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Clinical Trial Summary

Individuals diagnosed with autism are also often diagnosed with anxiety disorders. Therefore, having useful strategies to manage stress and anxiety may be particularly helpful for autistic individuals. Mindfulness-based interventions, delivered in-person as well as those offered remotely online, have been found to lower stress and anxiety. Although in-person mindfulness training has been found to be helpful for autistic individuals, there is little research that has studied remote app-based mindfulness training in autistic adults. This study examines whether a six-week structured intervention, using a mindfulness app, lowers anxiety and stress in autistic adults. Participants were randomly assigned either to an intervention group, which started the intervention immediately, or a wait-list control group, which participated in the same intervention program six-weeks later. Findings will provide important information about the potential for remote app-based mindfulness training to lower stress and anxiety in adults diagnosed with autism.


Clinical Trial Description

A significant proportion of individuals diagnosed with autism are also diagnosed with one or more anxiety disorders. Since stress and anxiety in autism have been found to exacerbate common symptoms associated with autism, such as sleep problems and sensory sensitivities, having effective strategies to manage anxiety and stress may be particularly beneficial for autistic individuals. Mindfulness-based therapies have been increasingly recognized as promising interventions to reduce stress and anxiety, and improve mental health in individuals with and without autism. Several studies of individuals without autism have demonstrated that remote digital mindfulness training is equally as effective as traditional in-person mindfulness training in reducing stress and anxiety and enhancing well-being. However, there is little research investigating remote app-based mindfulness training for autistic individuals, which could be especially beneficial with this population due to anxiety and other constraints that make in-person training less feasible. The primary objective is to assess efficacy of a six-week remote self-guided mindfulness intervention in reducing anxiety and stress in autistic adults. Autistic adults were invited to participate in a remote app-based mindfulness study where participants use their smartphones to complete the six-week structured mindfulness intervention. Participants were block randomized (based on initial trait anxiety scores) to either an intervention group or a wait-list control group. The intervention group immediately received the online mindfulness intervention. The wait-list control group received the same intervention program six-weeks later. All sessions and assessments were delivered online; thus participants were allowed maximal flexibility in participating in this fully remote intervention. Self-reported levels of stress, anxiety, positive and negative emotions, and trait/dispositional mindfulness were measured at four time-points throughout the study: before the intervention, half-way through (at 3 weeks), after the intervention, and at follow-up (6 weeks after the end of the intervention). The wait-list control group was assessed at two additional time-points: before they began their waiting period and half-way through their waiting period (at 3 weeks). The primary aim of the study is to compare between-group (and secondarily, within-group) outcome measures to determine whether stress and anxiety levels decrease after the mindfulness intervention and whether they decrease above and beyond any decreases experienced by the wait-list control group. Additionally, the study aims to: - Determine whether and how changes in mindfulness are associated with changes in anxiety and stress, over the course of the intervention, including whether there is a negative association of mindfulness with stress and anxiety. In using two different measures of mindfulness the specific components of mindfulness can be examined that appear to be most likely to change and most likely to be (negatively) associated with stress and anxiety. - Assess the feasibility of such a remote intervention with this sample of autistic adults by examining: - percentages of individuals in each group (intervention and wait-list control) who complete various stages of the intervention (e.g., post-test surveys, follow-up surveys). - percentages of individuals in each group (intervention and wait-list control) who complete all of the intervention activities, as well as those who complete at least a certain percentage (e.g. 50% and 75%) of the intervention activities. - Examine who seems to benefit most from the intervention (by demographic variables, autistic traits, and other baseline measures obtained). The aim is to have approximately 30 participants per group participate in the intervention and complete follow-up surveys. Individuals initially completed screening questionnaires to determine study eligibility. Eligible individuals were then given baseline measures, which included the outcome measures as well as autistic characterization measures. Participants were then randomly assigned (through block randomization based on baseline trait anxiety scores) to either the intervention group or the wait-list control group. After completing their pre-intervention surveys participants were instructed to download the Healthy Minds customized application for this study and were then given a start date for the six-week self-guided intervention. They received automated emails instructing them to complete the outcome measures at the time-points specified above. The intervention consisted of a customized version of the Healthy Minds app, with six-weeks of alternating didactic 'lessons' (each up to 7 minutes in length) and mindfulness 'practices' (either 10 minutes or 15 minutes in length- as chosen by the participant). There were a total of 29 lessons and practices that were part of the structured curriculum. Other optional practices were included on the app as well. Participants were instructed to listen to (at least) one activity per day for 5 days per week, for 6 weeks. They were told that it was suggested (but not required) that they listen to the activities in order, that they could re-listen to activities as they desired, and that they could listen to the optional practices as they saw fit. Findings from this intervention will provide important information about the feasibility of remote app-based mindfulness training for autistic adults and the potential of remote app-based mindfulness training to reduce stress and anxiety in this population. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05880498
Study type Interventional
Source Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 30, 2022
Completion date April 17, 2023

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