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Editorial
Published Online: 9 March 2020

Special Issue on Interpersonal Psychotherapy: Looking Back, Looking Ahead

In the United States in the 1970s, interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) was developed by Klerman and colleagues as a treatment for depression, and its original manual was published in 1984 (1). Almost a half century after its inception, IPT has matured, and it now holds a firm position in the group of evidence-based therapies to treat not only depression but also a number of other psychiatric problems (2, 3).
The contents of this special issue dedicated to IPT are a testament to the enthusiasm for and ongoing evolution of the treatment. Myrna Weissman, one of IPT’s cofounders, gives a unique personal account of the early development and history of the therapy (4). She concludes her contribution by emphasizing the importance of continuing to extend IPT’s global reach, given the core significance of interpersonal relationships in all cultures and recognition of the connection between interpersonal relationships and mental health worldwide. However, to stay relevant, IPT must be responsive to changes in the way human beings communicate and interact with each other. In their interesting article, Swartz and Novick (5) reflect on challenges facing IPT in the digital age, pointing out adaptations required to IPT during an era characterized by widespread use of social media, such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, in lieu of in-person communication.
Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy (IPSRT) is an evidence-based adaptation of IPT for bipolar disorder. Coming full circle, this adaptation now returns “home” in the contribution from Crowe and colleagues (6), who provide preliminary data that IPSRT may also be effective as a treatment for unipolar depression, which IPT was initially developed to treat. Additionally, Laura Dietz (7) describes a fascinating IPT-based intervention for preadolescent depression, family-based interpersonal psychotherapy. In her overview, Dietz describes the conceptual foundations underlying this approach, practical aspects of the intervention, and its current empirical status.
The successful adaptation of IPT for the treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a recent, important, and welcome change to the IPT landscape (8). IPT is now an available alternative for patients with PTSD who do not tolerate or respond to exposure-based interventions. Markowitz et al. (9) present a case report of a patient who was treated for PTSD and explore why IPT works with this population. They propose symptom-specific reflective functioning, a measure of psychological understanding of one’s own symptoms, as a potential mediator of the efficacy of IPT. Hopefully, future studies will permit systematic evaluation of moderators’ and mediators’ influence on patient outcomes in IPT. The need for such studies is illustrated in the article by Lemmens and colleagues (10), in which they summarize results of a large randomized controlled trial, the first study to investigate the long-term effectiveness of IPT for depression compared with cognitive therapy. The two treatments appeared equally effective, even at a 2-year follow-up. Additionally, the investigators report on differential mediation, which may stimulate further research into mechanisms of change in psychotherapy. Such knowledge may help to further improve the efficacy of these treatments. Finally, Lemmens et al. tested the predictive properties of a machine-learning technique, the Personalized Advantage Index (11), which may help clinicians and patients, in the process of shared decision making, choose which therapy will likely result in the best outcome. However, as the authors point out, much future work is necessary to bring these techniques to daily practice.
This special issue includes contributions from authors from around the globe, including from the United States, the Netherlands, and New Zealand. The diverse authorship within this issue is a testament to the global reach of IPT but also perhaps a warning sign pointing to continued limits to research funding for psychotherapy research in the United States, as previously pointed out by John Markowitz (12). Grant applications still seem most successful within a narrow theoretical framework that conceives psychiatric problems primarily as disorders of the brain, an astonishing reality given decades of scientifically and clinically uninformative research resulting from this paradigm (13) and compelling arguments that a reductionistic approach to psychopathology is a dead end (14). No one would argue that neuroscience is unimportant; however, psychotherapy necessarily addresses complex aspects of human experience that brain circuits as we currently understand them do not capture. The American Psychiatric Association’s resumed publication of the American Journal of Psychotherapy in 2018 is a hopeful sign, underscoring the importance of psychotherapy to psychiatry. Publication of this special issue further highlights the importance of IPT to the field, emphasizing how far we have come and the future to which we aspire.
I hope that the readership of the American Journal of Psychotherapy will enjoy these articles just as much as I did during the preparation of this special issue on IPT.

References

1.
Klerman G, Weissman M, Rounsaville B, et al: Interpersonal Psychotherapy of Depression. New York, Basic Books, 1984
2.
Cuijpers P, Donker T, Weissman MM, et al: Interpersonal psychotherapy for mental health problems: a comprehensive meta-analysis. Am J Psychiatry 2016; 173:680–687
3.
Ravitz P, Watson P, Lawson A, et al: Interpersonal psychotherapy: a scoping review and historical perspective (1974–2017). Harv Rev Psychiatry 2019; 27:165–180
4.
Weissman MM: Interpersonal psychotherapy: history and future. Am J Psychother 2020; 73:3–7
5.
Swartz HA, Novick DM: Psychotherapy in the digital age: what we can learn from interpersonal psychotherapy. Am J Psychother 2020; 73:15–21
6.
Crowe M, Inder M, Douglas K, et al: Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy for patients with major depressive disorder. Am J Psychother 2020; 73:29–34
7.
Dietz LJ: Family-based interpersonal psychotherapy: an intervention for preadolescent depression. Am J Psychother 2020; 73:22–28
8.
Markowitz JC, Petkova E, Neria Y, et al: Is exposure necessary? A randomized clinical trial of interpersonal psychotherapy for PTSD. Am J Psychiatry 2015; 172:430–440
9.
Markowitz JC, Lowell A, Milrod BL, et al: Symptom-specific reflective function as a potential mechanism for interpersonal psychotherapy outcome: a case report. Am J Psychother 2020; 73:35–40
10.
Lemmens LH, van Bronswijk SC, Peeters FP, et al: Interpersonal psychotherapy versus cognitive therapy for depression: how they work, how long, and for whom—key findings from an RCT. Am J Psychother 2020; 73:8–14
11.
DeRubeis RJ, Cohen ZD, Forand NR, et al: The Personalized Advantage Index: translating research on prediction into individualized treatment recommendations. a demonstration. PLoS One 2014; 9:e83875
12.
Markowitz J: Another interpersonal psychotherapy milestone. Am J Psychother 2014; 68:355–358
13.
Kennis M, Gerritsen L, van Dalen M, et al: Prospective biomarkers of major depressive disorder: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Mol Psychiatry 2020; 25:321–338
14.
Borsboom D, Cramer A, Kalis A: Brain disorders? Not really…why network structures block reductionism in psychopathology research. Behav Brain Sci (Epub Jan 24, 2018)

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychotherapy
Go to American Journal of Psychotherapy
American Journal of Psychotherapy
Pages: 1 - 2

History

Published in print: March 01, 2020
Published online: 9 March 2020

Keywords

  1. psychotherapy
  2. interpersonal psychotherapy

Authors

Affiliations

Frenk Peeters, M.D., Ph.D. [email protected]
Department of Clinical Psychological Science, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands. Dr. Peeters is guest editor of the American Journal of Psychotherapy’s special issue on interpersonal psychotherapy.

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Peeters ([email protected]).

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