Abstract
Aim
Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is effective for at‐risk‐mental state (ARMS) in reducing/delaying transition to psychosis. However, previous systematic reviews pointed out the small number of trials as a limitation and suggested that additional outcomes should be evaluated, not only prevention of first psychosis episode. No study assessed the CBT effects on subclinical psychotic symptoms. The present study investigated the effects of CBT on the transition risk (primary outcome), and on overall remission from ARMS and severity of subclinical symptoms, that is, unusual content of thought, non‐bizarre ideas, perceptual abnormalities, disorganized speech (secondary outcome).
Methods
CBT consisted of 30 individual weekly sessions over 7 months. Fifty‐eight participants with ARMS detected by the Comprehensive Assessment of At‐Risk‐Mental States were randomized to CBT or control condition.
Results
Respectively in the CBT and control groups, 1 (3.40%) and 5 (26.31%) participants at post‐treatment and 3 (10.30%) and 8 (42.10%) at follow‐up made transition with a difference between the two groups, despite at borderline significance. At post‐treatment and follow‐up, respectively, the number of participants recovered from ARMS was significantly higher in CBT (76.92% and 61.53%) than in control (10.52% and 15.80%). Participants in the control group reported lower reductions on all the subclinical symptoms over time as compared with those in CBT.
Conclusions
This is the first study assessing CBT on subclinical positive symptoms in ARMS. CBT seems to be a tailored approach able to produce short‐ and long‐term benefits on this outcome.