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Clinician guidance in digital therapeutics for panic disorder: Meta-analytic dissection and implications for regulatory framing and scalable deployment

Authors
 Inhye Cho  ;  Byung-Hoon Kim  ;  Hankil Lee  ;  Yun-Kyoung Song  ;  Min Jung Chang  ;  Junhyung Kim  ;  Euna Han 
Citation
 JOURNAL OF ANXIETY DISORDERS, Vol.115 : 103074, 2025-10 
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF ANXIETY DISORDERS
ISSN
 0887-6185 
Issue Date
2025-10
Keywords
Clinician guidance ; Cognitive outcomes ; Digital therapeutics ; Meta-analysis ; Panic disorder ; Self-guided intervention
Abstract
Background: Digital therapeutics (DTx) have emerged as scalable and accessible treatment modalities for panic disorder.

Objective: This study aimed to identify the extent to which clinician guidance impacts the digital intervention effectiveness for panic disorder across multiple clinical outcomes.

Methods: This study included 40 randomized controlled trials of digital intervention for panic disorder published up to March 2025. Eligible studies enrolled adults with a primary diagnosis of panic disorder (with or without agoraphobia) and compared a digital therapeutic intervention against active (therapist-led or treatment-as-usual) or passive (waitlist or no-treatment) controls. Outcomes were the Panic Disorder Severity Scale (PDSS), Agoraphobic Cognitions Questionnaire (ACQ), and Body Sensations Questionnaire (BSQ). Random-effects meta-analyses, subgroup analyses, sensitivity analyses, and mixed-effects meta regressions were conducted. The moderator variables included the comparator type, guidance format (clinician-guidance or self-guided), intervention modality, and region.

Results: Self-guided DTx demonstrated a moderate effect size on PDSS (Hedges' g =0.31, 95 % confidence interval [CI]: 0.05-0.68), whereas clinician-guided interventions exhibited stronger effects (g =0.95, 95 % CI: 0.44-1.46). These findings indicate that well-structured self-guided interventions can address symptom domains, involving panic frequency and physiological distress. Conversely, cognitive-focused outcome assessment using ACQ and BSQ revealed that only clinician-guided interventions yielded statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements (ACQ: g =0.46, 95 % CI: 0.15-0.76; BSQ: g =0.67, 95 % CI: 0.30-1.05), whereas self-guided formats exhibited negligible effects (ACQ: g =0.11; BSQ: g =0.27).

Conclusions: This meta-analysis revealed that self-guided digital interventions effectively reduce the overall symptom severity in panic disorder, whereas clinician involvement exerts a notably stronger influence on cognition-related outcomes. These findings support a domain-specific and context-sensitive understanding of guidance. Accordingly, the DTx design and policy should match the mechanistic pathways through which psychological change will occur.
Files in This Item:
T202506599.pdf Download
DOI
10.1016/j.janxdis.2025.103074
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Biomedical Systems Informatics (의생명시스템정보학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Kim, Byung Hoon(김병훈)
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/209134
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