Clinical High Risk for Psychosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Metacognitive Training in Individuals at Risk for Psychosis - a Pilot Study
The aim of this pilot study is to examine whether metacognitive training can improve symptoms, wellbeing and functioning in individuals with attenuated psychotic symptoms. Metacognitive group training is an intervention designed to raise awareness on and change cognitive biases that may foster the development of psychotic symptoms such as delusions. It has been shown to be helpful in people with manifest psychosis. The main goal is to assess whether this training is prone to reducing symptoms in individuals at risk for psychosis. Participants will be randomized either to treatment as usual or to treatment as usual plus metacognitive training. Follow-ups will be performed over the period of one year.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 30 |
Est. completion date | May 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | May 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 16 Years to 40 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: (i) Age 16-40 years; (ii) individuals belonging to either one of the following two groups: - attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS): Experience of subthreshold, attenuated forms of positive psychotic symptoms including ideas of reference, odd beliefs or magical thinking, perceptual disturbance, paranoid ideation, odd thinking and speech, odd behavior and appearance, at least several times per week within the last year, present for at least one week and no longer than five years, according to the criteria operationalized in the Comprehensive Assessment of At Risk Mental State (CAARMS) interview (Yung et al., 2003); - brief limited intermittent psychotic symptoms (BLIPS): Episodes of frank psychotic symptoms that have not lasted longer than a week and have spontaneously abated, according to the criteria operationalized in the CAARMS interview (Yung et al., 2003); (iii) ability to give informed consent and to follow study procedures Exclusion Criteria: (i) Past history of a treated or untreated manifest psychotic episode of one week's duration or longer (ii) Increases of dosages of antipsychotic medications - if any is given at all - within the last two weeks and/or clinical necessity for dosage increases at time of inclusion; (iii) Past neuroleptic exposure exceeding a total lifetime haloperidol dose of 50 mg (equivalent doses as referred to in Gardner, Murphy, O'Donnell, Centorrino, and Baldessarini (2010)); (iv) Acute suicidality or acute aggressive behavior; (v) Current attenuated symptoms that are entirely explained by acute intoxication (e.g., current attenuated symptoms entirely explained by LSD use) (vi) Organic brain disease (e.g. epilepsy, inflammatory brain disease etc.); (vii) Any other physical illness with psychotropic effect, if not stabilized; (viii) Diagnosis of a serious developmental disorder, e.g. Asperger ´s syndrome; (ix) Premorbid IQ lower than 70; (x) Inadequate knowledge of German language |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Austria | Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | Vienna | |
Austria | Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy | Vienna |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Medical University of Vienna |
Austria,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change Positive and Negativ Syndrome Scale (PANSS) positive subscale | The positive subscale of the PANSS is a scale rating the positive psychotic symptoms of an individual, where higher scores mean more symptoms. It consists of 7 items, where each item is rated from 1-7. So the minimum score is 7 and the maximum score is 49. | 12, 26, 52 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in the Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale (SOFAS) scores | The SOFAS is a scale used to rate current social and occupational functioning of an individual.To be rated a reduction in functioning must be directly related to mental or physical health issues. The scale is rated between 0-100, where higher scores mean higher functioning. | 12, 26, 52 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in metacognitive biases: Metacognitions-Questionnaire-30 (MCQ-30), Beck Cognitive Insight Scale (BCIS), Fish Task, Davos Assessment of Cognitive Biases Scale (DACOBS), Reading the Mind in the Eyes (RMET) Test. | MCQ-30 is a 65-item scale to assess metacognition. Each item is rated on a 4-point scale.
BCIS is a 15-items self administered scale assessing cognitive insight. It has a rating from 1-4 (do not agree to agree completely). Fish task is used to assess jumping to conclusion; the patient has the task to decide whether a fish comes from pond A or B according to subjective probabilities. RMET is a 36-item test to assess Theory of Mind; one has to guess the correct adjective best describing a set of eyes among 4 adjectives presented; each correct answer is rated with 1 point; a higher score meaning better Theory of mind. DACOBS is a 42 items scale used to assess cognitive biases specific to positive symptoms; each item is rated from 1-7, 7 subscales are calculated from the items, higher scores meaning more cognitive biases. |
12, 26, 52 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) total scores | The PANSS is a scale to rate positive, negative an global symptoms in schizophrenia. The positive subscale consists of 7 items, as well as the negative subscale, the global subscale consists of 16 items. Each item is rated from 1-7, where higher scores mean more severe symptoms. The minimum PANSS total score is 30, the maximum is 210. | 12, 26, 52 weeks |
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