Bipolar Disorder Clinical Trial
— BI-REALOfficial title:
Acceptability and Feasibility of a DBT Skills Group Intervention for Bipolar Disorder - a Randomized Pilot Trial
Verified date | July 2023 |
Source | University of Coimbra |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a serious mental disorder characterized by episodes of mania/hypomania and/or depression. Compared to the general population, these individuals present functional impairment, and life interference subclinical symptoms even between mood episodes, and higher mood instability and suicide rates with a lower quality of life. Given the chronic and phasic course of this disorder, patients are great consumers of health services and in Portugal there is no specialised psychotherapeutic approach to Bipolar Disorder, having pharmacological treatment alone as the main therapeutic response, and a considerable number of patients are not fully stabilized with drug treatments, experiencing residual symptoms. Although studies suggest that certain psychological therapies can be helpful for people experiencing full mood disorder episodes, or to reduce risk of future episodes, there are no gold standard and evidence-based psychological therapies for BD, and recent systematic reviews on psychosocial interventions for BD identify Dialectical-Behavior Therapy (DBT) as promising. Our research is sustained in a recovery based perspective, which means we intend to develop a sense of hope, understanding, empowerment and work towards a meaningful and satisfying life, focusing on less clinical outcomes. Recovery is a concept that looks beyond the traditional clinical definitions which focus on reduced symptomatology, hospitalisation and medication compliance, and focuses on having a better sense of living even though you might have some clinical symptomatology. DBT was developed as an approach for highly emotionally and behaviourally dysregulated people, and it has been referred as promising in BD patients. DBT aims to give individuals who experience quick and intense shifts in mood, skills to manage and regulate their emotions. People with Bipolar Disorder can benefit from skills to regulate their emotions and interpersonal efficacy, which is frequently affected by mood changes, and therefore have a life worth living, feeling skillful and empowered to deal with challenges. Our study aimed to develop a 12 session DBT-skills group adapting the sessions and skills to be used with this client group (Bi-REAL - Respond Effectively and Live mindfully). This study aims to test acceptability, feasibility and efficacy of this 12 session DBT skills pilot randomized group intervention for patients with Bipolar Disorders.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 109 |
Est. completion date | January 31, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | September 30, 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 65 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - A diagnosis of bipolar disorder according to DSM-5 (BD-I, BD-II and Other (un)specified bipolar and related disorder) (APA, 2013), identified by psychiatrists or any assistant physician, and confirmed through CIBD; - A history of two or more episodes of illness meeting DSM-5 criteria for mania, hypomania, major depressive disorder or mixed affective disorder, one of which must have been within 5 year of recruitment. - Mood symptoms cause interference in their life (currently) - Having a computer/tablet with access to internet, zoom installed, a microphone and camera. - Living in Portugal and with good comprehension of Portuguese at a level sufficient to complete self-report instruments and clinical interview. Exclusion Criteria: - Active suicide ideation - Bipolar disorder secondary to an organic cause; - Continuous illicit substance misuse resulting in uncertain primary diagnosis; - Acute episode of mania, hypomania or major depressive episode; - Other high risk pervasive disorders such as Borderline Personality Disorder; persistent self-injury; |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Portugal | Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences - University of Coimbra | Coimbra |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Julieta Azevedo | ADEB - Associação de Apoio a Doentes Depressivos e Bipolares, Centro Hospitalar de Leiria, Centro Hospitalar do Oeste, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra, E.P.E., CINEICC - Center for Research in Neuropsychology and Cognitive Behavioral Intervention, Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, IPM - Institute of Psychological Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Coimbra |
Portugal,
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* Note: There are 21 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Changes in Self-criticism | Assessed through Forms of self-criticizing/attacking and self-reassuring scale - lower scores in self-criticising mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Other | Changes in Self-reassurance | Assessed through Forms of self-criticizing/attacking and self-reassuring scale - higher scores in self-reassurance mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Other | Changes in Awareness and acceptance of experience | Assessed through Philadelphia Mindfulness Scale (PHLMS) - higher scores mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Other | Changes in difficulties in emotional regulation | Assessed through Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS) - lower scores mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Other | Changes in internal and external shame | Assessed through Internal and External Shame Scale (IESS) - lower scores mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Primary | Sense of personal recovery | Assessed by the Bipolar Recovery Questionnaire (scores vary from 0-3600) higher scores mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Primary | Changes in quality of life | Assessed by Quality of Life Questionnaire for Bipolar Disorder (scores from 1-60) higher scores mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Secondary | Changes in activation and reactivity levels | Assessed through Multidimensional assessment of thymic states (0-200) continuum between Hypo-reactivity/Hyper-reactivity - median scores around 100 mean better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Secondary | Changes in Distress Tolerance | Assessed through Distress Tolerance Scale (1-75) - higher scores mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Secondary | Changes in psychopathology symptoms | Assessed through Depression and Anxiety Stress Scale - lower scores mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Secondary | Changes in Rumination | Assessed through Rumination-Reflexion Questionnaire (RRQ-10) lower scores mean a better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) | |
Secondary | Changes in symptoms interference with life | Assessed through semi-structured clinical interview for Bipolar Disorder (CIBD) lower scored mean less interference, thus better outcome | 6 months (from Baseline to 3-months follow-up) |
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