Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT06776991
Reward Processing and Exposure Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder
Reward Processing and Exposure Therapy
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 94 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- University of California, Los Angeles · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 60 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
The investigators are conducting a clinical trial of therapy for public speaking anxiety. There are many eligibility criteria, but the main ones are that participants need to be socially anxious and have public speaking anxiety. In this clinical trial, all participants will do exposure therapy. Before doing exposure therapy in the study, though, participants will be randomized to do one of two treatments: i) a positive mood treatment, which is designed to increase how positive people feel, and ii) a relaxation treatment, which is designed to help people feel more relaxed. The investigators are doing this study to see whether doing the positive mood treatment or relaxation treatment first will affect how well exposure therapy works.
Detailed description
A substantial number of individuals do not achieve clinically significant symptom relief from exposure therapy, or they may experience return of fear following completion of exposure therapy. This clinical trial aims to intervene on one potential reason exposure therapy's success is mitigated: anhedonia. Anhedonia is characterized by physiological, behavioral, neural, and self-report deficits in reward processing - where reward processing includes anticipation of reward (positive experiences, such as social connection, food, personal achievement), engaging in effort for reward, feeling motivated for reward, savoring reward when it occurs, taking responsibility for the occurrence of reward, and learning what leads to reward. In basic scientific studies of non-humans and humans, poor reward processing is associated with poor extinction of fear (i.e., poor reduction of fear), and anxiety disorders (e.g., social anxiety disorder) often have elevated anhedonia. Therefore, individuals who are both anxious and anhedonic likely experience deficits in extinguishing fear, which is a core process of exposure therapy. Methods of improving reward processing and anhedonia may thus increase the efficacy of exposure therapy. The present clinical trial will recruit individuals who are clinically socially anxious, have elevated public speaking anxiety, and have anhedonia / poor reward processing. Participants will all do Exposure Therapy for public speaking anxiety, but before doing so, they will be randomized to one of two treatment conditions: the behavioral portion of Positive Affect Treatment (PAT-B; to increase reward processing and reduce anhedonia), and Relaxation Treatment (comprised of mindfulness, diaphragmatic breathing, and progressive muscle relaxation). Assessments including a public speech behavioral approach task, questionnaires, and fear conditioning. The behavioral approach task and questionnaires will be conducted before participants' first treatment (Pre Tx; before PAT-B or Relaxation Treatment), after their first treatment (Post Tx-1), after Exposure Therapy (Post Tx-2), and three months after completing Exposure Therapy (3-Month Follow-Up). The fear conditioning task will be conducted before participants' first treatment (Pre Tx; before PAT-B or Relaxation Treatment) and after their first treatment (Post Tx-1); this will be done either in an fMRI or non-fMRI setting, depending on whether participant has MRI contraindications or based on study needs.
Conditions
- Social Anxiety Disorder (Social Phobia)
- Public Speaking Anxiety
- Anhedonia
- ANXIETY DISORDERS (or Anxiety and Phobic Neuroses)
- Phobic Disorders
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Positive Affect Treatment - Behavioral (PAT-B) | 8 therapy sessions conducted individually with a therapist. Focuses on improving reward processing to increase positive emotional experience. Specific techniques include psychoeducation on mood cycle and positive emotions, mood monitoring, behavioral activation, and imaginal recounting and savoring of behavioral activation events. Intervention includes between-session practice. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Relaxation Treatment | 8 therapy sessions conducted individually with a therapist. Focuses on mindfulness and relaxation skills. Specific techniques include mindfulness approaches from dialectical behavior therapy, diaphragmatic breathing, and progressive muscle relaxation. Intervention includes between-session practice. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Exposure Therapy | 8 therapy sessions conducted individually with a therapist using the inhibitory retrieval model of exposure therapy. Sessions are designed to include four exposures each (32 exposures total). Each exposure is a public speech delivered to an audience. Goal of this treatment is to reduce public speaking anxiety. Principles of exposure therapy that will be incorporated are maximizing prediction error, maintaining attention to the situation/stimuli that are perceived predictors of the feared outcome (e.g., social rejection), removing safety signals, variability, engaging in post-exposure rehearsal/consolidation, deepened extinction, and positive occasion setter extinction. Intervention does not include between-session practice. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2024-09-26
- Primary completion
- 2029-04-30
- Completion
- 2029-04-30
- First posted
- 2025-01-15
- Last updated
- 2026-04-02
Locations
2 sites across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06776991. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.