Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
Threat Interpretation Bias as Cognitive Marker and Treatment Target in Pediatric Anxiety
Anxiety is the most common mental health problem in children and adolescents. This two-phased study will test the effects of an experimental computerized intervention aimed at reducing threat-based thinking (i.e., interpretation bias) in anxious youth. Participants in both the R61 (N=46) and R33 (N=72) trials will be youth ages 10 to 17 with a primary anxiety disorder (Separation, Social, Generalized). In the R61 trial, youth will be randomly assigned to receive 16 sessions over 4 weeks of either a personalized cognitive bias modification program for interpretation bias (CBM-I) or a computerized control condition (ICC). If CBM-I reduces interpretation bias significantly more than the ICC, the R33 trial will commence. In the R33, youth will be randomly assigned to either CBM-I or an equal amount of time in a cognitive restructuring intervention, which also aims to reduce threat-based thinking in anxiety.
Anxiety is the most common mental health problem in youth, affecting one in four children and adolescents. Unfortunately, evidence-based treatments (pharmacotherapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy) are costly, not widely available, and ineffective for a substantial proportion of youth. In response, experts have called for novel treatments that directly target mechanisms underlying youth anxiety while simultaneously addressing barriers to care (i.e., cost, accessibility). One such promising mechanism is interpretation bias - the inaccurate interpretation of threat from ambiguity. The investigators have previously demonstrated that interpretation bias occurs in over 90% of anxious youth, is predictive of anxiety severity in clinical samples of youth, and differentiates between anxious and non-anxious youth. These data indicate that interpretation bias may be a ubiquitous phenomenon underlying anxiety expression in children and adolescents and therefore may be an ideal intervention target. Cognitive bias modification for interpretation bias (CBM-I) is a computerized intervention that attempts to reduce anxiety by directly modifying interpretation bias. CBM-I has demonstrated preliminary efficacy for reducing anxiety symptoms in adults. Yet extant CBM-I data in anxious youth are sparse, with little work addressing whether CBM-I significantly reduces interpretation bias, and whether this in turn reduces anxiety symptoms, as well as the dose necessary to reduce both bias and anxiety. This two-phased study tests personalized CBM-I in youth ages 10 to 17 who meet diagnostic criteria for a primary anxiety disorder (Separation, Social, Generalized). In the R61 Phase (N=46), a randomized clinical trial (RCT) examines whether CBM-I personalized to youth anxiety symptoms significantly reduces interpretation bias compared to a computerized interpretation control condition (ICC). The interpretation target will be measured at multiple time points (4, 8, 12, 16 sessions) to identify the optimal dose for reduction in interpretation bias. If the R61 trial results indicate that CBM-I outperforms ICC on interpretation bias reduction, the R33 phase will commence. In the R33 Phase, an RCT (N=72) will validate whether CBM-I significantly reduces interpretation bias, and conducts a mechanism test (i.e., does bias reduction precede and predict anxiety reduction?), by comparing CBM-I to cognitive restructuring, a clinically relevant psychosocial intervention that also targets anxious cognition. ;
| Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed |
NCT03535805 -
Transdiagnostic, Cognitive and Behavioral Intervention for in School-aged Children With Emotional and Behavioral Disturbances
|
N/A | |
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT05006976 -
A Naturalistic Trial of Nudging Clinicians in the Norwegian Sickness Absence Clinic. The NSAC Nudge Study
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT05419934 -
EMDR Therapy in Young Children, a Double-blinded Randomized Controlled Trial
|
N/A | |
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT04136054 -
Better Sleep in Psychiatric Care - Anxiety and Affective Disorders
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT04091139 -
Research of Unified Protocol for the Treatment of Common Mental Disorders in Adolescents in Hong Kong
|
Phase 2/Phase 3 | |
| Completed |
NCT04647318 -
Physiological Response to Self-compassion Versus Relaxation
|
N/A | |
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT05114824 -
Acceptability and Feasibility of an 8-week Online Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy Program Among Undergraduate Students
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT05843695 -
Enhancing Psychotherapy for Veterans and Service Members With PTSD and Anxiety
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT05078450 -
Mood Lifters Online for Graduate Students and Young Professionals
|
N/A | |
| Not yet recruiting |
NCT06162624 -
Pilot Effectiveness Trial of an ACT Self-help Workbook Tailored Specifically for Prisons
|
N/A | |
| Not yet recruiting |
NCT05747131 -
Emotion Detectives In-Out: Feasibility and Efficacy of a Blended Version of the Unified Protocol for Children
|
N/A | |
| Not yet recruiting |
NCT05863637 -
Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy (ISTDP) for Anxiety Diagnoses in a Primary Care Setting
|
N/A | |
| Not yet recruiting |
NCT05225701 -
Efficacy of a Transdiagnostic Guided Internet-Delivered Intervention for Emotional, Trauma and Stress-Related Disorders.
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT02579915 -
Developing a Low-Intensity Primary Care Intervention for Anxiety Disorders (AIM-PC)
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT02186366 -
Efficacy Study of Abdominal Massage Therapy to Treat Generalized Anxiety Disorder of Deficiency of Both Heart and Spleen Type
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT02376959 -
Effect of Spiritist "Passe" Energy Therapy in Reducing Anxiety in Volunteers
|
N/A | |
| Not yet recruiting |
NCT02126787 -
Short-term, Intensive Psychodynamic Group Therapy Versus Cognitive-behavioral Group Therapy in the Day Treatment
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT02134730 -
School-based Universal Prevention for Anxiety and Depression in Sweden: A Cluster-randomized Trial
|
N/A | |
| Withdrawn |
NCT01953042 -
Benefits of a Psychoeducation Program for Those Awaiting Treatment for OCD and OCD Spectrum Disorders
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT01636791 -
CBT Versus a Return to Work Intervention for Patients With Common Mental Illness in Primary Care
|
Phase 3 |