Home Family Practice Cognitive Therapy by Phone, Web May Ease Irritable Bowel Symptoms

Cognitive Therapy by Phone, Web May Ease Irritable Bowel Symptoms

Mean IBS Symptom Severity Score reduced for telephone-, web-CBT versus treatment as usual

TUESDAY, Sept. 10, 2019 (HealthDay News) — Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) delivered via telephone and web is effective for relieving the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), according to a study published online Sept. 3 in The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology.

Hazel A. Everitt, Ph.D., from the University of Southampton in the United Kingdom, and colleagues conducted a three-group randomized trial involving 558 adults with refractory IBS. Participants were randomly assigned to receive therapist-delivered telephone CBT, web-based CBT with minimal therapist support, or treatment as usual (TAU) and were followed for 12 months. Twenty-four-month follow-up was achieved for 323 participants: 119, 99, and 105 in the telephone-CBT, web-CBT, and TAU groups, respectively.

The researchers found that the mean IBS Symptom Severity Score (IBS-SSS) was 40.5 points (95 percent confidence interval [CI], 15.0 to 66.0; P = 0.002) and 12.9 points (95 percent CI, −12.9 to 38.8; P = 0.33) lower in the telephone- and web-CBT groups, respectively, compared with the TAU group. The mean Work and Social Adjustment Scale score was 3.1 points (95 percent CI, 1.3 to 4.9; P < 0.001) and 1.9 points (95 percent CI, 0.1 to 3.7; P = 0.036) lower in the telephone- and web-CBT groups, respectively, versus the TAU group. A clinically significant change in IBS-SSS (≥50 points from baseline to 24 months) occurred in 71, 63, and 46 percent of participants in the telephone-CBT, web-CBT, and TAU groups, respectively.

“Patients with refractory IBS should be offered CBT for IBS, which is currently not widely available,” the authors write.

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