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Hoarding Symptoms in Children and Adolescents With Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: Clinical Features and Response to Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy.
OBJECTIVE: Although adult hoarding disorder is relatively common and often debilitating, few studies have examined the phenomenology of pediatric hoarding. We examined the clinical phenomenology and response to cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) treatment in youth with a diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) with and without hoarding symptoms. Age was tested as a moderator across analyses given prior findings that the impact of hoarding symptoms may not become apparent until adolescence.
METHOD: Youth (N=215; ages 7 to 17) with OCD pursuing evaluation and/or treatment at a university-based specialty clinic participated in the current study. Presence of hoarding symptoms was assessed as part of a larger battery. Data from a subset of youth (n=134) who received CBT were included in treatment response analyses.
RESULTS: Youth with hoarding symptoms did not differ from those without hoarding symptoms with respect to overall OCD symptom severity and impairment. Youth with hoarding met criteria for more concurrent diagnoses, including greater rates of internalizing and both internalizing/externalizing, but not externalizing-only, disorders. Youth with and without hoarding symptoms did not significantly differ in rate of response to CBT. Age did not moderate any of these relationships, suggesting that presence of hoarding symptoms was not associated with greater impairments across the clinical presentation of OCD or its response to treatment by age.
CONCLUSION: We found no evidence that hoarding is associated with greater OCD severity or poorer treatment response in affected youth. Theoretical and clinical implications of these findings, including future directions for research on testing developmental models of hoarding across the lifespan, are discussed.
METHOD: Youth (N=215; ages 7 to 17) with OCD pursuing evaluation and/or treatment at a university-based specialty clinic participated in the current study. Presence of hoarding symptoms was assessed as part of a larger battery. Data from a subset of youth (n=134) who received CBT were included in treatment response analyses.
RESULTS: Youth with hoarding symptoms did not differ from those without hoarding symptoms with respect to overall OCD symptom severity and impairment. Youth with hoarding met criteria for more concurrent diagnoses, including greater rates of internalizing and both internalizing/externalizing, but not externalizing-only, disorders. Youth with and without hoarding symptoms did not significantly differ in rate of response to CBT. Age did not moderate any of these relationships, suggesting that presence of hoarding symptoms was not associated with greater impairments across the clinical presentation of OCD or its response to treatment by age.
CONCLUSION: We found no evidence that hoarding is associated with greater OCD severity or poorer treatment response in affected youth. Theoretical and clinical implications of these findings, including future directions for research on testing developmental models of hoarding across the lifespan, are discussed.
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