Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T06:40:11.443Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Imaginal desensitisation plus motivational interviewing for pathological gambling: randomised controlled trial

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Jon E. Grant*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis
Christopher B. Donahue
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis
Brian L. Odlaug
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis
Suck Won Kim
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis
Michael J. Miller
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis
Nancy M. Petry
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut, USA
*
Jon E. Grant, Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, 2450 Riverside Avenue, Minneapolis, MN 55454, USA. Email: grant045@umn.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Sixty-eight individuals were randomised to either six sessions of imaginal desensitisation plus motivational interviewing (IDMI) or Gamblers Anonymous. Individuals assigned to IDMI had significantly greater reductions in Yale–Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale Modified for Pathological Gambling total scores, gambling urges and gambling behaviour. People who failed to respond to Gamblers Anonymous reported significantly greater reduction in pathological gambling symptoms following later assignment to IDMI. Abstinence was achieved by 63.6% during the acute IDMI treatment period.

Type
Short Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2009 

Pathological gambling is characterised by persistent and recurrent maladaptive patterns of gambling behaviour affecting from 0.4 to 1.6% of individuals worldwide. Reference Petry1 Studies suggest that cognitive–behavioural interventions, motivational interviewing and imaginal desensitisation may be beneficial for pathological gambling. Reference Petry1,Reference Hodgins, Petry, Grant and Potenza2 This study sought to combine the strengths of prior treatments into a brief, 6-session format of imaginal desensitisation plus motivational interviewing (IDMI). We hypothesised it would reduce the severity of pathological gambling symptoms to a greater extent than referral to Gamblers Anonymous (GA).

Method

Men and women aged 18 to 75 with pathological gambling Reference Grant, Steinberg, Kim, Rounsaville and Potenza3 and who had gambled at least once per week for the past 2 months were included. Exclusion criteria included: past 3-month substance use disorder; positive urine drug screen at screening; current psychotherapy or medication for pathological gambling; previous GA attendance; suicidal intentions; and current use of psychotropic medications. The University of Minnesota's institutional review board approved the study and informed consent. After complete description of the study, participants provided written informed consent. This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov: NCT00337753.

Manualised IDMI consisted of six sessions, each lasting 1 h, over an 8-week period. Session one consisted of psychoeducation and motivational enhancement. Session two focused on functional analysis and behavioural strategies. Session three focused on coping with gambling urges and changing irrational thinking. Session four introduced imaginal desensitisation by creating and audiotaping three gambling scenarios that stimulated gambling urges. Relaxation training and cognitive skills were used to cope with the urges that the scenarios elicited. Participants were instructed to listen to the tape three times each day (reported mean 2.2 times (s.d. = 0.8)). Session five included relapse prevention and assertiveness training. Session six included significant-other involvement, education and therapy.

Participants in the GA group received a list of meeting times and locations for 75 GA meetings throughout the Twin Cities metropolitan area.

Individuals in the IDMI group began therapy 1 week after baseline assessment and were seen weekly for 6 sessions. One week after the final session, they returned for evaluation. Individuals assigned to GA returned after 8 weeks for follow-up. People in this group were given six sessions of IDMI beginning 1 week following the 8-week post-GA assessment. The primary outcome measure was the Yale–Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale Modified for Pathological Gambling (PG–YBOCS), Reference Pallanti, DeCaria, Grant, Urpe and Hollander4 a 10-item scale comprising an urge/thought subscale and a behaviour subscale. Initial treatment response between those assigned to the IDMI and GA groups were compared by analysis of covariance (ANCOVA). The baseline measure of the end-point was entered as a covariate in the model. Within-participant differences for the GA group between post-8 weeks of GA and post-IDMI treatment were tested using the baseline measure as a covariate in an intent-to-treat ANCOVA repeated-measures model. Using previously reported effect sizes from other psychosocial studies of pathological gambling Reference Hodgins, Petry, Grant and Potenza2 and a two-tailed alpha level of 0.05, a total sample of 68 was required to generate a power of 0.80.

Results

Sixty-eight participants (43 (63.2%) females, mean age 48.7 years (s.d. = 12.8)) were randomised to IDMI (n = 33) or GA (n = 35) (online Fig. DS1). No statistically significant imbalances existed regarding any baseline variable. Individuals spent a mean of 12.5 hours (s.d. = 4.2) each week gambling and had lost 49.7% of their gross income to gambling during the past year. Twenty-five (75.8%) in the IDMI group and 30 (85.7%) in the GA group completed the 8-week treatment.

During the acute 8-week treatment period, significantly better results on the PG–YBOCS were observed for the IDMI group (Table 1). Of the 33 participants in the IDMI group, 21 (63.6%) were abstinent from all gambling for at least 1 month by the end of the 8-week period, whereas only 6 of the 35 (17.1%) in the GA group were abstinent (Fisher's exact <0.001). Twenty-six individuals assigned to GA attended at least one meeting (mean weekly attendance 1.1 meetings (s.d. = 2.4)).

Table 1 Treatment responses of pathological gambling participants assigned to imaginal desensitisation plus motivational interviewing (IDMI) or Gamblers Anonymous (GA) (intent-to-treat population; between-participant analysis)

Baseline 8-week end-point (LOCF)a
Variable IDMI group (n = 33), mean (s.d.) GA group (n = 35), mean (s.d.) IDMI group (n = 33), mean (s.d.) GA group (n = 35), mean (s.d.) F(1,65)b P Cohen's effect sizec
PG—YBOCS
    Total score 19.1 (5.45) 19.7 (5.81) 9.00 (7.78) 18.1 (7.70) 48.31 <0.001 1.55
    Urge/thought subscale 9.18 (3.28) 9.40 (3.84) 5.48 (3.91) 9.40 (3.85) 23.40 <0.001 1.06
    Behaviour subscale 9.94 (4.32) 10.3 (4.34) 3.52 (5.11) 8.63 (5.47) 17.78 <0.001 1.13
G—SAS Reference Kim, Grant, Potenza, Blanco and Hollander5 total score 29.3 (7.70) 30.2 (7.99) 19.9 (11.2) 29.7 (10.6) 20.25 <0.001 1.14
CGI Reference Guy6 — Severity 4.70 (0.68) 4.71 (0.83) 2.73 (1.44) 4.46 (1.17) 31.48 <0.001 2.26
HRSD Reference Hamilton7 6.36 (5.11) 7.60 (4.71) 4.64 (4.83) 8.00 (4.99) 7.76 0.007 0.52
HAS Reference Hamilton8 4.88 (3.92) 6.20 (3.75) 3.73 (3.80) 6.37 (3.51) 7.12 0.010 0.47
Sheehan Disability Scale Reference Sheehan9 11.94 (7.03) 14.69 (7.92) 5.39 (6.14) 12.49 (8.41) 13.50 <0.001 0.74
Quality of Life Inventory Reference Frisch, Cornell and Villaneuva10 36.6 (13.5) 31.4 (16.1) 40.9 (12.4) 32.6 (15.9) 3.66 0.060 0.31

Participants in the IDMI group demonstrated a significantly greater response to the other measures of gambling severity (G–SAS, CGI–S), depression and anxiety symptoms and psychosocial functioning (i.e. SDS score) (Table 1). There were no significant gender differences in treatment response.

Those initially assigned to GA showed a statistically greater reduction in gambling symptoms on the PG–YBOCS after receiving IDMI following 8 weeks of GA (F(1,26) = 27.192, P<0.001). Significant symptom improvement following IDMI was also observed on the PG–YBOCS urge subscale (F(1,26) = 22.188, P<0.001), PG–YBOCS behaviour subscale (F(1,26) = 22.277, P<0.001), G–SAS (F(1,26) = 14.359, P = 0.001), CGI–S (F(1,26) = 17.199, P<0.001), SDS (F(1,26) = 15.529, P = 0.001) and QoLI (F(1,26) = 10.222, P = 0.004).

Discussion

We found IDMI to be superior to GA referral in acute treatment of pathological gambling across a spectrum of illness-specific and global outcome measures. The results demonstrate that this treatment reduces pathological gambling symptoms and is effective in improving measures of psychosocial functioning and quality of life.

Manualised IDMI was effective in reducing gambling urges as well as behaviour. Unlike conventional treatment, where the individual may not experience urges to gamble during a therapy session, this treatment elicits gambling urges throughout the day and provides, via audiotapes, the immediate cognitive restructuring to control the urges. One theory for its effectiveness is that impairments in prefrontally mediated cognitive functions appear to underlie behavioural dysregulation, namely decision-making and inhibitory control. Reference Yucel and Lubman11 These impairments may increase the risk for making impulsive decisions that focus on short-terms gains. Treatment with IDMI allows individuals to experience the urge and immediately increases inhibitory control by focusing on decisions that consider both short- and long-term behavioural consequences.

This study also shows that the most commonly used treatment intervention, GA, was beneficial in only a minority of cases in the short term. Although some long-term benefits from GA have been documented, Reference Petry1,Reference Hodgins, Petry, Grant and Potenza2 the limited short-term benefits seen in this study may explain the high rates of treatment discontinuation. Reference Stewart and Brown12 However, our exclusion of individuals who had previously attended GA may have resulted in poor GA attendance during the study and worse overall outcomes.

This study has several limitations. First, it is unclear how many IDMI sessions are optimal. It is possible that a longer course of therapy could result in continued and even greater reductions in gambling symptoms. Second, individuals assigned to GA attended meetings very infrequently, so we cannot determine whether GA would be more efficacious if attended more regularly. Finally, although the GA group demonstrated significant benefit from later assignment to IDMI, we cannot rule out a possible impact of earlier GA attendance on later IDMI treatment.

This investigation suggests that IDMI may be effective in the treatment of pathological gambling. As effective treatments for pathological gambling emerge, it becomes increasingly important that physicians and mental healthcare providers screen for pathological gambling in order to provide timely treatment.

Funding

Supported by an NIMH Career Development Award (K23 MH069754-01A1) (J.E.G.).

Footnotes

Supported by an NIMH Career Development Award (K23 MH069754-01A1) (J.E.G.).

Declaration of interest

J.E.G. has received research grants from Forest Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline and Somaxon Pharmaceuticals he has been a consultant to Somaxon Pharmaceuticals and for law offices as an expert in pathological gambling.

References

1 Petry, NM. Pathological Gambling: Etiology, Comorbidity, and Treatment. American Psychological Association, 2005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Hodgins, DC, Petry, NM. Cognitive and behavioral treatments. In Pathological Gambling: A Clinical Guide to Treatment (eds Grant, JE, Potenza, MN): 169–87. APPI, 2004.Google Scholar
3 Grant, JE, Steinberg, MA, Kim, SW, Rounsaville, BJ, Potenza, MN. Preliminary validity and reliability testing of a structured clinical interview for pathological gambling (SCI-PG). Psychiatry Res 2004; 128: 7988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4 Pallanti, S, DeCaria, CM, Grant, JE, Urpe, M, Hollander, E. Reliability and validity of the Pathological Gambling Modification of the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (PG-YBOCS). J Gambling Stud 2005; 21: 431–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5 Kim, SW, Grant, JE, Potenza, MN, Blanco, C, Hollander, E. The Gambling Symptom Assessment Scale (G-SAS): a reliability and validity study. Psychiatry Res, 2009; 166, 7684.Google ScholarPubMed
6 Guy, W. ECDEU Assessment Manual for Psychopharmacology. US Dept Health, Education and Welfare publication (ADM) 76–338. National Institute of Mental Health, 1976.Google Scholar
7 Hamilton, M. A rating scale for depression. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1960; 23: 5662.Google Scholar
8 Hamilton, M. The assessment of anxiety states by rating. Br J Med Psychol 1959; 32: 50–5.Google Scholar
9 Sheehan, DV. The Anxiety Disease. Scribner's, 1983.Google Scholar
10 Frisch, MB, Cornell, J, Villaneuva, M. Clinical validation of the Quality of Life Inventory: a measure of life satisfaction for use in treatment planning and outcome assessment. Psychol Assess 1993; 4: 92101.Google Scholar
11 Yucel, M, Lubman, DI. Neurocognitive and neuroimaging evidence of behavioural dysregulation in human drug addiction: implications for diagnosis, treatment and prevention. Drug Alcohol Rev 2007; 26: 33–9.Google Scholar
12 Stewart, RM, Brown, RI. An outcome study of Gamblers Anonymous. Br J Psychiatry 1988; 152: 284–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1 Treatment responses of pathological gambling participants assigned to imaginal desensitisation plus motivational interviewing (IDMI) or Gamblers Anonymous (GA) (intent-to-treat population; between-participant analysis)

Supplementary material: PDF

Grant et al. supplementary material

Supplementary Figure S1

Download Grant et al. supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 31.2 KB
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.