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Could mindfulness-based cognitive therapy prevent a lifelong recurrent course of depression or anxiety by addressing key mechanisms of vulnerability in high-risk adolescents?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 July 2019

Tamsin Ford*
Affiliation:
Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, College of Medicine and Health, University of Exeter, UK
Jessica Richardson
Affiliation:
Clinical Psychologist, Anxiety and Traumatic Stress Clinic, South London & Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust; and Co-Director of Children and Young People's IAPT, Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, UK
Kath Wilkinson
Affiliation:
Associate Research Fellow, Peninsula Childhood Disability Research Unit, University of Exeter College of Medicine and Health; and NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research & Care South-West Peninsula, Institute of Health Research, University of Exeter Medical School, UK
Patrick Smith
Affiliation:
Clinical Psychologist, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust; and Reader in Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, UK
Vashti Berry
Affiliation:
Senior Research Fellow, NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research & Care South-West Peninsula, Institute of Health Research, University of Exeter Medical School, UK
Thorsten Barnhofer
Affiliation:
Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychology, University of Surrey, UK
Jerry Fox
Affiliation:
Community Psychiatric Nurse, Devon Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service; and MBCT Therapist, Mood Disorder Centre, University of Exeter, UK
Willem Kuyken
Affiliation:
Professor of Mindfulness and Psychological Science, Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, UK
*
Correspondence: Tamsin Ford, University of Exeter Medical School, Room 2.03, College House, St Luke's Campus, ExeterEX1 2LU, UK. Email: t.j.ford@exeter.ac.uk
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Summary

We explore the potential of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, a skills-based intervention that provides participants with sustainable tools for adaptive responses to stress and negative mood, for the large group of young people with depression or anxiety who only partially or briefly respond to currently available first-line interventions.

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2019

Depression and anxiety often commence in childhood or adolescence, and run a fluctuating, episodic course; fewer than half the young people who are affected maintain their recovery into early adult life, and many experience repeat recurrences.Reference Costello and Maughan1 The modification of psychological and biological processes that may underlie the vulnerability to relapse, the amelioration of subclinical symptoms that are indicative of such vulnerabilities, and the prevention of future episodes should be a clinical priority. Aside from the immediate need to reduce distress, the attainment and maintenance of recovery in adolescence is likely to limit adverse educational and social outcomes in addition to protecting mental health in adulthood. In this editorial, we explore the potential of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT), a skills-based intervention that provides participants with sustainable tools for adaptive responses to stress and negative mood, for the subgroup of young people with depression and anxiety who only partially or briefly respond to currently available first-line interventions. Our focus is on young people with emotional disorder attending specialist mental health services who are either not sufficiently recovered to be discharged despite compliance with an evidence-based intervention or who rapidly relapse. The terms used to describe their psychological difficulties and response to treatment reflect those used in the quoted literature.

Psychological approaches targeting depression in young people also improve symptoms of anxiety and vice versa, and are moderately effective in the short term, but 20–40% fail to respond and beneficial effects are often not maintained.Reference Costello and Maughan1, Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2 There is evidence for the efficacy of cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT), but families and practitioners would benefit from more evidence about different types of psychotherapy as well as indicators of which young people are most likely to benefit from them.Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2 Similar levels of efficacy have been reported for the use of antidepressant medication in the acute treatment of depression among young people, whereas the combination of medication with psychological approaches may improve outcomes as well as shorten the episode of depression and reduce the likelihood of relapse.Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2 These approaches still leave a substantial number of young people with residual difficulties – as many as 40% according to estimates from a recent review.Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2

Both treatment non-response and residual symptoms strongly predict subsequent difficulties among young people with depression and anxiety,Reference Costello and Maughan1, Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2 so indicate future vulnerability. Targeting residual symptoms may prevent relapse, although current evidence is limited and mostly based on data from young people who initially recovered. The Cochrane review retrieved nine trials, which allowed only limited synthesis; medication reduced the proportion of young people who experienced relapse of depression from two-thirds to 40%. Psychological approaches were encouraging but less frequently studied and when included were mostly tested in combination with medication. All five trials that evaluated psychotherapy used CBT in various forms and the absence of alternative psychotherapeutic approaches other than systemic behavioural family therapy (one study) is striking. There is an important need for more research on other approaches as the evidence base for children and young people's mental health remains limited compared with that for adults, and alternatives to CBT have rarely been studied.Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2

A large body of evidence demonstrates that maladaptive responses to negative mood, such as rumination or worry, may be key.Reference Schweizer, Segal, Speckens, Teasdale, Van Heeringen and Williams3 Recent commentaries have reinforced both a general psychopathology factor, best understood as a reflection of the extent of impairment or dysfunction in a person's life, and a bi-factor model, which includes an internalising psychopathology factor characterised by an increased propensity to respond to stress and negative mood with maladaptive repetitive thinking.Reference Schweizer, Segal, Speckens, Teasdale, Van Heeringen and Williams3 Such responses are likely to become increasingly automatic and habitual with recurrent exposure to symptoms, and may drive relapse. Interventions that improve the young person's ability to respond adaptively to stress and negative mood may thus be key to fostering recovery and resilience, although there is little research into mechanisms in this age group.Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2Reference Dunning, Griffiths, Kuyken, Crane, Foulkes and Parker4 Given a large subgroup who fail to respond to initial treatment (40%), and high rates of relapse (50–75%), it seems sensible to explore interventions that might offer adjunctive treatment to existing combinations of manualised psychotherapy and antidepressant medication.Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2

MBCT is an 8-week, group-based programme that combines mindfulness practice with cognitive–behavioural elements. It aims to teach people the skills to recognise the early warning signs of relapse and respond in more adaptive ways, and was specifically designed to target engagement in unhelpful, maladaptive patterns of repetitive thinking. There is now a substantial body of evidence for its effectiveness and cost-effectiveness in relapse prevention for depression among adults.Reference Schweizer, Segal, Speckens, Teasdale, Van Heeringen and Williams3 Indeed, preventative effects of the intervention are increased among patients who are suffering from residual symptoms and those who experienced childhood maltreatment, an important predictor of poor response to intervention for depression in young people.Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2 Notably, research has shown that the utilisation of core skills learned during MBCT is maintained and even increased after the actual intervention, which suggests a lasting potential for buffering responses to negative mood and stress.Reference Schweizer, Segal, Speckens, Teasdale, Van Heeringen and Williams3

There is growing interest in the application of mindfulness-based approaches with young people and some tentative evidence to support their use in clinical populations; theoretically, the mid-to-late teens might be a particularly effective period in development to enhance mindfulness-based skills, because of brain plasticity.Reference Dunning, Griffiths, Kuyken, Crane, Foulkes and Parker4 To date, only a small number of studies have used randomised controlled designs, but in a recent systematic review and meta-analysis, the most robust studies suggested MBCT may be effective for young people with anxiety and depression.Reference Dunning, Griffiths, Kuyken, Crane, Foulkes and Parker4 To our knowledge, there have been no trials of MBCT restricted to adolescents with residual or relapsed depression or anxiety, but two small evaluations suggest that MBCT is both acceptable and feasible in this context.Reference Racey, Fox, Berry, Blockley, Longridge and Simmons5 Importantly, both demonstrated symptomatic improvement among young people who had not completely responded to initial interventions or had rapidly relapsed as assessed by the referring mental health practitioner. Although they were presenting only for the first or second time, they were at a life-stage where poor function may radically alter life trajectory and thus were at high risk of becoming the adult population for whom MBCT is demonstrably effective.Reference Racey, Fox, Berry, Blockley, Longridge and Simmons5

Adaptation of MBCT for young people needs to accommodate the contributing factors specific to adolescence to optimise treatment response. Young people's functioning is strongly determined by family contexts, and there is considerable evidence to support the intergenerational transmission of depression.Reference Costello and Maughan1 Parental anxiety or depression predicts the severity and persistence of emotional disorders among young people,Reference Costello and Maughan1 whereas family conflict predicts a poorer response to intervention.Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2 Hence the clinical consensus that the involvement of parents in the treatment of their child is important. Although parental involvement is widely endorsed and included in most manualised psychotherapies, current service restraints may undermine its use in routine practice.Reference Racey, Fox, Berry, Blockley, Longridge and Simmons5

Our pilot MBCT programme for young people who needed continuing support or relapse rapidly after completing a first-line psychological intervention for depression or anxiety included a parallel MBCT group for parents.Reference Racey, Fox, Berry, Blockley, Longridge and Simmons5 The addition of the parallel parent MBCT group seems to offer a particularly powerful approach in highly vulnerable young people who have not responded fully to previous treatment and for whom intergenerational transmission is more likely to have played a role in their presentation. More than half of the attending parents reported a personal history of depression, and a quarter were taking antidepressant medication. Parental involvement was strongly endorsed by young people, parents and the referring clinicians. Although primarily designed to support young people's mindfulness practice, which is assumed to be the major vehicle of therapeutic effect, the parent group provided similar content to the young people's group and was experienced as therapeutic. Parents reported that it supported them through the emotional impact of parenting an adolescent with poor mental health and, in line with previous reports of beneficial effects of mindfulness training on interpersonal functioning,Reference Racey, Fox, Berry, Blockley, Longridge and Simmons5 both young people and parents reported significantly improved family relationships. Parents as well as young people reported statistically significant reductions in rumination and improvements in self-compassion and de-centring, which suggests that this joint intervention may protect or enhance parental mental health.Reference Racey, Fox, Berry, Blockley, Longridge and Simmons5 Given the interrelated nature of mental health within a family, any benefits might be expected to amplify over time and might extend to other family members, such as siblings and the other parent.

Based on theoretical reasoning and preliminary data, MBCT offers a promising therapeutic option for the subgroup of young people with depression or anxiety who do not fully respond to initial treatment or who relapse rapidly after initial recovery. Practitioners, children and families in this predicament need an array of evidence-based therapeutic options from which to choose. We suggest that MBCT, particularly if combined with a parallel parent group, could prove to be effective and should be evaluated further. There is a need for adequately powered, randomised controlled trials, with validated measures of potential mediators as well as clinical outcomes to test its potential to counter vulnerabilities that otherwise might easily fuel a life-course of recurrent emotional disorder.Reference Costello and Maughan1,Reference Goodyer and Wilkinson2,Reference Dunning, Griffiths, Kuyken, Crane, Foulkes and Parker4,Reference Racey, Fox, Berry, Blockley, Longridge and Simmons5

Funding

K.W.’s and V.B.'s time on this work was supported by the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care, South West Peninsula (PenCLAHRC).

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Jerry Fox for submitting a question to PenCLAHRC about the potential role of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy with young people. The PenCLAHRC prioritisation of this question supported the collaboration that underpins this work. The PenCLAHRC aims to bring together local universities and their surrounding National Health Service (NHS) organisations to test new treatments and new ways of working in specific clinical areas, to see if they are effective and appropriate for everyday use in the health service. Where potential improvements are identified, PenCLAHRC helps NHS staff to incorporate them into their everyday working practices, so that patients across the local community receive a better standard of healthcare. The authors also wish to thank Hannah Durkin for her support in finalising this paper. The views and opinions expressed therein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the National Institute for Health Research, NHS or the Department of Health.

Footnotes

Declaration of interest: T.B. is the co-author of a book on mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) and has received fees and honoraria for teaching MBCT workshops. W.K. is Director of the University of Oxford Mindfulness Centre. He donates all speaker fees to the not-for-profit Oxford Mindfulness Foundation. J.F. has been paid to deliver mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) programmes in the workplace and has delivered MBIs to elite performers at his own expense.

References

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3Schweizer, S, Segal, Z, Speckens, A, Teasdale, JD, Van Heeringen, K, Williams, M, et al. Efficacy of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy in prevention of depressive relapse: an individual patient data meta-analysis from randomized trials. JAMA Psychiatry 2016; 73: 565–74.Google Scholar
4Dunning, D, Griffiths, K, Kuyken, W, Crane, C, Foulkes, L, Parker, J, et al. Research review: the effects of mindfulness-based interventions on cognition and mental health in children and adolescents – a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 2019; 60: 244–58.Google ScholarPubMed
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