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Rumination-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Reduces Rumination and Targeted Cross-network Connectivity in Youth With a History of Depression: Replication in a Preregistered Randomized Clinical Trial

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posted on 2025-08-02, 10:54 authored by SA Langenecker, M Westlund Schreiner, KL Bessette, H Roberts, L Thomas, A Dillahunt, SL Pocius, DA Feldman, D Jago, B Farstead, M Pazdera, E Kaufman, JA Galloway, PK Kerig, A Bakian, RC Welsh, RH Jacobs, SE Crowell, ER Watkins
Background: Rumination-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (RF-CBT) is designed to reduce depressive rumination or the habitual tendency to dwell on experiences in a repetitive, negative, passive, and global manner. RF-CBT uses functional analysis, experiential exercises, and repeated practice to identify and change the ruminative habit. This preregistered randomized clinical trial (NCT03859297, R61) is a preregistered replication of initial work. We hypothesized a concurrent reduction of both self-reported rumination and cross-network connectivity between the left posterior cingulate cortex and right inferior frontal and inferior temporal gyri. Methods: Seventy-six youths with a history of depression and elevated rumination were randomized to 10 to 14 sessions of RF-CBT (n = 39; 34 completers) or treatment as usual (n = 37; 28 completers). Intent-to-treat analyses assessed pre-post change in rumination response scale and in functional connectivity assessed using two 5 minute, 12 second runs of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging. Results: We replicated previous findings: a significant reduction in rumination response scale and a reduction in left posterior cingulate cortex to right inferior frontal gyrus/inferior temporal gyrus connectivity in participants who received RF-CBT compared with those who received treatment as usual. Reductions were large (z change = 0.84; 0.73, respectively [ps < .05]). Conclusions: This adolescent clinical trial further demonstrates that depressive rumination is a brain-based mechanism that is modifiable via RF-CBT. Here, we replicated that RF-CBT reduces cross-network connectivity, a possible mechanism by which rumination becomes less frequent, intense, and automatic. This National Institute of Mental Health-funded fast-fail study continues to the R33 phase during which treatment-specific effects of RF-CBT will be compared with relaxation therapy.

Funding

Huntsman Mental Health Institute

MH116080

National Institute of Mental Health

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© 2023 Published by Elsevier Inc on behalf of Society of Biological Psychiatry. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Biological Psychiatry Global Open Science

Pagination

1-10

Publisher

Elsevier / Society of Biological Psychiatry

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2023-11-03T10:15:42Z

FOA date

2023-11-03T10:27:14Z

Citation

Vol. 4 (1), pp. 1-10

Department

  • Psychology

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