Neuropsychopharmacology Reports (Sep 2023)

Japanese Society of Anxiety and Related Disorders/Japanese Society of Neuropsychopharmacology: Clinical practice guideline for social anxiety disorder (2021)

  • Satoshi Asakura,
  • Naoki Yoshinaga,
  • Hisashi Yamada,
  • Yutaka Fujii,
  • Nobuyuki Mitsui,
  • Yoshihiro Kanai,
  • Takeshi Inoue,
  • Eiji Shimizu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/npr2.12365
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 3
pp. 288 – 309

Abstract

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Abstract The development of clinical practice guidelines for social anxiety disorder began in March 2018 when the Joint Clinical Practice Guideline Development Committee for Anxiety and Obsessive–Compulsive Disorders was formed by the Japanese Society of Anxiety and Related Disorders and Japanese Society of Neuropsychopharmacology to jointly develop guidelines for anxiety and obsessive–compulsive disorders. Based on the universal concept of evidence‐based medicine, three clinical questions (CQs) about pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy were developed for clinical guidelines for social anxiety disorder, panic disorders, and obsessive–compulsive disorder in accordance with the Minds Manual for Guidelines Development 2017 by the Japan Council for Quality Health Care: CQ1—“What is the recommended pharmacotherapy for social anxiety disorder in adults?”; CQ2—“What is the recommended psychotherapy (psychological intervention) for social anxiety disorder in adults?”; and CQ3—“What are the recommendations regarding monotherapy and combination therapy for social anxiety disorder in adults in terms of pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy (psychological interventions)?” Summarized recommendations for social anxiety disorder in adults are selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and serotonin‐norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor for CQ1, cognitive behavioral therapy for CQ2, and there are no recommendations regarding monotherapy and combination therapy for CQ3. These were answered by considering the balance between benefits and harms based on systematic reviews of each. The aim of this brief guideline for the standard‐of‐care (i.e., medical treatment) for social anxiety disorder in adults (18 years and older) was to help “shared decision making,” in which medical professionals, including physicians, and patients share scientific evidence to decide on a course of treatment.

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