Skip to main content
Full access
Perspectives
Published Online: 1 June 2015

CBT for Adolescents With Anxiety: Mature Yet Still Developing

Abstract

Anxiety disorders are common in adolescents (ages 12 to 18) and contribute to a range of impairments. There has been speculation that adolescents with anxiety are at risk for being treatment nonresponders. In this review, the authors examine the efficacy of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for adolescents with anxiety. Outcomes from mixed child and adolescent samples and from adolescent-only samples indicate that approximately two-thirds of youths respond favorably to CBT. CBT produces moderate to large effects and shows superiority over control/comparison conditions. The literature does not support differential outcomes by age: adolescents do not consistently manifest poorer outcomes relative to children. Although extinction paradigms find prolonged fear extinction in adolescent samples, basic research does not fully align with the processes and goals of real-life exposure. Furthermore, CBT is flexible and allows for tailored application in adolescents, and it may be delivered in alternative formats (i.e., brief, computer/Internet, school-based, and transdiagnostic CBT).
Adolescence is by no means a unified transition from childhood to adulthood. Rather, adolescence marks a series of interrelated yet not entirely synchronized changes in biological, cognitive, emotional, social, and identity-related functioning (1, 2). Although many of the changes in adolescence contribute positively to an individual’s maturation (3), others increase susceptibility to psychopathology, including the anxiety disorders.
Adolescence is a time of vulnerability to anxiety yet, paradoxically, is also a period of increased risk-taking and striving for autonomy (4). Normative adolescent development, both biological and psychological, includes possible sources for increased risk for anxiety disorders. For example, changes in neural white and gray matter density (particularly in the prefrontal cortex) and synaptic pruning coincide with cognitive advances (5), such that the capacity for working memory, metacognition, and hypothetical thought also advance (6). By the same token, these developmental changes have been linked to maladaptive thinking patterns, such as worry in generalized anxiety disorder (7). For instance, the comprehension that thoughts are uncontrollable, inherent in generalized anxiety disorder, emerges between ages 5 and 9 but crystallizes in adolescence (8). Similarly, the capacity to make catastrophic attributions about bodily sensations, common in panic disorder, develops largely in adolescence (9). With increasing cognitive sophistication, adolescents have more existential worries (e.g., the future, death), which complement the challenges of identity development (10). Increased responsibilities, greater independence from parents, and mounting academic pressures are also potential sources of anxiety. Adolescent social development, including sexual maturation, propensity toward peer relationships, and body awareness from pubertal development, raises self-consciousness and preoccupations with the opinions of others (11, 12). Such developments create vulnerability to social anxiety. Biological and social changes also alter sleep patterns and circadian rhythms during adolescence (13), and these alterations in turn contribute to emotion dysregulation and anxiety in youths (14). Thus, the confluence of normative developmental changes makes adolescence a sensitive period for the genesis and maintenance of anxiety.
Anxiety disorders are among the most common psychiatric disorders in youths (15), with approximately 10%−20% of children and adolescents meeting diagnostic criteria (16). Many of the anxiety disorders of childhood persist into adolescence, and the onset of new anxiety disorders, such as social phobia/social anxiety disorder and panic disorder, commonly emerge in the teen years (17, 18). Anxiety disorders in adolescence predict anxiety as well as substance use disorders into adulthood (19). Adolescents with anxiety disorders also face a range of serious impairments in academic, interpersonal, and leisure functioning (20). Further heightening this concern is that evidence suggests that adolescents with anxiety are a particularly underserved population that often does not receive adequate treatment (21).
Given anxiety’s prevalence, chronicity, and impairment, there is a great need for treatments that align with the developmental concerns of adolescence. The first-line psychological treatment for youth anxiety disorders is cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) (22). CBT for youths was adapted from adult protocols and addresses symptomatology that cuts across anxiety diagnoses (23). Specifically, CBT provides psychoeducation about anxiety, teaches youths skills for managing fears (e.g., relaxation, coping thoughts, problem solving, externalization), and provides a context for youths to gradually encounter their fears and minimize avoidance (e.g., exposure) (24). CBT is present-focused, short-term, and active, requiring youths to participate during in-session and at-home exercises (25). Although CBT principles are evidence based and standardized, clinicians are encouraged to use “flexibility within fidelity,” tailoring treatment to the youth’s individual presentation (26).
In light of the developmental challenges and increased vulnerability to anxiety during adolescence, some have speculated that adolescents may be less responsive to CBT than adults (27, 28). A recent article in Biological Psychiatry (29), a related opinion column in the New York Times (30), and other research have highlighted this concern and examined theories on why CBT outcomes may be attenuated. For example, laboratory research in humans and mice suggests that adolescents take longer than adults and children to habituate in fear extinction (31, 32), which in turn suggests that teenagers may be less responsive to exposures in CBT. Second, cognitive and neurological immaturity may hamper adolescents’ ability to regulate emotions and process CBT material to engage in treatment (33). Third, strivings for autonomy may hinder therapy engagement as teenagers reject the need for help and collaboration with adults (27). Fourth, adolescents’ increasingly busy schedules, marked by extracurricular activities, large academic workloads, and social engagements, may further limit adolescents’ willingness to participate in therapy and complete the necessary homework tasks. Fifth, the onset of depression and social anxiety disorder emerge in adolescence, and both conditions have been suggested to be linked with less favorable treatment response in CBT for anxiety (34). Sixth, years of avoidant coping and distorted thoughts may be established and recalcitrant by the time an individual reaches adolescence (35). Aside from issues linked to adolescence, other pitfalls may exist in the treatment itself. For example, some have criticized manual-based CBT for a “cookie-cutter” approach with limited adaptability to the developmental needs of teenagers. What does the research literature have to say on these issues?
In this review, we examine the status of the research findings evaluating CBT for adolescents with anxiety. Our central objectives were to report rates of improvement for adolescents and to examine whether or not adolescents have poor outcomes relative to preadolescent children. In other words, is the concern that adolescents are more likely to have an unfavorable treatment response warranted? First, we review studies that evaluated CBT in mixed child and adolescent samples. Second, we provide an overview of the smaller number of outcome trials with adolescent-only samples. Third, we examine adaptations of CBT for adolescents that have been evaluated, including brief CBT, computer-based CBT, transdiagnostic treatment, and CBT in community-based settings. We then discuss the reported findings, and we conclude with suggestions for future research. Note that we focus on the large randomized clinical trials evaluating CBT for youths with anxiety; in areas where less research has been conducted, pilot studies are cited. Note also that operationalizing “adolescence” proved a challenge, given the heterogeneity of biological, cognitive, emotional, and social maturity in youths. Despite its imprecision, we used age as a proxy or marker of adolescence, given that most randomized clinical trials lack measures of adolescent maturation (e.g., pubertal status, cognitive ability). We define adolescence as ages 12 to 18, in line with randomized clinical trials for CBT of youth anxiety (34). This review extends beyond past reviews by including a broader range of studies (e.g., both mixed-aged and adolescent-only studies), focusing on the anxiety disorders defined by DSM-5, examining outcomes associated with CBT and not other treatments (e.g., eye movement desensitization and reprocessing), including up-to-date research from the Child-Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study (CAMS), outlining alternative modalities of CBT for adolescents, and responding to criticism of poor CBT response for adolescents from an empirical and theoretical perspective.

Efficacy of CBT for Anxiety in Adolescence

Assessing CBT in Mixed Child and Adolescent Samples

There have been over two dozen randomized clinical trials examining CBT in mixed child and adolescent samples. Outcomes across ages indicate large pre- to posttreatment effect sizes and medium to large effect sizes for CBT compared with control conditions (36), with minimal differences between individual and group CBT formats (37) and between individual and family CBT (38). The studies find that approximately 60% to 80% of youths show clinically significant improvement (response), and that in more conservative measures of outcome, such as remission (defined as the absence of the principal anxiety disorder following treatment), evidence rates are in the range of 50%–70% (39). Additionally, evidence from follow-up studies ranging from 1 to 19 years indicates that gains are maintained after treatment (4042). Thus, according to the criteria established by the Division of Clinical Psychology of the American Psychological Association, CBT is the only “well-established” intervention for anxious youths (43).
Although the outcomes are favorable, the age range of samples (e.g., ages 7–17) could mask differential outcomes by age. That said, in nearly all studies that examined age as a potential predictor of outcomes, few significant differences in outcome were found between children and adolescents (Table 1) (4467). The results are consistent, although some caution is warranted, as some studies may have been underpowered to detect a difference or been limited by methodological weaknesses. Additionally, most of the studies only included youths in early adolescence, although some of the largest trials included the full range of ages. Comparisons of differential outcomes by age can also be confounded by the fact that diagnoses vary across ages; prevalences are greater for separation anxiety disorder in children and for social phobia in adolescents (68). Finally, a number of studies did not test for differential response rates by age. One study examining outcomes for youths with mixed-anxiety diagnoses in an outpatient clinic did find a poorer response among adolescents compared with children (69), although the study was published before the introduction of the Coping Cat program (70), which was designed specifically for adolescents with mixed-anxiety presentations.
TABLE 1. Studies Examining CBT for Anxiety Disorders in Combined Child and Adolescent Samples
StudyNAge Range (years)DiagnosisTreatment GroupsRemission RatesaAge Effect
Barrett (44)607–14MixedGroup CBT; group CBT plus family management; waiting listGroup CBT, 65%Not reported
Barrett et al. (45)797–14MixedCBT; CBT plus family management; waiting listCBT 70%; 60%bNo differences
Beidel et al. (46)678–12Social phobiaGroup CBT; Testbusters (nonspecific intervention)CBT, 67%No differences
Cobham et al. (47)677–14MixedCBT; CBT plus parent anxiety managementCBT, 39%–82%No differencesc
Dadds et al. (48)1287–14MixedGroup CBT; self-monitoringCBT > self-monitoringdNo differences
Flannery-Schroeder and Kendall (49)458–14MixedCBT; group CBTGroup CBT, 50%Not reported
CBT, 75%
Hudson et al. (50)1127–16MixedGroup CBT; education/supportCBT, 68%Not reported
Kendall (51)479–13MixedCBT; waiting listCBT, 64%Not reported
Kendall et al. (52)949–13MixedCBT; waiting listCBT, 53%No differences
Kendall et al. (53)1077–14MixedCBT; family CBT; education/supportCBT and family CBT, 64%No differences
King et al. (54)345–15Mixed (school refusal)CBT; waiting listCBT, 88%No differences
Last et al. (55)566–17Mixed (school refusal)CBT; attention placeboCBT, 65%Not reported
Lyneham and Rapee (56)1006–12MixedBibliotherapy CBT plus either telephone contact, e-mail contact, or waiting listBibliotherapy CBT plus telephone contact, 79%Not reported
Manassis et al. (57)788–12MixedCBT; group CBTCBT = group CBTeNo differences
Mendlowitz et al. (58)627–12MixedGroup CBT; group CBT plus family treatment; family treatment only; waiting listCBT > waiting listfNot reported
Muris et al. (59)309–12MixedGroup CBT; placebo; waiting listCBT > placebo and waiting listfNot reported
Nauta et al. (60)797–18MixedCBT; CBT plus parent training; waiting listCBT, 54%No differences
Pina et al. (61)88M=10.4MixedCBT; CBT plus parent trainingN/AgNot reported
Rapee et al. (62)2676–12MixedGroup CBT; waiting list; placeboCBT, 61%Not reported
Schneider et al. (63)648–13Separation anxiety disorderCBT (general); CBT (specific for separation anxiety)CBT, 82%Not reported
CBT for separation anxiety, 88%
Silverman et al. (64)4160–16MixedGroup CBT; waiting listGroup CBT, 64%No differences
Silverman et al. (65)816–16Specific phobiaCBT; behavioral therapy; education/supportCBT, 88%; behavioral therapy, 55%No differences
Spence et al. (66)507–14Social phobiaCBT; family CBT; waiting listCBT, 58%; family CBT, 87%Not reported
Walkup et al. (67)4887–17MixedCBT; CBT plus medication; medication; placeboCBT plus medication, 65%; CBT, 36%Mixedh
a
Remission rates at posttreatment assessment.
b
Sixty percent of adolescents (ages 11–14) met remission criteria.
c
Adolescents had a higher remission in CBT (86%) than in CBT plus parent anxiety management (20%).
d
Remission rates not included, partial prevention study.
e
Significant improvements were seen in both CBT and group CBT; remission rates not reported.
f
Active treatments were superior to waiting list; remission rates not reported.
g
Partial prevention study; 87% in the CBT plus parent training group and 96% in the CBT group were diagnosis free at posttreatment assessment.
h
Adolescents had poorer remission rates than children (34), but there were no differences in treatment response rates (75).
Addressing the need for an integration of the data on age as a moderator of outcomes, Bennett et al. (27) investigated the role of age across randomized clinical trials for CBT in mixed-aged anxious youths (ages 6–19) through an individual patient data meta-analysis. To be eligible, studies had to examine CBT compared with a waiting list or attentional control, use a common CBT protocol for all study participants, be conducted in English, use outcome assessments, and use face-to-face CBT, with participants 6–19 years of age who had an anxiety diagnosis at baseline. The authors identified 23 eligible trials and obtained data for analysis from 16 studies (N=1,171 cases). The results of the meta-analysis indicated no significant moderation by age on outcome using the Anxiety Disorder Interview Schedule (71), which is consistent with results of a previous meta-analysis by Silverman et al. (37). It is worth noting that the Bennett et al. results were consistent when measuring age as a dimensional or a categorical variable. The results are bolstered by the proportionally high number of studies analyzed, the studies’ use of the gold-standard Anxiety Disorder Interview Schedule, their use of covariates in the models (e.g., baseline anxiety severity and depression), and the authors’ use of the individual patient data meta-analysis approach, which yielded greater power to analyze individual randomized clinical trials and random-effects models that provide a conservative approach to analysis.
In another meta-analysis, Reynolds et al. (72) evaluated 55 studies in which participants were under age 19, had elevated anxiety or a formal DSM-IV anxiety diagnosis at a pretreatment assessment and received anxiety-focused treatment (with outcomes reported), and were randomly assigned to a treatment or a control condition. Twenty of the studies included children only (under age 13), and six examined adolescents only. The authors found that age did predict outcome, with larger treatment effect sizes for adolescents than for children (large effects, compared with small to medium). Effects were also calculated by groupings of mean age. Studies whose participants had a mean age of 7–8 years had medium to large effects (N=3), those with a mean age of 9–10 years had small effects (N=19), those with a mean age of 11–12 years had medium to large effects (N=7), those with a mean age of 13–14 years had large effects (N=4), and those with a mean age of 15 years or older also had large effects (N=5). However, the results should be interpreted with caution, as Reynolds et al. analyzed a wider range of randomized clinical trials than did Bennett et al. (27), including samples with principal diagnoses of obsessive-compulsive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder as well as studies evaluating non-CBT therapies (e.g., eye movement desensitization and reprocessing). The review also did not reanalyze data using an individual patient data meta-analysis approach, as Bennett et al. did. Taken together, the meta-analytic findings do not indicate inferior outcomes for adolescents.
The review by Bennett et al. (27) did not include data from the Child-Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study (CAMS) (67) in its analysis because that study used a separate (although similar) treatment manual for adolescents. CAMS is the largest randomized clinical trial for anxiety treatment to date (488 youths, ages 7–17). Youths with a principal diagnosis of generalized anxiety disorder, social phobia/social anxiety disorder, or separation anxiety disorder were randomly assigned to one of four conditions: 12 weeks of CBT, medication (sertraline), combination treatment, or pill placebo. The results indicated that the combination treatment was associated with greater gains compared with CBT alone and medication alone. Monotherapies were statistically equivalent, and all active treatments were superior to placebo (Table 2) (34, 67). With regard to patient age in the CAMS study, Ginsburg et al. (34) found that age was associated with two of three measures of remission (the Anxiety Disorder Interview Schedule and the severity scale of the Clinical Global Impressions Scale [CGI], but not on remission as defined by the CGI improvement scale [“very much improved”] [73]), such that adolescents were less likely than children to achieve remission. Age differences were not tested by treatment condition, limiting the conclusions that can be drawn about differences by age specific to CBT. For example, although adolescents fared worse on the CGI severity scale overall, the proportions receiving CBT only who remitted differed by only 3% between the two age groups. Further discrepancies in favor of children were noted across non-CBT conditions, including better outcomes for children in the placebo group. Remission rates by age group are presented in Table 3.
TABLE 2. Response and Remission Rates (%) at Posttreatment and 36-Week Follow-Up Assessments in the Child-Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Studya
 ResponseRemission
Condition and AssessmentCGI Improvement ScorebAnxiety Disorder Interview SchedulecCGI Severity Scored
Combination   
 Posttreatment816865
 36 weeks837367
CBT   
 Posttreatment604636
 36 weeks725258
Medication   
 Posttreatment554646
 36 weeks715263
Placebo   
 Posttreatment242427
a
Data are from references 34 and 67. CGI=Clinical Global Impressions Scale; CBT=cognitive-behavioral therapy (Coping Cat program); medication=sertraline; combination=CBT plus medication; placebo=pill placebo.
b
Scored as “very much improved” or “much improved.”
c
Loss of all targeted anxiety diagnoses (e.g., generalized anxiety disorder, social phobia, separation anxiety disorder).
d
Scored as “not at all ill” or “borderline mentally ill.”
TABLE 3. Remission Rates (%) at Posttreatment Assessment, by Age Group, in the Child-Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Studya
Condition and GroupAnxiety Disorder Interview ScheduleCGI Severity ScoreCGI Improvement Score
Combination   
 Children737048
 Adolescents595441
Medication   
 Children515137
 Adolescents353723
CBT   
 Children523720
 Adolescents363421
Placebo   
 Children263016
 Adolescents192114
a
Data are from reference 34. CGI=Clinical Global Impressions Scale; CBT=cognitive-behavioral therapy (Coping Cat program); medication=sertraline; combination=CBT plus medication; placebo=pill placebo.
When treatment response (significant reduction in anxious symptoms) was evaluated, age did not moderate outcome for any of the treatment conditions when examined categorically and dimensionally (e.g., on the CGI improvement scale or on the Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale) (74, 75). Results at 24 and 36 weeks showed that treatment response and remission for the combined treatment remained consistent, yet the monotherapies’ outcomes improved considerably on some measures (see Table 2) (76). Unfortunately, age has yet not been examined in follow-up. At 6 years after randomization, remission, cautiously defined as the absence of all study entry anxiety disorders, was 49% for combined treatment, 52% for medication, and 46% for CBT (77). Age did not predict remission.
Overall, findings from the CAMS trial present a somewhat mixed picture on adolescent-specific outcomes, with minimal age differences. Longer follow-ups of CAMS participants are under way, and future research will also examine age. In the article by Drysdale et al. (29), the authors proposed larger effects for CBT compared with placebo for children over adolescents. All told, however, we emphasize that the acute outcomes from the CAMS study, the null findings of Bennett et al. (27), and other research do not provide sufficient data to conclude that age predicts differential outcome in studies using mixed child and adolescent samples.
Perhaps adolescents, relative to children, do not differ in response to treatment but in the course of treatment. One investigation that measured symptom trajectory using multilevel growth models found that adolescents showed less symptom improvement in the early stages of treatment relative to children, despite no significant difference in symptom measures between the groups at termination (78). Differential time course may be attributed to less initial engagement by adolescents or less responsiveness to non-exposure components presented in the first half of treatment (e.g., relaxation, cognitive restructuring, problem solving). Such findings suggest that adolescents are capable of responding to treatment but that treatment modifications are necessary to maximize outcomes.

Assessing CBT in Adolescent Samples

Although the bulk of research that has examined the efficacy of CBT has used combined child and adolescent samples, there are studies that have assessed efficacy exclusively in teenagers. To address unique treatment concerns for adolescent samples, studies either used existing child treatments and modified them to be developmentally sensitive or used treatments that were specifically developed for adolescents (e.g., the Coping Cat program for generalized anxiety disorder, social phobia/social anxiety disorder, specific phobia [70]; cognitive behavioral group therapy for adolescents for social phobia/social anxiety disorder [79]; panic control treatment for adolescents for panic disorder [80]).
Outcomes from randomized clinical trials evaluating adolescent-only samples are fairly comparable to those from trials using mixed-age samples (Table 4) (8189). Studies of adolescents report significant improvement from pre- to posttreatment assessments, medium to large effect sizes, and superiority over control conditions. Significant improvement in symptoms has been measured on a variety of assessments, including diagnostic interview, self-report, and behavioral assessment (85, 86). Reduction of symptoms has also been observed for comorbid diagnoses (87). Although some remission rates in adolescent-only samples at posttreatment assessment appear lower than those in studies with mixed child and adolescent samples (Table 1), there is evidence that adolescents show continued improvement at follow-up, with a group CBT study reporting a 27% remission rate at posttreatment assessment and 54% at 6-month follow-up (85), another reporting a 45% remission rate at posttreatment assessment and 60% at 1-year follow-up (84), and a third study reporting that two of three CBT treatments had an average remission rate of 35% at posttreatment assessment and 52% at 1-year follow-up (82). Most studies of adolescents are restricted to youths with social phobia/social anxiety disorder, although other studies have reported significant improvement in panic disorder (89) and in mixed-anxiety samples (83). Favorable outcomes and attrition rates comparable to those for children (90) indicate that CBT is an effective treatment in adolescent samples.
TABLE 4. Studies Examining CBT for Anxiety Disorders in Adolescent-Only Samples
StudyNAge Range (years)DiagnosisTreatment GroupsRemission Ratesa
Baer and Garland (81)1213–18Social phobiaGroup CBT; waiting listCBT, 36%
Garcia-Lopez et al. (82)5915–17Social phobiaGroup CBT; controlGroup CBT, 40%b
Ginsburg and Drake (83)1214–17MixedGroup CBT; education/supportCBT, 75%
Hayward et al. (84)7014–17Social phobiaGroup CBT; waiting listCBT, 45%
Herbert et al. (85)7312–17Social phobiaCBT; group CBT; education/supportCBT, 29%; group CBT, 27%
Ingul et al. (86)5713–16Social phobiaCBT; group CBT; attention placeboCBT, 73%; group CBT, 53%
Masia-Werner et al. (87)3513–17Social phobiaGroup CBT; waiting listCBT, 67%
Masia-Werner et al. (88)3614–16Social phobiaGroup CBT; attention placeboCBT, 59%
Pincus et al. (89)2414–17Panic disorderCBT; self-monitoringCBT > self-monitoringc
a
Remission rates at posttreatment assessment.
b
Average across three treatment conditions.
c
Large effect sizes reported for CBT, superior to control; remission rates not reported.

Adaptations of CBT

Although CBT produces favorable outcomes in randomized clinical trials, there remains room for improvement. Variations in the provision of CBT may better individualize treatment for adolescents with unique needs and improve outcomes for patients who might otherwise be treatment nonresponders. Although research in this area is less developed relative to efficacy trials, studies examining brief CBT, computer/Internet-delivered CBT, transdiagnostic treatments, and community/school-based delivery indicate positive outcomes when treating youths with heterogeneous presentations (Table 5) (9198). Alternative forms of delivery and treatment modifications suggest CBT’s versatility and generalizability with adolescent samples.
TABLE 5. Studies Examining CBT for Anxiety Disorders Using Adapted Protocols
StudyNAge Range (years)DiagnosisStudy TypeTreatment GroupsRemission RatesaAge Effect
Bodden et al. (91)1288–17MixedPartial effectivenessCBT; family CBTCBT, 53%; family CBT, 28%Children > adolescents
March et al. (92)737–12MixedInternet CBTInternet CBT; waiting listCBT, 58%Not reported
Ollendick et al. (93)1967–16Specific phobiaBrief CBT, one sessionBrief CBT; waiting list; education/supportCBT, 55%No differences
Öst et al. (94)607–17Specific phobiaBrief CBT, one sessionBrief CBT; brief CBT plus parent training; waiting listCBT, 91%; CBT plus parent training, 65%No differences
Southam-Gerow et al. (95)488–15MixedEffectivenessCBT; usual careCBT, 73%No differences
Spence et al. (96)727–14MixedInternet CBTCBT; Internet CBT; waiting listCBT, 67%; Internet CBT, 61%No differences
Thirlwall et al. (97)1947–12MixedParent-guided CBTCBT; waiting listCBT, 50%Not reported
Wergeland et al. (98)1828–15MixedEffectivenessCBT; group CBT; waiting listCBT, 26%; group CBT 21%No differences
a
Remission rates at posttreatment assessment.

Brief Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy

Brief CBT is an alternative form of delivery that condenses core components of CBT and removes elements with less empirical support (e.g., relaxation) (99). As such, brief CBT maintains the integrity of evidence-based protocols but delivers the intervention in fewer sessions and/or less time. To date, brief CBT has been examined in one trial for anxious adolescents (100). Twenty-six adolescents with panic disorder were assigned to receive weekly panic control treatment (11 sessions over 12 weeks) (see reference 80) or an 8-day brief CBT (see reference 101). Brief CBT yielded medium to large effect sizes at the posttreatment and 6-month follow-up assessments, with significant reductions in anxiety comparable to those of standard-duration weekly treatment. Brief CBT has also been tested in pilot studies with combined child and adolescent samples, including an eight-session adaptation of Coping Cat for youths with mixed anxiety (ages 6–13) (102) and a 1-week therapy summer camp for youths with social anxiety disorder (ages 7–12) (103); both brief CBT programs showed significant reductions in anxiety (the remission rates were 42% at posttreatment assessment and 65% 1-year follow-up [102], and 50% at posttreatment assessment [103]).
In its briefest form, CBT for specific phobias in youths has been reduced to a one-session treatment that lasts several hours (104, 105). One-session treatment has been assessed in mixed child-adolescent samples in seven studies, including several randomized clinical trials (106108), and is considered an effective treatment for specific phobias (108). In the largest study to date (ages 7–16), Ollendick et al. (108) found that 55% of youths who received the one-session treatment were diagnosis free at the posttreatment assessment (49% at the 6-month follow-up), compared with only 2% at posttreatment and follow-up assessments for youths in a waiting list condition, and 23% at posttreatment assessment and 21% at the 6-month follow-up for youths who received education/support treatment. Although all seven one-session treatment studies used mixed child-adolescent samples, age was not found to be associated with treatment outcome (108). Overall, brief CBT has shown acceptability, feasibility, and efficacy in youth samples, particularly for specific phobia. However, additional studies are needed to test brief CBT in adolescent-only samples as well as in youths representing a wider variety of anxiety diagnoses.

Computer- and Internet-Delivered CBT

Computer- or Internet-delivered CBT has the potential to advance dissemination to adolescents (109) and to facilitate engagement by using a platform with which young people are already familiar and comfortable. These programs are typically completed online or through downloadable content (with a therapist at a clinic) or at home with modest remote therapist consultation. Although the emphasis of several computer/Internet CBT protocols has been placed on younger age groups (e.g., Camp Cope-A-Lot [110]; the BRAVE Program [92]), programs for adolescents are available (112, 113). Studies examining computer/Internet CBT in mixed-aged youths have reported patient acceptability and outcomes superior to control conditions and comparable to outpatient CBT (92, 113, 114). Addressing adolescents in particular, a randomized clinical trial with 115 youths 12–18 years old compared Internet-delivered CBT (the youth goes through Web-based modules and a remote therapist follows up with weekly e-mails and an occasional telephone call), computer-based CBT (the youth goes through online modules at the clinic with a therapist), and a waiting list condition (116). Both active treatment conditions showed significantly greater reductions in anxiety compared with the waiting list condition at the posttreatment assessment (remission rates of 37% for the Internet-delivered CBT group, 33% for the computer-based CBT group, and 4% for the waiting-list group), with added gains at the 12-month follow-up assessment (remission rates of 78% for the Internet-delivered CBT group and 81% for the computer-based CBT group). These results are comparable to the outcomes reported in CAMS (67), suggesting that computer- or Internet-delivered CBT is a viable alternative for adolescents. Additional research for replication, examination of predictors of differential outcomes, and further development of telehealth ethical guidelines (e.g., confidentiality, safety) is needed.

Transdiagnostic Treatments

High comorbidity rates of anxiety with other psychiatric disorders (117) (especially depression [118]), a return to functional analytic thinking, and a gradual paradigm shift toward targeting underlying deficits rather than categorical disorders (119) have served to promote broad-based transdiagnostic treatments (120). Most treatments for adolescent anxiety are designed to address one or several similar anxiety disorders, whereas a transdiagnostic approach targets anxiety and non-anxiety comorbidities and the shared mechanisms of dysregulation. For example, the Modular Approach to Therapy for Children With Anxiety, Depression, or Conduct Problems (MATCH) (121) invites therapists to select specific modules to target areas of deficits with the assistance of flowcharts (e.g., problem solving, behavioral avoidance, parental reinforcement of misbehavior). In a randomized clinical trial in 174 youths 7–13 years old (29% with a principal anxiety disorder, 57% with any anxiety disorder), MATCH outperformed usual care and was comparable to standard manual-based CBT on clinical remission, yielding an average of one less diagnosis at posttreatment assessment (122). Unfortunately, the study was not powered to test for age differences. Modular treatment has been tested in anxious samples in pilot studies (123), but not all studies found it to outperform usual care (124). More studies are needed that test MATCH’s efficacy as well as to develop modular treatment for youths in mid to late adolescence.
Another approach to transdiagnostic treatment is the Unified Protocol for the Treatment of Emotional Disorders in Adolescents (UP-A) (125). UP-A treats emotional disorders broadly, targeting shared underlying problems (e.g., emotional avoidance, cognitive distortions). UP-A, an adaptation of an adult unified protocol, was designed to treat adolescent-specific depression and anxiety in eight to 21 sessions (126). Although research on UP-A has thus far been limited to case studies (127), results from an adult randomized clinical trial show UP to be superior to a waiting list condition in treating emotional problems (128). Despite its strength in targeting overlapping disorders specifically in adolescence, the absence of randomized clinical trials limits conclusions we can draw about it, and research is needed to assess UP-A outcomes relative to empirically supported treatments for adolescent anxiety and depression.

Effectiveness Research

Recent studies have assessed the effectiveness of CBT for youths, including adolescents, in naturalistic settings, such as community clinics and schools. In community clinic randomized clinical trials, CBT for child and adolescent anxiety evidences significant improvements in symptoms at posttreatment assessment, yet effect sizes have been lower than in efficacy trials and are sometimes comparable to those of treatment as usual (95, 98, 129). However, a recent trial in community clinic settings in Norway (N=159; ages 7 to 13) demonstrated a 51% remission rate at posttreatment assessment and a 96% remission rate at 2-year follow-up (130). Studies of adolescent-only samples are lacking; however, preliminary research suggests CBT’s effectiveness compared with a waiting list condition for adolescents with social phobia (81). Potential explanations for CBT’s relatively less impressive performance in effectiveness compared with efficacy trials include a lack of CBT experience and underutilization of exposures among community clinicians (95), increased comorbidity in community samples, and methodological issues (e.g., studies being underpowered and CBT content being included in the control/comparison conditions).
CBT’s effectiveness for teens has been further bolstered by studies examining its generalizability to culturally and ethnically diverse samples. Preliminary studies report effectiveness of CBT for anxious youths in minority samples, including African Americans (83) Latino Americans (61, 131), Asian Americans (123), as well as in samples in other countries (82, 91, 132). A recent open clinical trial of mixed-age youths (ages 10 to 17) found moderate to large effects for CBT among anxious Brazilian youths, supporting the effectiveness and transportability of CBT in low- and middle-income countries (134). Initial findings are promising and show comparable outcome rates across diverse samples. Researchers must continue to develop guidelines for culturally sensitive adaptations that maintain the integrity of CBT (135).
School-based programs have also found gains from CBT across age. A meta-analysis by Mychailyszyn et al. (136) synthesized 12 universal intervention studies that found moderate effects for anxiety reduction and reported no significant differences by age. School-based studies with exclusively adolescent samples are rare, but one such randomized clinical trial (87) found that CBT was superior to a waiting list condition for adolescents with social anxiety disorder (67% of the CBT group were diagnosis free at end of study, compared with 6% of the waiting list group), which is consistent with findings from smaller studies examining anxious adolescents in school settings (135, 137).

Conclusions

The overall outlook for CBT for adolescents with anxiety is bright: randomized clinical trials demonstrate that approximately two-thirds of youths who receive CBT show clinical improvement, and rates are even higher when treatment is combined with antidepressant medication. Notably, the majority of studies of mixed child and adolescent samples did not find significant differences in outcomes between these age groups. Research also supports the versatility of CBT, with adolescents showing improvement when CBT is administered in alternative formats.
What can be said with regard to the reasonable concern that adolescents are more likely to be nonresponders to CBT? The data suggest that it is reasonable to conclude that adolescents and children have comparable positive response rates to CBT. Quality CBT for youths must be delivered in a flexible, developmentally sensitive fashion such that the cognitive, emotional, and social maturity of adolescents are not ignored. Indeed, research suggests that a developmentally tailored approach to CBT, compared with a “one size fits all” approach, predicts better outcomes for anxious youths (138). Indeed, there is a wealth of information available to guide developmentally sensitive treatment, including treatment manuals for anxiety designed solely for adolescents, as well as articles and texts on ways to modify existing treatments for application in adolescents (139141). For example, Sauter et al. (33) outlined treatment modifications for adolescents at each step of the therapy process, including conducting assessments of CBT-relevant (cognitive) capacities, developmentally sensitive case formulation, motivation building, and use of age-appropriate language and treatment materials. In particular, taking a collaborative approach and integrating the youth’s personal goals into treatment are central to adolescent engagement in CBT (26). CBT can align with the adolescent’s normative strivings for autonomy (140), using exposure as a means to gain increasing independence. Such implementation modifications address concerns about the applicability and accessibility of CBT content for anxious adolescents.
Evidence from basic research suggests that adolescents, relative to other age groups, may be less responsive in fear extinction tasks, implicating attenuated treatment outcomes (32). However, classical conditioning paradigms used in experimental fear extinction are not true analogues of real-life exposure therapy. Unlike such experiments, CBT exposure tasks require youths to be active participants, interacting with the feared situations, vocalizing their fears, and reappraising their beliefs and expected catastrophes with their therapists. Unlike in basic research, therapeutic exposure tasks are not done to them, but with them. Indeed, some research indicates that the postexposure processing with clinicians is a significant predictor of outcome (142). It is also worth noting that a positive treatment outcome is not simply an absence of anxiety, but rather the ability to cope with anxiety (e.g., reduction in interference). Fear extinction, as in basic extinction experiments, may not be the central mechanism by which exposure operates in CBT, and recent models of the mechanism of change postulate that exposures do not weaken fear structures but rather help patients develop new inhibitory meanings for the feared situation (inhibitory learning theory [143]). Such explanations cite the benefit of high anxiety levels throughout the exposure, and they are bolstered by the fact that new learning may occur in the absence of fear habituation (144) and that habituation is not uniformly linked to positive outcome (143). Thus, the conceptualization of exposure as the patient being “systematically desensitized to anxiety triggers through repeated exposures” as cited by Drysdale et al. (29), likely underestimates the complexity of exposure in youths.
In addition to receiving benefit from the several active components of CBT, patients benefit from other features that hold the program together, such as the therapeutic relationship/alliance. Research indicates that a strong therapeutic alliance is associated with treatment engagement and outcome (145), particularly when CBT is delivered without medication treatment (146). Whereas the development of autonomy involves distancing oneself from one’s parents, many adolescents seek and value relationships with nonfamilial adults (147), and the therapeutic relationship may be particularly helpful for the adolescent’s psychological well-being, with therapy as a context in which he or she can process normative adolescent stressors and experience support during a time of identity development.
Critics have cited the 50% to 70% remission rates (defined as being free of the principal diagnosis) and 60% to 80% response rates as too low, indicating that CBT is not working properly in adolescents (30). Although there is certainly room for improvement in outcomes—and research is needed to determine optimal treatment for CBT nonresponders—the outcomes for CBT in youth anxiety disorders are among the best seen for mental health problems in youths (for example, an 80% acute response rate for combination treatment with CBT and sertraline [67]). Moreover, gains are observed for some youths at long-term follow-ups, and successful treatment has preventive features for the sequelae of anxiety (41). As Ryan (148) remarked, “An 80% response is a high hurdle to surpass, but what a wonderful problem to have.”
It is also important to recall issues that may be lost in meta-analytic findings. Remission rate may not be the gold standard for treatment outcome; youths who do not achieve remission may still experience meaningful reduction in anxiety and improvements on quality of life indices. Additionally, many randomized clinical trials for CBT are standardized to approximately 16 sessions. Teenagers who do not achieve remission at this posttreatment point may still be capable of responding after a greater “dose” of CBT, as some have been shown to do after receiving more sessions (149). And given that adolescents are still within their developmental course (regarding school, work, interpersonal issues, independence), they remain in a stage of life that is notable for new and emerging anxiety-provoking situations. Finally, individual differences mean that some less responsive youths may have better outcomes in an alternative format, such as computer-based CBT or brief CBT.
In sum, basic research on fear extinction does not fully align with the processes and goals of real-life exposure. Conclusions from startle paradigms may not fully generalize to clinical settings. To suggest that CBT does not work for adolescents (30) is misleading at best and runs counter to accrued knowledge from outcome studies. Findings suggest that adolescents respond to CBT at rates comparable to those of children, although there remains potential for improved outcomes. Although adolescents present challenges in the therapy setting, such challenges can be addressed with individualized protocols that meet developmental needs.

References

1.
Kendall PC, Williams C: Therapy with adolescents: treating the “marginal man”. Behav Ther 1986; 17:522–537
2.
Lerner RM, Steinberg L: Handbook of Adolescent Psychology, 2nd ed. Hoboken, NJ, John Wiley & Sons, 2004
3.
Steinberg L: Age of Opportunity: Lessons From the New Science of Adolescence. New York, Eamon Dolan/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014
4.
Reynolds E, Magidson J, Mayes L, et al: Risk-taking behaviors across the transition from adolescence to young adulthood, in Young Adult Mental Health. Edited by Grant JE, Potenza MN. New York, Oxford University Press, 2010, pp 40–63
5.
Blakemore SJ: Development of the social brain during adolescence. Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) 2008; 61:40–49
6.
Weil LG, Fleming SM, Dumontheil I, et al: The development of metacognitive ability in adolescence. Conscious Cogn 2013; 22:264–271
7.
Ellis DM, Hudson JL: The metacognitive model of generalized anxiety disorder in children and adolescents. Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev 2010; 13:151–163
8.
Kertz SJ, Woodruff-Borden J: The developmental psychopathology of worry. Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev 2011; 14:174–197
9.
Nelles WB, Barlow DH: Do children panic? Clin Psychol Rev 1988; 146:1059–1060
10.
Muris P, Merckelbach H, Meesters C, et al: Cognitive development and worry in normal children. Cognit Ther Res 2002; 26:775–785
11.
Hyde JS, Mezulis AH, Abramson LY: The ABCs of depression: integrating affective, biological, and cognitive models to explain the emergence of the gender difference in depression. Psychol Rev 2008; 115:291–313
12.
Steinberg L: Cognitive and affective development in adolescence. Trends Cogn Sci 2005; 9:69–74
13.
Sadeh A, Dahl RE, Shahar G, et al: Sleep and the transition to adolescence: a longitudinal study. Sleep 2009; 32:1602–1609
14.
Peterman JS, Carper MM, Kendall PC: Anxiety disorders and comorbid sleep problems in school-aged youth: review and future research directions. Child Psychiatry Hum Dev (Epub ahead of print, June 25, 2014)
15.
Kessler RC, Berglund P, Demler O, et al: Lifetime prevalence and age-of-onset distributions of DSM-IV disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication. Arch Gen Psychiatry 2005; 62:593–602
16.
Costello E, Mustillo S, Keeler G, et al: Prevalence of psychiatric disorders in children and adolescents, in Mental Health Services: A Public Health Perspective. Edited by Levine B, Petrila J, Hennessey K. New York, Oxford University Press, 2004, pp 111–128
17.
Masi G, Favilla L, Mucci M, et al: Panic disorder in clinically referred children and adolescents. Child Psychiatry Hum Dev 2000; 31:139–151
18.
Puleo CM, Conner BT, Benjamin CL, et al: CBT for childhood anxiety and substance use at 7.4-year follow-up: a reassessment controlling for known predictors. J Anxiety Disord 2011; 25:690–696
19.
Pine DS, Cohen P, Gurley D, et al: The risk for early-adulthood anxiety and depressive disorders in adolescents with anxiety and depressive disorders. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1998; 55:56–64
20.
Van Ameringen M, Mancini C, Farvolden P: The impact of anxiety disorders on educational achievement. J Anxiety Disord 2003; 17:561–571
21.
Elkins RM, McHugh RK, Santucci LC, et al: Improving the transportability of CBT for internalizing disorders in children. Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev 2011; 14:161–173
22.
Connolly SD, Bernstein GA; Work Group on Quality Issues: Practice parameter for the assessment and treatment of children and adolescents with anxiety disorders. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2007; 46:267–283
23.
Settipani CA, Brodman DM, Peterman JS, et al: Anxiety disorders in children and adolescents: assessment and treatment, in The Wiley Handbook of Anxiety Disorders. Edited by Emmelkamp P, Ehring T. Chichester, UK, Wiley-Blackwell, 2014, pp 1038–1077
24.
Gosch EA, Flannery-Schroeder E, Mauro CF, et al: Principles of cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety disorders in children. J Cogn Psychother 2006; 20:247–292
25.
Kendall PC: Anxiety disorders in youth, in Child and Adolescent Therapy: Cognitive-Behavioral Procedures. Edited by Kendall PC. New York, Guilford, 2012, pp 143–189
26.
Kendall PC, Gosch E, Furr JM, et al: Flexibility within fidelity. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2008; 47:987–993
27.
Bennett K, Manassis K, Walter SD, et al: Cognitive behavioral therapy age effects in child and adolescent anxiety: an individual patient data metaanalysis. Depress Anxiety 2013; 30:829–841
28.
Pattwell SS, Lee FS, Casey BJ: Fear learning and memory across adolescent development: Hormones and Behavior Special Issue: Puberty and Adolescence. Horm Behav 2013; 64:380–389
29.
Drysdale AT, Hartley CA, Pattwell SS, et al: Fear and anxiety from principle to practice: implications for when to treat youth with anxiety disorders. Biol Psychiatry 2014; 75:e19–e20
30.
Friedman RA: Why teenagers act crazy. New York Times, June 28, 2014
31.
Pattwell SS, Bath KG, Casey BJ, et al: Selective early-acquired fear memories undergo temporary suppression during adolescence. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2011; 108:1182–1187
32.
Pattwell SS, Duhoux S, Hartley CA, et al: Altered fear learning across development in both mouse and human. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2012; 109:16318–16323
33.
Sauter FM, Heyne D, Michiel Westenberg P: Cognitive behavior therapy for anxious adolescents: developmental influences on treatment design and delivery. Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev 2009; 12:310–335
34.
Ginsburg GS, Kendall PC, Sakolsky D, et al: Remission after acute treatment in children and adolescents with anxiety disorders: findings from the CAMS. J Consult Clin Psychol 2011; 79:806–813
35.
Hudson JL, Kendall PC, Coles ME, et al: The other side of the coin: using intervention research in child anxiety disorders to inform developmental psychopathology. Dev Psychopathol 2002; 14:819–841
36.
Ishikawa S, Okajima I, Matsuoka H, et al: Cognitive behavioural therapy for anxiety disorders in children and adolescents: a meta-analysis. Child Adolesc Ment Health 2007; 12:164–172
37.
Silverman WK, Pina AA, Viswesvaran C: Evidence-based psychosocial treatments for phobic and anxiety disorders in children and adolescents. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol 2008; 37:105–130
38.
Manassis K, Lee TC, Bennett K, et al: Types of parental involvement in CBT with anxious youth: a preliminary meta-analysis. J Consult Clin Psychol 2014; 82:1163–1172
39.
Seligman LD, Ollendick TH: Cognitive-behavioral therapy for anxiety disorders in youth. Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am 2011; 20:217–238
40.
Beidel DC, Turner SM, Young BJ: Social effectiveness therapy for children: five years later. Behav Ther 2006; 37:416–425
41.
Benjamin CL, Harrison JP, Settipani CA, et al: Anxiety and related outcomes in young adults 7 to 19 years after receiving treatment for child anxiety. J Consult Clin Psychol 2013; 81:865–876
42.
Kendall PC, Safford S, Flannery-Schroeder E, et al: Child anxiety treatment: outcomes in adolescence and impact on substance use and depression at 7.4-year follow-up. J Consult Clin Psychol 2004; 72:276–287
43.
Hollon DS, Beck AT: Cognitive and cognitive-behavioral therapies, in Bergin and Garfield’s Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change, 6th ed. Edited by Lambert MJ. New York, John Wiley & Sons, 2013, pp 393–442
44.
Barrett PM: Evaluation of cognitive-behavioral group treatments for childhood anxiety disorders. J Clin Child Psychol 1998; 27:459–468
45.
Barrett PM, Dadds MR, Rapee RM: Family treatment of childhood anxiety: a controlled trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 1996; 64:333–342
46.
Beidel DC, Turner SM, Morris TL: Behavioral treatment of childhood social phobia. J Consult Clin Psychol 2000; 68:1072–1080
47.
Cobham VE, Dadds MR, Spence SH: The role of parental anxiety in the treatment of childhood anxiety. J Consult Clin Psychol 1998; 66:893–905
48.
Dadds MR, Spence SH, Holland DE, et al: Prevention and early intervention for anxiety disorders: a controlled trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 1997; 65:627–635
49.
Flannery-Schroeder E, Kendall PC: Group and individual cognitive-behavioral treatments for youth with anxiety disorders: a randomized clinical trial. Cognit Ther Res 2000; 24:251–278
50.
Hudson JL, Rapee RM, Deveney C, et al: Cognitive-behavioral treatment versus an active control for children and adolescents with anxiety disorders: a randomized trial. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2009; 48:533–544
51.
Kendall PC: Treating anxiety disorders in children: results of a randomized clinical trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 1994; 62:100–110
52.
Kendall PC, Flannery-Schroeder E, Panichelli-Mindel SM, et al: Therapy for youths with anxiety disorders: a second randomized clinical trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 1997; 65:366–380
53.
Kendall PC, Hudson JL, Gosch E, et al: Cognitive-behavioral therapy for anxiety disordered youth: a randomized clinical trial evaluating child and family modalities. J Consult Clin Psychol 2008; 76:282–297
54.
King NJ, Tonge BJ, Heyne D, et al: Cognitive-behavioral treatment of school-refusing children: a controlled evaluation. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1998; 37:395–403
55.
Last CG, Hansen C, Franco N: Cognitive-behavioral treatment of school phobia. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1998; 37:404–411
56.
Lyneham HJ, Rapee RM: Evaluation of therapist-supported parent-implemented CBT for anxiety disorders in rural children. Behav Res Ther 2006; 44:1287–1300
57.
Manassis K, Mendlowitz SL, Scapillato D, et al: Group and individual cognitive-behavioral therapy for childhood anxiety disorders: a randomized trial. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2002; 41:1423–1430
58.
Mendlowitz SL, Manassis K, Bradley S, et al: Cognitive-behavioral group treatments in childhood anxiety disorders: the role of parental involvement. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1999; 38:1223–1229
59.
Muris P, Meesters C, van Melick M: Treatment of childhood anxiety disorders: a preliminary comparison between cognitive-behavioral group therapy and a psychological placebo intervention. J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry 2002; 33:143–158
60.
Nauta MH, Scholing A, Emmelkamp PM, et al: Cognitive-behavioral therapy for children with anxiety disorders in a clinical setting: no additional effect of a cognitive parent training. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2003; 42:1270–1278
61.
Pina AA, Zerr AA, Villalta IK, et al: Indicated prevention and early intervention for childhood anxiety: a randomized trial with Caucasian and Hispanic/Latino youth. J Consult Clin Psychol 2012; 80:940–946
62.
Rapee RM, Abbott MJ, Lyneham HJ: Bibliotherapy for children with anxiety disorders using written materials for parents: a randomized controlled trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 2006; 74:436–444
63.
Schneider S, Blatter-Meunier J, Herren C, et al: The efficacy of a family-based cognitive-behavioral treatment for separation anxiety disorder in children aged 8–13: a randomized comparison with a general anxiety program. J Consult Clin Psychol 2013; 81:932–940
64.
Silverman WK, Kurtines WM, Ginsburg GS, et al: Treating anxiety disorders in children with group cognitive-behavioral therapy: a randomized clinical trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 1999; 67:995–1003
65.
Silverman WK, Kurtines WM, Ginsburg GS, et al: Contingency management, self-control, and education support in the treatment of childhood phobic disorders: a randomized clinical trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 1999; 67:675–687
66.
Spence SH, Donovan C, Brechman-Toussaint M: The treatment of childhood social phobia: the effectiveness of a social skills training-based, cognitive-behavioural intervention, with and without parental involvement. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 2000; 41:713–726
67.
Walkup JT, Albano AM, Piacentini J, et al: Cognitive behavioral therapy, sertraline, or a combination in childhood anxiety. N Engl J Med 2008; 359:2753–2766
68.
Kendall PC, Settipani CA, Cummings CM: No need to worry: the promising future of child anxiety research. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol 2012; 41:103–115
69.
Southam-Gerow MA, Kendall PC, Weersing VR: Examining outcome variability: correlates of treatment response in a child and adolescent anxiety clinic. J Clin Child Psychol 2001; 30:422–436
70.
Kendall PC, Choudhury M, Hudson J, et al: The CAT Project Manual: For the Cognitive Behavioral Treatment of Anxious Adolescents. Ardmore, Pa, Workbook Publishing, 2002
71.
Silverman WK, Albano AM: Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV: Child and Parent Versions. Boulder, Colo, Graywind Publications, 1996
72.
Reynolds S, Wilson C, Austin J, et al: Effects of psychotherapy for anxiety in children and adolescents: a meta-analytic review. Clin Psychol Rev 2012; 32:251–262
73.
Guy W (ed): ECDEU Assessment Manual for Psychopharmacology: Publication ADM 76-338. Washington, DC, US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1976, pp 218–222
74.
Research Units on Pediatric Psychopharmacology Anxiety Study Group: The Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale (PARS): development and psychometric properties. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2002; 41:1061–1069
75.
Compton SN, Peris TS, Almirall D, et al: Predictors and moderators of treatment response in childhood anxiety disorders: results from the CAMS trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 2014; 82:212–224
76.
Piacentini J, Bennett S, Compton SN, et al: 24- and 36-week outcomes for the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study (CAMS). J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2014; 53:297–310
77.
Ginsburg GS, Becker EM, Keeton CP, et al: Naturalistic follow-up of youths treated for pediatric anxiety disorders. JAMA Psychiatry 2014; 71:310–318
78.
Chu BC, Skriner LC, Zandberg LJ: Shape of change in cognitive behavioral therapy for youth anxiety: symptom trajectory and predictors of change. J Consult Clin Psychol 2013; 81:573–587
79.
Albano AM, DiBartolo PM: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Social Phobia in Adolescents: Stand Up, Speak Out Therapist Guide. New York, Oxford University Press, 2007
80.
Hoffman EC, Mattis SG: A developmental adaptation of panic control treatment for panic disorder in adolescence. Cognit Behav Pract 2000; 8:338–346
81.
Baer S, Garland EJ: Pilot study of community-based cognitive behavioral group therapy for adolescents with social phobia. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2005; 44:258–264
82.
Garcia-Lopez LJ, Turner SM, Albano AM, et al: Results at long-term among three psychological treatments for adolescents with generalized social phobia (II): clinical significance and effect size. Psicol Conductual 2002; 10:371–385
83.
Ginsburg GS, Drake KL: School-based treatment for anxious African-American adolescents: a controlled pilot study. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2002; 41:768–775
84.
Hayward C, Varady S, Albano AM, et al: Cognitive-behavioral group therapy for social phobia in female adolescents: results of a pilot study. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2000; 39:721–726
85.
Herbert JD, Gaudiano BA, Rheingold AA, et al: Cognitive behavior therapy for generalized social anxiety disorder in adolescents: a randomized controlled trial. J Anxiety Disord 2009; 23:167–177
86.
Ingul JM, Aune T, Nordahl HM: A randomized controlled trial of individual cognitive therapy, group cognitive behaviour therapy, and attentional placebo for adolescent social phobia. Psychother Psychosom 2014; 83:54–61
87.
Masia-Warner C, Klein RG, Dent HC, et al: School-based intervention for adolescents with social anxiety disorder: results of a controlled study. J Abnorm Child Psychol 2005; 33:707–722
88.
Masia Warner C, Fisher PH, Shrout PE, et al: Treating adolescents with social anxiety disorder in school: an attention control trial. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 2007; 48:676–686
89.
Pincus DB, May JE, Whitton SW, et al: Cognitive-behavioral treatment of panic disorder in adolescence. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol 2010; 39:638–649
90.
Gonzalez A, Weersing VR, Warnick EM, et al: Predictors of treatment attrition among an outpatient clinic sample of youths with clinically significant anxiety. Adm Policy Ment Health Ment Health Serv Res 2011; 38:356–367
91.
Bodden DH, Bögels SM, Nauta MH, et al: Child versus family cognitive-behavioral therapy in clinically anxious youth: an efficacy and partial effectiveness study. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2008; 47:1384–1394
92.
March S, Spence SH, Donovan CL: The efficacy of an Internet-based cognitive-behavioral therapy intervention for child anxiety disorders. J Pediatr Psychol 2009; 34:474–487
93.
Ollendick TH, Öst LG, Reuterskiöld L, et al: One-session treatment of specific phobias in youth: a randomized clinical trial in the United States and Sweden. J Consult Clin Psychol 2009; 77:504–516
94.
Öst LG, Svensson L, Hellström K, et al: One-session treatment of specific phobias in youths: a randomized clinical trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 2001; 69:814–824
95.
Southam-Gerow MA, Weisz JR, Chu BC, et al: Does cognitive behavioral therapy for youth anxiety outperform usual care in community clinics? An initial effectiveness test. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2010; 49:1043–1052
96.
Spence SH, Holmes JM, March S, et al: The feasibility and outcome of clinic plus Internet delivery of cognitive-behavior therapy for childhood anxiety. J Consult Clin Psychol 2006; 74:614–621
97.
Thirlwall K, Cooper PJ, Karalus J, et al: Treatment of child anxiety disorders via guided parent-delivered cognitive-behavioural therapy: randomised controlled trial. Br J Psychiatry 2013; 203:436–444
98.
Wergeland GJ, Fjermestad KW, Marin CE, et al: An effectiveness study of individual vs group cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety disorders in youth. Behav Res Ther 2014; 57:1–12
99.
Beidas RS, Mychailyszyn MP, Podell JL, et al: Brief cognitive-behavioral therapy for anxious youth: the inner workings. Cognit Behav Pract 2013; 20:134–146
100.
Chase R, Whitton S, Pincus D: Treatment of adolescent panic disorder: a nonrandomized comparison of intensive versus weekly CBT. Child Fam Behav Ther 2012; 34:305–323
101.
Angelosante AG, Pincus DB, Whitton SW, et al: Implementation of an intensive treatment protocol for adolescents with panic disorder and agoraphobia. Cognit Behav Pract 2009; 16:345–357
102.
Crawley SA, Kendall PC, Benjamin CL, et al: Brief cognitive-behavioral therapy for anxious youth: feasibility and initial outcomes. Cognit Behav Pract 2013; 20:123–133
103.
Santucci LC, Ehrenreich-May J: A randomized controlled trial of the Child Anxiety Multi-Day Program (CAMP) for separation anxiety disorder. Child Psychiatry Hum Dev 2013; 44:439–451
104.
Flatt N, King N: Building the case for brief psychointerventions in the treatment of specific phobias in children and adolescents. Behav Change 2008; 25:191–200
105.
Öst L: Rapid treatment of specific phobias, in A Handbook of Theory, Research, and Treatment. Edited by Davie GCL. New York, Wiley, 1997, pp 227–246
106.
Flatt N, King N: Brief psycho-social interventions in the treatment of specific childhood phobias: a controlled trial and 1-year follow-up. Behav Change 2010; 27:130–153
107.
Öst LG, Svensson L, Hellström K, et al: One-session treatment of specific phobias in youths: a randomized clinical trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 2001; 69:814–824
108.
Ollendick TH, Davis TE 3rd: One-session treatment for specific phobias: a review of Öst’s single-session exposure with children and adolescents. Cogn Behav Ther 2013; 42:275–283
109.
Kendall PC, Khanna MS, Edson A, et al: Computers and psychosocial treatment for child anxiety: recent advances and ongoing efforts. Depress Anxiety 2011; 28:58–66
110.
Khanna MS, Kendall PC: Computer assisted CBT for child anxiety: development of the Coping Cat CD-ROM. Cognit Behav Pract 2008; 15:159–165
112.
Cunningham MJ, Wuthrich VM, Rapee RM, et al: The Cool Teens CD-ROM for anxiety disorders in adolescents: a pilot case series. Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2009; 18:125–129
113.
Spence SH, Donovan CL, March S, et al: Online CBT in the treatment of child and adolescent anxiety disorders: issues in the development of BRAVE–ONLINE and two case illustrations. Behav Cogn Psychother 2008; 36:411–430
114.
Khanna MS, Kendall PC: Computer-assisted cognitive behavioral therapy for child anxiety: results of a randomized clinical trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 2010; 78:737–745
116.
Spence SH, Donovan CL, March S, et al: A randomized controlled trial of online versus clinic-based CBT for adolescent anxiety. J Consult Clin Psychol 2011; 79:629–642
117.
Costello EJ, Egger HL, Angold A: The developmental epidemiology of anxiety disorders: phenomenology, prevalence, and comorbidity. Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am 2005; 14:631–648
118.
Cummings CM, Caporino NE, Kendall PC: Comorbidity of anxiety and depression in children and adolescents: 20 years after. Psychol Bull 2014; 140:816–845
119.
Simpson HB: The RDoC project: a new paradigm for investigating the pathophysiology of anxiety. Depress Anxiety 2012; 29:251–252
120.
Ehrenreich J, Chu B: Transdiagnostic Treatments for Children and Adolescents: Principles and Practice. New York, Guilford, 2014
121.
Chorpita BF: Modular Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Childhood Anxiety Disorders. New York, Guilford, 2007
122.
Weisz JR, Chorpita BF, Palinkas LA, et al: Testing standard and modular designs for psychotherapy treating depression, anxiety, and conduct problems in youth: a randomized effectiveness trial. Arch Gen Psychiatry 2012; 69:274–282
123.
Chorpita B, Taylor A, Francis S, et al: Efficacy of modular cognitive behavior therapy for childhood anxiety disorders. Behav Ther 2004; 35:263–287
124.
Ginsburg GS, Becker KD, Drazdowski TK, et al: Treating anxiety disorders in inner city schools: results from a pilot randomized controlled trial comparing CBT and usual care. Child Youth Care Forum 2012; 41:1–19
125.
Ehrenreich, JT, Buzzela, BA, Trosper, SE, et al: Unified Protocol for the Treatment of Emotional Disorders in Youth. University of Miami and Boston University, unpublished treatment manual
126.
Girio-Herrera E, Ehrenreich-May J: Using flexible clinical processes in the unified protocol for the treatment of emotional disorders in adolescence. Psychotherapy (Chic) 2014; 51:117–122
127.
Ehrenreich JT, Goldstein CM, Wright LR, et al: Development of a unified protocol for the treatment of emotional disorders in youth. Child Fam Behav Ther 2009; 31:20–37
128.
Farchione TJ, Fairholme CP, Ellard KK, et al: Unified protocol for transdiagnostic treatment of emotional disorders: a randomized controlled trial. Behav Ther 2012; 43:666–678
129.
Barrington J, Prior M, Richardson M, et al: Effectiveness of CBT versus standard treatment for childhood anxiety disorders in a community clinic setting. Behav Change 2005; 22:29–43
130.
Villabo M: Effectiveness of CBT for anxiety-disordered children in community clinics. Presented at the 43rd annual congress of the European Association of Behavioral and Cognitive Therapy, 2013
131.
Pina AA, Silverman WK, Fuentes RM, et al: Exposure-based cognitive-behavioral treatment for phobic and anxiety disorders: treatment effects and maintenance for Hispanic/Latino relative to European-American youths. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2003; 42:1179–1187
132.
Ishikawa S, Motomura N, Kawabata Y, et al: Cognitive behavioural therapy for Japanese children and adolescents with anxiety disorders: a pilot study. Behav Cogn Psychother 2012; 40:271–285
134.
de Souza MA, Salum GA, Jarros RB, et al: Cognitive-behavioral group therapy for youths with anxiety disorders in the community: effectiveness in low and middle income countries. Behav Cogn Psychother 2013; 41:255–264
135.
Pina AA, Holly LE, Zerr AA, et al: A personalized and control systems engineering conceptual approach to target childhood anxiety in the contexts of cultural diversity. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol 2014; 43:442–453
136.
Mychailyszyn M, Brodman D, Read K, et al: Cognitive-behavioral school-based interventions for anxious and depressed youth: a meta-analysis of outcomes. Clin Psychol Sci Pract 2012; 19:129–153
137.
Masia CL, Klein RG, Storch EA, et al: School-based behavioral treatment for social anxiety disorder in adolescents: results of a pilot study. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2001; 40:780–786
138.
Podell JL, Kendall PC, Gosch EA, et al: Therapist factors and outcomes in CBT for anxiety in youth. Prof Psychol Res Pr 2013; 44:89–98
139.
Cosgrave E, Keating V: After the assessment: introducing adolescents to cognitive-behavioural therapy. Aust J Guid Couns 2006; 16:149–157
140.
Kingery J, Roblek T, Suveg C, et al: They’re not just “little adults”: developmental considerations for implementing cognitive-behavioral therapy with anxious youth. J Cogn Psychother 2006; 20:263–273
141.
Peterman JS, Settipani CA, Kendall PC: Effectively engaging and collaborating with children and adolescents in cognitive behavioral therapy sessions, in Evidence-Based CBT for Anxiety and Depression in Children and Adolescents: A Competencies-Based Approach. Edited by Sburlati ES, Heidi JL, Schniering CA, Rapee RM. New York, Wiley, 2014, pp 128–140
142.
Tiwari S, Kendall PC, Hoff AL, et al: Characteristics of exposure sessions as predictors of treatment response in anxious youth. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol 2013; 42:34–43
143.
Craske MG, Kircanski K, Zelikowsky M, et al: Optimizing inhibitory learning during exposure therapy. Behav Res Ther 2008; 46:5–27
144.
Lang AJ, Craske MG: Manipulations of exposure-based therapy to reduce return of fear: a replication. Behav Res Ther 2000; 38:1–12
145.
Hughes AA, Kendall PC: Prediction of cognitive behavior treatment outcome for children with anxiety disorders: therapeutic relationship and homework compliance. Behav Cogn Psychother 2007; 35:487–494
146.
Cummings CM, Caporino NE, Settipani CA, et al: The therapeutic relationship in cognitive-behavioral therapy and pharmacotherapy for anxious youth. J Consult Clin Psychol 2013; 81:859–864
147.
Petersen AC: Adolescent development. Annu Rev Psychol 1988; 39:583–607
148.
Ryan ND: Treating anxiety in youth: does maintenance treatment maintain? J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2014; 53:269–270
149.
Gearing RE, Schwalbe CS, Lee R, et al: The effectiveness of booster sessions in CBT treatment for child and adolescent mood and anxiety disorders. Depress Anxiety 2013; 30:800–808

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 519 - 530
PubMed: 26029805

History

Received: 26 August 2014
Revision received: 2 January 2015
Revision received: 17 March 2015
Accepted: 17 March 2015
Published online: 1 June 2015
Published in print: June 01, 2015

Authors

Details

Philip C. Kendall, Ph.D.
From the Child and Adolescent Anxiety Disorders Clinic, Department of Psychology, Temple University, Philadelphia.
Jeremy S. Peterman, M.A.
From the Child and Adolescent Anxiety Disorders Clinic, Department of Psychology, Temple University, Philadelphia.

Notes

Address correspondence to Dr. Kendall ([email protected]).

Funding Information

Dr. Kendall has received funding from NIMH and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; he receives royalties from Guilford Publications and Workbook Publishing and honoraria for presentations related to anxiety disorders in youths. Mr. Peterman reports no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Export Citations

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

For more information or tips please see 'Downloading to a citation manager' in the Help menu.

Format
Citation style
Style
Copy to clipboard

View Options

View options

PDF/EPUB

View PDF/EPUB

Get Access

Login options

Already a subscriber? Access your subscription through your login credentials or your institution for full access to this article.

Personal login Institutional Login Open Athens login
Purchase Options

Purchase this article to access the full text.

PPV Articles - American Journal of Psychiatry

PPV Articles - American Journal of Psychiatry

Not a subscriber?

Subscribe Now / Learn More

PsychiatryOnline subscription options offer access to the DSM-5-TR® library, books, journals, CME, and patient resources. This all-in-one virtual library provides psychiatrists and mental health professionals with key resources for diagnosis, treatment, research, and professional development.

Need more help? PsychiatryOnline Customer Service may be reached by emailing [email protected] or by calling 800-368-5777 (in the U.S.) or 703-907-7322 (outside the U.S.).

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Share article link

Share