PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Rappaport, Lance M. AU - Hunter, Michael D. AU - Russell, Jennifer J. AU - Pinard, Gilbert AU - Bleau, Pierre AU - Moskowitz, D.S. TI - Emotional and interpersonal mechanisms in community SSRI treatment of social anxiety disorder AID - 10.1503/jpn.190164 DP - 2021 Jan 01 TA - Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience PG - E56--E64 VI - 46 IP - 1 4099 - http://jpn.ca/content/46/1/E56.short 4100 - http://jpn.ca/content/46/1/E56.full SO - JPN2021 Jan 01; 46 AB - Background Affective and interpersonal behavioural patterns characteristic of social anxiety disorder show improvement during treatment with serotonin agonists (e.g., selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors), commonly used in the treatment of social anxiety disorder. The present study sought to establish whether, during community psychopharmacological treatment of social anxiety disorder, changes in positive or negative affect and agreeable or quarrelsome behaviour mediate improvement in social anxiety symptom severity or follow from it.Methods Adults diagnosed with social anxiety disorder (n = 48) recorded their interpersonal behaviour and affect naturalistically in an event-contingent recording procedure for 1-week periods before and during the first 4 months of treatment with paroxetine. Participants and treating psychiatrists assessed the severity of social anxiety symptoms monthly. A multivariate latent change score framework examined temporally lagged associations of change in affect and interpersonal behaviour with change in social anxiety symptom severity.Results Elevated agreeable behaviour and positive affect predicted greater subsequent reduction in social anxiety symptom severity over the following month of treatment. Elevated negative affect, but not quarrelsome behaviour, predicted less subsequent reduction in symptom severity.Limitations Limitations included limited assessment of extreme behaviour (e.g., violence) that may have precluded examining the efficacy of paroxetine because of the lack of a placebo control group.Conclusion The present study suggests that interpersonal behaviour and affect may be putative mechanisms of action for serotonergic treatment of social anxiety disorder. Prosocial behaviour and positive affect increase during serotonergic treatment of social anxiety disorder. Specifically, modulating agreeable behaviour, positive affect and negative affect in individuals’ daily lives may partially explain and refine clinical intervention.