OBJECTIVE In a previous paper the authors reported survival data for 20 panic disorder patients whose therapeutic doses of alprazolam were tapered by one of two methods: slow, flexible drug taper with supportive medical management or the same taper procedure carried out concurrently with cognitive behavior therapy. This report is an analysis of predictors of drug discontinuation success in that study. In addition, between-group comparisons of clinical measures at follow-up are presented. METHODS The subjects in the previous study (10 in each group) were assessed blindly at baseline, 2 weeks after completion of drug taper, and at 3- and 6-month follow-up. Potential predictors of drug discontinuation success were tested by using logistic regression. Between-group differences in symptom severity at 3-month follow-up were examined by using analyses of covariance. RESULTS Thirteen subjects (nine receiving alprazolam plus cognitive behavior therapy and four receiving alprazolam only) completed the drug taper on schedule and were still medication free at follow-up. A single variable--baseline-to-posttaper change in anxiety sensitivity--predicted drug status at follow-up in 85% of the cases. At follow-up, subjects in the combined-treatment group were significantly more improved on measures of anxiety, depression, catastrophic thinking related to anxiety, perception of emotional control, and disability than subjects in the drug-only group. CONCLUSIONS Across groups, reduction in the fear of anxiety symptoms was the best predictor of patients' ability to achieve and maintain drug abstinence. Some implications of that finding for the pharmacotherapy of panic disorder are discussed.