TY - JOUR AU1 - Kambanis, P. Evelyna AU2 - Graver, Haley AU3 - Palmer, Lilian P. AU4 - Stern, Casey M. AU5 - Tabri, Nassim AU6 - Dunford, Ashley AU7 - Burton‐Murray, Helen AU8 - Breithaupt, Lauren AU9 - Wang, Shirley B. AU1 - Rossman, Setareh M. AU1 - Mancuso, Christopher J. AU1 - Andrea, Alexandra M. AU1 - Waller, Glenn AU1 - Freid, Cathryn M. AU1 - Eddy, Kamryn T. AU1 - Thomas, Jennifer J. AU1 - Becker, Kendra R. AB - SummaryWe observed large and significant reductions in most behavioral and all cognitive symptoms pre‐ to mid‐treatment and pre‐ to post‐treatment during 10‐session cognitive‐behavioral therapy for eating disorders (CBT‐T).Early changes in behavioral symptoms did not predict subsequent cognitive changes.Behavioral improvements occurred rapidly and were sustained throughout treatment, whereas cognitive changes followed a more gradual trajectory.IntroductionCognitive‐behavioral therapy for eating disorders (CBT‐ED; Fairburn 2008; Waller et al. 2007) has the strongest evidence base for treating adult eating disorders (EDs; Atwood and Friedman 2020; Linardon et al. 2017); however, access to care remains limited due to its resource‐intensive nature. Treatment typically requires ≥ 20 sessions, with some protocols extending up to 60 sessions (Stefini et al. 2017). Emerging evidence supports a briefer, 10‐session version known as CBT‐T (“T” for 10 sessions; Waller et al. 2019), which retains core elements of CBT‐ED for non‐underweight EDs while significantly reducing session count. CBT‐T achieves comparable outcomes to 20‐session CBT‐ED, with similar symptom reduction/remission rates (Allen et al. 2025; Moore et al. 2021; Moore and Waller 2023; Pellizzer et al. 2019; Waller et al. 2018; Tatham et al. 2020; Wade et al. 2021; Rose et al. 2021). A systematic review and meta‐analysis reported that 65% of CBT‐T completers achieved positive outcomes (i.e., post‐treatment ED symptom scores within one standard deviation of non‐clinical norms) in half the time of CBT‐ED (Keegan et al. 2022).One of TI - Patterns of Symptom Change in Behaviors and Cognitions During 10‐Session Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT‐T) for Non‐Underweight Eating Disorders JF - International Journal of Eating Disorders DO - 10.1002/eat.24429 DA - 2025-04-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/wiley/patterns-of-symptom-change-in-behaviors-and-cognitions-during-10-DsVBQ2gilG VL - Early View IS - DP - DeepDyve ER -