Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT04405440

Excessive Avoidance Behaviors in Anorexia Nervosa: the Role of Reward

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
Bram Vervliet · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study investigates excessive avoidance behaviors in patients with a diagnosis of Anorexia Nervosa (AN) compared to a healthy control group. The study further examines the role of reward (relief) as a putative factor in maintaining excessive avoidance behaviors in AN.

Detailed description

Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a life-threatening mental disease with a disappointing treatment outcome. Fear of weight gain and diet restrictions are considered the core symptoms of AN. Although from a diagnostic perspective AN is conceptualized as an eating-related disorder connected to an extremely low Body Mass Index (BMI) and body image distortion, AN might represent a specific phenotype of anxiety disorders characterized by tenacious avoidance behaviors, especially the restrictive subtype. To date, avoidance in AN is often investigated as a general personality trait (e.g. harm avoidance) but poorly examined in its behavioral form (which is life-threatening, such as food-avoidance). Hence, the investigators will perform a systematic investigation of excessive avoidance behaviors within a laboratory setting. Within a learning perspective, the investigators will investigate excessive avoidance in a group of 30 AN patients and 30 healthy volunteers. To achieve this, a well-validated avoidance paradigm will be used. Most critically, the investigators will examine whether patients with a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa show persistent avoidance behaviors compared to a control group. Additionally, the investigators will examine if, in the anorexia group, higher subjective relief to successful omissions of negative events during avoidance learning predicts persistent (excessive) avoidance behaviors after fear extinction.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALBehavioral avoidance taskBehavioral task able to measure avoidance actions, US-expectancy, and reward-related indexes in different learning times

Timeline

Start date
2019-05-01
Primary completion
2021-05-01
Completion
2021-09-01
First posted
2020-05-28
Last updated
2020-05-28

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Belgium

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04405440. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.