Skip to content

Barnaby D Dunn

Mood Disorders Centre, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK.

2 papers in the library · 19 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Does mindfulness-based cognitive therapy with tapering support reduce risk of relapse/recurrence in major depressive disorder by enhancing positive affect? A secondary analysis of the PREVENT trial.

Journal of consulting and clinical psychology September 1, 2024 Barnaby D Dunn, Laura Warbrick, Rachel Hayes et al. 10 citations

Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy with support to taper medication (MBCT-TS) increases positive affect more than continuing antidepressant medication alone, and this increase partly explains the reduced risk of relapse or recurrence in people with recurrent depression. In a randomized trial of 424 adults with three or more prior depressive episodes, MBCT-TS led to significantly greater positive affect at posttreatment compared with maintenance antidepressants. Across both treatments, higher positive affect at intake predicted a lower hazard of relapse over two years. Among participants who had not relapsed by posttreatment, a greater rise in positive affect mediated a reduced risk of subsequent relapse. The findings indicate that boosting positive affect is one mechanism through which MBCT-TS protects against relapse when discontinuing antidepressants.

Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy versus treatment as usual after non-remission with NHS Talking Therapies high-intensity psychological therapy for depression: a UK-based clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness randomised, controlled, superiority trial.

The lancet. Psychiatry June 1, 2025 Thorsten Barnhofer, Barnaby D Dunn, Clara Strauss et al. 9 citations

About half of patients with depression who complete the UK National Health Service Talking Therapies stepped care pathway still have symptoms. A randomized trial tested whether adding mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) via videoconference to treatment as usual improves outcomes for these patients. At 34 weeks, the MBCT group had significantly lower depression scores than the treatment-as-usual group (adjusted difference -2.49 points on the PHQ-9). The MBCT group also had slightly lower healthcare costs and higher quality-of-life scores, with a 99% chance of being cost-effective at the £20,000 per QALY threshold. No serious adverse events occurred. MBCT is an effective and scalable further-line treatment for depression that does not remit after psychological therapy.