, Fisher's exact test, or logistic
regression, as appropriate. Logistic-regression models included the study center as a
covariate. For dimensional outcomes, linear mixed-effects models (implemented with the
use of PROC MIXED) were used to determine predicted mean values at each assessment
point (weeks 4, 8, and 12) and to test the study hypotheses with respect to between-group
differences at week 12. In each linear mixed-effects model, time and study group were
included as fixed effects, with linear and quadratic time and time-by-treatment group
interaction terms. Each model also began with a limited number of covariates (e.g., age,
sex, and race), followed by backward stepping to identify the best-fitting and most
parsimonious model. In all models, random effects included intercept and linear slope
terms, and an unstructured covariance was used to account for within-subject correlation
over time. All comparisons were planned and tests were two-sided. A P value of less than
0.05 was considered to indicate statistical significance. The sequential Dunnett test was
used to control the overall (familywise) error rate.24
We analyzed data from all subjects according to study group. Sensitivity analyses were
performed with the last observation carried forward (LOCF) and multiple imputation
assuming missingness at random. Results were similar for the two missing-data methods.
We report the results of the LOCF analysis because the response rates were lower and
hence provide a more conservative estimate of outcomes.
Results
Subjects
A total of 3066 potentially eligible subjects were screened by telephone (Figure 1Figure 1
Clinical Response
In the intention-to-treat analysis, the percentages of children who were rated as 1 (very
much improved) or 2 (much improved) on the Clinical Global ImpressionImprovement
scale at 12 weeks were 80.7% (95% CI, 73.3 to 86.4) in the combination-therapy group,
59.7% (95% CI, 51.4 to 67.5) in the cognitive-behavioral-therapy group, 54.9% (95% CI,
46.4 to 63.1) in the sertraline group, and 23.7% (95% CI, 15.5 to 34.5) in the placebo
group (Table 2). With the study center as a covariate, planned pairwise comparisons from
a logistic-regression model showed that each active treatment was superior to placebo as
follows: combination therapy versus placebo, P<0.001 (odds ratio, 13.6; 95% CI, 6.9 to
26.8); cognitive behavioral therapy versus placebo, P<0.001 (odds ratio, 4.8; 95% CI, 2.6
to 9.0); and sertraline versus placebo, P<0.001 (odds ratio, 3.9; 95% CI, 2.1 to 7.4).
Similar pairwise comparisons revealed that combination therapy was superior to either
sertraline alone (odds ratio, 3.4; 95% CI, 2.0 to 5.9; P<0.001) or cognitive behavioral
therapy alone (odds ratio, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.6 to 4.8; P=0.001). However, there was no
significant difference between sertraline and cognitive behavioral therapy (P=0.41).
There was no main effect for center (P=0.69); however, a comparison among centers
according to study group revealed a significant difference in response to combination
therapy but no differences with respect to the response to sertraline alone (P=0.15) or
cognitive behavioral therapy alone (P=0.25). Further evaluation of response rates
revealed that the average response rate for combination therapy at one center was
significantly lower than at the other centers (P=0.002). A sensitivity analysis of site
response rates showed that when data from the one site were removed, the average
response rate of the other sites was consistent with that of the full sample.
The mixed-effects model for the Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale revealed a significant
quadratic effect for time (P<0.001) and a significant quadratic time-by-treatment
interaction for cognitive behavioral therapy versus placebo (P=0.01) but not for either
combination therapy or sertraline versus placebo. In other words, as compared with
placebo, cognitive behavioral therapy had a linear mean trajectory (Figure 2Figure 2
Scores on the Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale during the 12-Week Study.).
Planned pairwise comparisons of the expected mean scores on the Pediatric Anxiety
Rating Scale at week 12 revealed a similar ordering of outcomes, with all active
treatments superior to placebo, according to the following comparisons: combination
therapy versus placebo, t=5.94 (P<0.001); cognitive behavioral therapy versus placebo,
t=2.11 (P=0.04); and sertraline versus placebo, t=3.15 (P=0.002). In addition,
combination therapy was superior to both sertraline alone (t=3.26, P=0.001) and
cognitive behavioral therapy alone (t=4.73, P<0.001). No significant difference was
found between sertraline and cognitive behavioral therapy (t=1.32, P=0.19). The same
magnitude and pattern of outcome were found for the Clinical Global Impression
Severity scale and the Children's Global Assessment Scale.
Estimates of the effect size (Hedges' g) and the number needed to treat between the
active-treatment groups and the placebo group were calculated. Effect sizes are based on
the expected mean scores on the Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale, derived from the mixed-
effects model. The number needed to treat is based on the dichotomized, end-of-treatment
scores on the Clinical Global ImpressionImprovement scale with the use of LOCF. The
effect size was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.56 to 1.15) for combination therapy, 0.45 (95% CI, 0.17
to 0.74) for sertraline, and 0.31 (95% CI, 0.02 to 0.59) for cognitive behavioral treatment.
The number needed to treat was 1.7 (95% CI, 1.7 to 1.9) for combination therapy, 3.2
(95% CI, 3.2 to 3.5) for sertraline, and 2.8 (95% CI, 2.7 to 3.0) for cognitive behavioral
therapy.
Treatment and Study Withdrawals
Most treatment and study withdrawals were attributed to reasons other than adverse
events (43 of 57, 75.4%) (Table 3Table 3 Subjects Who Withdrew from
Treatment or the Study.). Of the 14 withdrawals that were attributed to an adverse event,
11 (78.6%) were in the groups receiving either sertraline alone or placebo and consisted
of 3 physical events (headache, stomach pains, and tremor) and 8 psychiatric adverse
events (worsening of symptoms, 3 subjects; agitation or disinhibition, 3; hyperactivity, 1;
and nonsuicidal self-harm and homicidal ideation, 1).
Adverse Events
Subjects in the combination-therapy group had a greater number of study visits and
therefore significantly more opportunities for elicitation of adverse events than did those
in the other study groups, with a mean of 12.84.0 opportunities (range, 1 to 22) in the
combination-therapy group, as compared with 9.93.6 (range, 1 to 14) in the sertraline
group, 10.62.0 (range, 1 to 14) in the cognitive-behavioral-therapy group, and 9.74.2
(range, 1 to 14) in the placebo group (P<0.001 for all comparisons). Rates of adverse
events, including suicidal and homicidal ideation, were not significantly greater in the
sertraline group than in the placebo group. No child in the study attempted suicide.
Among children in the cognitive-behavioral-therapy group, there were fewer reports of
insomnia, fatigue, sedation, and restlessness or fidgeting than in the sertraline group
(P<0.05 for all comparisons). For a list of mild adverse events that were not associated
with functional impairment, as well as moderate and severe events, see the
Supplementary Appendix, available with the full text of this article at www.nejm.org.
Discussion
Our study examined therapies that many clinicians consider to be the most promising
treatments for childhood anxiety disorders. Our findings indicate that as compared with
placebo, the three active therapies combination therapy with both cognitive behavioral
therapy and sertraline, cognitive behavioral therapy alone, and sertraline alone are
effective short-term treatments for children with separation and generalized anxiety
disorders and social phobia, with combination treatment having superior response rates.
No physical, psychiatric, or harm-related adverse events were reported more frequently in
the sertraline group than in the placebo group, a finding similar to that for SSRIs, as
identified in previous studies of anxious children.12,13,25 Few withdrawals from either
treatment or the study were attributed to adverse events. Suicidal ideation and homicidal
ideation were uncommon. No child attempted suicide during the study period.
Since they were recruited at multiple centers and locations, the study subjects were
racially and ethnically diverse. However, despite intense outreach, the sample did not
include the most socioeconomically disadvantaged children. Subjects were
predominantly younger children and included those with ADHD and other anxiety
disorders, factors that allow for generalization of the results to these populations.
Conversely, the exclusion of children and teens with major depression and pervasive
developmental disorders may have limited the generalizability of the results to these
populations.
The observed advantage of combination therapy over either cognitive behavioral therapy
or sertraline alone during short-term treatment (an improvement of 21 to 25%) suggests
that among these effective therapies, combination therapy provides the best chance for a
positive outcome. The superiority of combination therapy might be due to additive or
synergistic effects of the two therapies. However, additional contact time in the
combination-therapy group, which was unblinded, and expectancy effects on the part of
both subjects and clinicians cannot be ruled out as alternative explanations. Nonetheless,
the magnitude of the treatment effect in the combination-therapy group (with two
subjects as the number needed to treat to prevent one additional event) suggests that
children with anxiety disorders who receive quality combination therapy can consistently
expect a substantial reduction in the severity of anxiety. An increased number of visits in
the combination-therapy group resulted in increased opportunities for elicitation of
adverse events. Consequently, the potential for expectancies among subjects, parents, and
clinicians regarding the side effects of medications in the context of more visits may have
increased the rate of some adverse events in the combination-therapy group and may
limit conclusions that can be drawn regarding the rates of adverse events in combination
therapy.
The positive benefit of cognitive behavioral therapy, as compared with placebo, adds new
information to the existing literature.26 The number needed to treat for cognitive
behavioral therapy in this study (three subjects) is the same as that identified in a meta-
analysis of studies comparing subjects who were assigned to cognitive behavioral therapy
with those assigned to a waiting list for therapy or to sessions without active therapy.14
Our study's test of cognitive behavioral therapy included children with moderate-to-
severe anxiety and addresses criticism of previous trials that included children with only
mild-to-moderate anxiety.14 Before our study, cognitive behavioral therapy for childhood
anxiety was considered to be probably efficacious.26 This evaluation of cognitive
behavioral therapy and other recent studies27,28 suggests that such therapy for childhood
anxiety is a well-established, evidenced-based treatment.29 Given that the risk of some
adverse events was lower in the behavioral-therapy group than in the sertraline group,
some parents and their children may consider choosing cognitive behavioral therapy as
their initial treatment.
The results of our study confirm the short-term efficacy of sertraline for children with
generalized anxiety disorder25 and show that sertraline is effective for children with
separation anxiety disorder and social phobia. The number needed to treat for sertraline in
our study (three subjects) was the same as that previously identified in a meta-analysis15
of six randomized, placebo-controlled trials of SSRIs for childhood anxiety
disorders.12,13,25,30,31 These studies and others27 suggest that SSRIs, as a class, are
the medication of choice for these conditions. The titration schedule that we used, which
emphasized upward dose adjustment in the absence of response and adverse events,
suggests that the average end-point dose of sertraline in this study is the highest dose
consistent with good outcome and tolerability. No adverse events were observed more
frequently in the sertraline group than in the placebo group. In contrast to the apparent
risk of suicidal ideation and behavior in studies of depression in children and
adolescents,15 our study did not demonstrate any increased risk for suicidal behavior in
the sertraline group. Given the benefit of sertraline alone or in combination with
cognitive behavioral therapy and the limited risk of adverse events associated with the
drug in our study, the well-monitored use of sertraline and other SSRIs in the treatment of
childhood anxiety disorders is indicated.
Supported by grants (U01 MH064089, to Dr. Walkup; U01 MH64092, to Dr. Albano;
U01 MH64003, to Dr. Birmaher; U01 MH63747, to Dr. Kendall; U01 MH64107, to Dr.
March; U01 MH64088, to Dr. Piacentini; and U01 MH064003, to Dr. Compton) from the
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). Sertraline and matching placebo were
supplied free of charge by Pfizer.
The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily
represent the official views of the NIMH, the National Institutes of Health, or the
Department of Health and Human Services.
Dr. Walkup reports receiving consulting fees from Eli Lilly and Jazz Pharmaceuticals and
fees for legal consultation to defense counsel and submission of written reports in
litigation involving GlaxoSmithKline, receiving lecture fees from CMP Media, Medical
Education Reviews, McMahon Group, and DiMedix, and receiving support in the form of
free medication and matching placebo from Eli Lilly and free medication from Abbott for
clinical trials funded by the NIMH; Dr. Albano, receiving royalties from Oxford
University Press for the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV, Child and
Parent Versions, but not for interviews used in this study, and royalties from the Guilford
Press; Dr. Piacentini, receiving royalties from Oxford University Press for treatment
manuals on childhood obsessivecompulsive disorder and tic disorders and from the
Guilford Press and APA Books for other books on child mental health and receiving
lecture fees from Janssen-Cilag; Dr. Birmaher, receiving consulting fees from Jazz
Pharmaceuticals, Solvay Pharmaceuticals, and Abcomm, lecture fees from Solvay, and
royalties from Random House for a book on children with bipolar disorder; Dr. Rynn,
receiving grant support from Neuropharm, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, and
Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, consulting fees from Wyeth, and royalties from APPI for a book
chapter on pediatric anxiety disorders; Dr. McCracken, receiving consulting fees from
Sanofi-Aventis and Wyeth, lecture fees from Shire and UCB, and grant support from
Aspect, Johnson & Johnson, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Eli Lilly; Dr. Waslick, receiving
grant support from Baystate Health, Somerset Pharmaceuticals, and GlaxoSmithKline;
Dr. Iyengar, receiving consulting fees from Westinghouse for statistical consultation; Dr.
March, receiving study medications from Eli Lilly for an NIMH-funded clinical trial and
receiving royalties from Pearson for being the author of the Multidimensional Anxiety
Scale for Children, receiving consulting fees from Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Wyeth, and
GlaxoSmithKline, having an equity interest in MedAvante, and serving on an advisory
board for AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson; and Dr. Kendall, receiving royalties from
Workbook Publishing for anxiety-treatment materials.
This article (10.1056/NEJMoa0804633) was published on October 30, 2008, and updated
on January 17, 2013, at NEJM.org.
We thank the children and their families who made this study possible; and J. Chisar, J.
Fried, R. Klein, E. Menvielle, S. Olin, J. Severe, D. Almirall, and members of NIMH's
data and safety monitoring board.
Source Information
From the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore (J.T.W., G.S.G.); New York
State Psychiatric InstituteColumbia University Medical Center, New York (A.M.A.,
M.A.R.); the University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles (J.P., J.M.); Western
Psychiatric Institute and ClinicUniversity of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh
(B.B., S.I.); Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC (S.N.C., J.S.M.); the Division
of Services and Intervention Research, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda,
MD (J.T.S.); Baystate Medical Center, Springfield, MA (B.W.); and Temple University,
Philadelphia (P.C.K.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Walkup at the Division of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins Medical
Institutions, 600 N. Wolfe St., Baltimore, MD 21287.
Appendix
The following investigators participated in this study: Steering Committee: J. Walkup
(chair), A. Albano (cochair), S. Compton (executive secretary); StatisticsExperimental
Design: S. Compton, S. Iyengar, J. March; Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: P. Kendall,
G. Ginsburg; Pharmacotherapy: M. Rynn, J. McCracken; Assessment: J. Piacentini, A.
Albano; Study Coordinators: C. Keeton, H. Koo, S. Aschenbrand, L. Bardsley, R.
Beidas, J. Catena, K. Dever, K. Drake, R. Dublin, E. Fontaine, J. Furr, A. Gonzalez, K.
Hedtke, L. Hunt, M. Keller, J. Kingery, A. Krain, K. Miller, J. Podell, P. Rentas, M.
Rozenmann, C. Suveg, C. Weiner, M. Wilson, T. Zoulas; Data Center: K. Sullivan, M.
Fletcher; Cognitive Behavior Therapists: E. Gosch, C. Alfano, A. Angelosante, S.
Aschenbrand, A. Barmish, L. Bergman, S. Best, J. Comer, S. Compton, W. Copeland, M.
Cwik, M. Desari, K. Drake, E. Fontaine, J. Furr, P. Gammon, C. Gaze, R. Grover, H.
Harmon, A. Hughes, K. Hutchinson, J. Jones, C. Keeton, H. Kepley, J. Kingery, A. Krain,
A. Langley, J. Lee, J. Levitt, J. Manetti-Cusa, E. Martin, C. Mauro, K. McKnight, T.
Peris, K. Poling, L. Preuss, A. Puliafico, J. Robin, T. Roblek, J. Samson, M. Schlossberg,
M. Sweeney, C. Suveg, O. Velting, T. Verduin; Pharmacotherapists: M. Rynn, J.
McCracken, A. Adegbola, P. Ambrosini, D. Axelson, S. Barnett, A. Baskina, B. Birmaher,
C. Cagande, A. Chrisman, B. Chung, H. Courvoisie, B. Dave, A. Desai, K. Dever, M.
Gazzola, E. Harris, G. Hirsh, V. Howells, L. Hsu, I. Hypolite, F. Kampmeier, S. Khalid-
Khan, B. Kim, D. Kondo, L. Kotler, M. Krushelnycky, J. Larson, J. Lee, P. Lee, C.
Lopez, L. Maayan, J. McCracken, R. Means, L. Miller, A. Parr, C. Pataki, C. Peterson, P.
Pilania, R. Pizarro, H. Ravi, S. Reinblatt, M. Riddle, M. Rodowski, D. Sakolsky, A.
Scharko, R. Suddath, C. Suarez, J. Walkup, B. Waslick; Independent Evaluators: A.
Albano, G. Ginsburg, B. Asche, A. Barmish, M. Beaudry, S. Chang, M. Choudhury, B.
Chu, S. Crawley, J. Curry, G. Danner, N. Deily, R. Dingfelder, D. Fitzgerald, P. Gammon,
S. Hofflich, E. Kastelic, J. Keener, T. Lipani, K. Lukin, M. Masarik, T. Peris, T.
Piacentini, S. Pimentel, A. Puliafico, T. Roblek, M. Schlossberg, E. Sood, S. Tiwari, J.
Trachtenberg, P. van de Velde; Pharmacy: K. Truelove, H. Kim; Research Assistants: S.
Allard, S. Avny, D. Beckmann, C. Brice, B. Buzzella, E. Capelli, A. Chiu, M. Coles, J.
Freeman, M. Gringle, S. Hefton, D. Hood, M. Jacoby, J. King, A. Kolos, B. Lourea-
Wadell, L. Lu, J. Lusky, R. Maid, C. Merolli, Y. Ojo, A. Pearlman, J. Regan, S. Rock, M.
Rooney, N. Simone, S. Tiwari, S. Yeager.
Web: http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa0804633#t=article