Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of a Collaborative Stepped Care Intervention for the Treatment of Common Mental Disorders in Primary Care Settings in Goa, India
Depressive and anxiety disorders (termed as 'Common Mental Disorders') affect as many as one in four persons attending primary care; most patients do not receive effective treatments. Although the integration of mental health in primary care is accepted as the only feasible way of managing Common Mental Disorders in developing countries, there is no evidence demonstrating how this can be done in a manner which is effective and affordable. The hypothesis of this trial is that a Collaborative Stepped Care package will be both clinically and cost-effective for the treatment of Common Mental Disorders in primary care.
The goal of the research is to evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of a
Collaborative Stepped Care intervention for the treatment of Common Mental Disorders (CMD)
in primary care in Goa, India.
The Collaborative Stepped Care intervention will be compared with Enhanced Usual care in a
cluster randomized controlled trial in 24 primary care facilities; the first phase of the
trial will be located in 12 government run Primary Health Centres, while the second phase
will be located in 12 private family physician/general practice facilities. Approximately
2400 participants who screen positive on a screening questionnaire for CMD will be recruited
from the 24 facilities (a harmonic mean of 100 per cluster per arm) of whom 2/3 will be
ICD10 cases confirmed by a diagnostic interview (the Revised Clinical Interview Schedule).
Follow-up interviews at home will be conducted by an independent team at 2, 6 and 12 months
post recruitment. Allowing for 25% attrition during follow-up gives 650 patients in each arm
with a confirmed CMD, or a total of 960 in each arm, contributing to analyses of the primary
outcomes (see below).
The Collaborative Stepped Care intervention is a complex intervention comprising the
following components: screening for detection of cases; psycho-education; antidepressants;
inter-personal therapy; yoga; specialist supervision & adherence management. The method of
delivery will be based on the stepped-care model which provides treatments according to the
patients' needs and incorporates strategies to overcome challenges to the integration of
mental health in primary care in developing countries. This will be compared with Enhanced
Usual Care which will comprise screening for detection of cases, provision of the diagnosis
to the doctor, and making antidepressants available in the facility-all these components
will be available in the Collaborative Stepped care facilities as well. The intervention
will be delivered by two new, full-time, primary care human resources-the Health Assistant
(in both arms) who will screen adult attenders; and in the Collaborative Stepped Care arms,
the Health Counselor-who has been trained over 3 months, and a part-time Psychiatrist
supporting the primary care team.
The primary analyses will be intention-to-treat, regardless of adherence to the
intervention, and will be based on outcomes measured at 6 months. All analyses will take
into account any within-facility clustering resulting from the cluster randomized design,
and will include adjustment for any of the a-priori defined confounding factors for which
randomization did not achieve balance between the two arms at baseline.
The primary research question being answered and the analysis outputs are:
- Does the Collaborative Stepped Care Intervention have an effect on the outcome of
Definite Cases? Prevalence of CMD in the two arms amongst participants who had an
International Classification of Diseases, tenth edition (ICD10) CMD at baseline
- Does the Collaborative Stepped Care Intervention have an effect on the burden of CMD
amongst patients who are Possible Cases? Prevalence of CMD in the two arms in all
screen-positive participants
- Does the Collaborative Stepped Care Intervention have an effect on the outcome of
Depression Cases? Prevalence of CMD in the two arms amongst participants who had an
ICD10 Depression at baseline
- Does the Collaborative Stepped Care Intervention have an effect on the incidence of
ICD10 CMD amongst Sub-threshold Cases? Prevalence of CMD in the two arms in
screen-positive participants who did not have an ICD10 CMD diagnosis at baseline.
Secondary analyses will include:
- Comparison of prevalences listed above at 2 months (as a measure of speed of recovery)
and at 12 months (sustainability of effectiveness).
- Repeated measures analysis of CMD prevalence at 2, 6 and 12 months, to assess effect of
the intervention over the whole 12 month follow-up period.
- Comparisons of Revised Clinical Interview Schedule (CISR) and General Health
Questionnaire (GHQ) scores, and World Health Organisation Disability Assessment
Schedule (WHO-DAS) scores as continuous outcomes (i) at each endpoint; and (ii) using
repeated measures analyses combining information from the three endpoints.
- Interaction of gender, education and co-morbidity with intervention effects
- Interaction of facility type (private/public) with intervention effects.
- Interaction of baseline illness attribution (somatic/psychosocial) with intervention
effects.
- Interaction of baseline severity of CISR scores with intervention effects
- Comparison of adverse events between the two arms at 2, 6 and 12 months.
- Per-protocol analysis:
- Adherence with minimum intervention (at least one meeting with the Health
Counselor in the Collaborative Stepped Care arm)
- Adherence with optimal intervention-completion of intervention-i.e. discharge by
the Health Counselor; or minimum therapeutic dose of either antidepressant (90%
adherence over 90 days) or Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT) (6 sessions over 4
months).
- Dose response relationship with levels of adherence
For the economic analysis, health care costs and other patient- or family-borne costs will
be computed and compared at 2, 6 and 12 months, and subsequently related to changes in
health outcome: both the primary outcome measure of depression status and also Quality
Adjusted Life Years [QALYs]. In the event that dominance is not shown, i.e. the intervention
is more effective but the costs are also more than the usual care group, incremental
cost-effectiveness ratios will be computed, together with their confidence intervals (using
bootstrapping techniques to overcome expected skewness of cost data). Cost-effectiveness
acceptability curves will also be derived in order to show the probability of any
cost-effective advantages for the component interventions at a range of 'willingness to pay'
threshold levels.
We will also carry out a nested qualitative evaluation with the objective is to assess the
participants' perceptions of the quality of the care they received, their satisfaction with
this care, the reasons why they did/did not take full advantage of the intervention offered,
and the impact of their health problems on their daily lives, economic productivity and
lives of family members. We will also explore their experience of being a trial participant
(in particular, the experience of the informed consent procedure; reasons for participation;
their understanding of randomization). Two in-depth interviews will be conducted with at
least 96 participants, the first about 1 month after enrolment and the second interview
about 6 months later. A second group of in-depth interviews will be carried out with members
of the intervention team about the process of the intervention, its successes and
limitations (on quality of care, on the PHC's overall function) and how future programs may
address these. We aim to interview at least one doctor from each facility and one Health
Counselor from each PHC (i.e. total of 24). Two in-depth interviews will be conducted with
each staff member, the first about 2 months after the initiation of the program. The second
interview will be conducted between 6 and 12 month after the initiation of the trial.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05777044 -
The Effect of Hatha Yoga on Mental Health
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04977232 -
Adjunctive Game Intervention for Anhedonia in MDD Patients
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04680611 -
Severe Asthma, MepolizumaB and Affect: SAMBA Study
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04043052 -
Mobile Technologies and Post-stroke Depression
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04512768 -
Treating Comorbid Insomnia in Transdiagnostic Internet-Delivered Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03207828 -
Testing Interventions for Patients With Fibromyalgia and Depression
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04617015 -
Defining and Treating Depression-related Asthma
|
Early Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT06011681 -
The Rapid Diagnosis of MCI and Depression in Patients Ages 60 and Over
|
||
Completed |
NCT04476446 -
An Expanded Access Protocol for Esketamine Treatment in Participants With Treatment Resistant Depression (TRD) Who do Not Have Other Treatment Alternatives
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT02783430 -
Evaluation of the Initial Prescription of Ketamine and Milnacipran in Depression in Patients With a Progressive Disease
|
Phase 2/Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05563805 -
Exploring Virtual Reality Adventure Training Exergaming
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04598165 -
Mobile WACh NEO: Mobile Solutions for Neonatal Health and Maternal Support
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03457714 -
Guided Internet Delivered Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy for Persons With Spinal Cord Injury: A Feasibility Trial
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05956912 -
Implementing Group Metacognitive Therapy in Cardiac Rehabilitation Services (PATHWAY-Beacons)
|
||
Completed |
NCT05588622 -
Meru Health Program for Cancer Patients With Depression and Anxiety
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05234476 -
Behavioral Activation Plus Savoring for University Students
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05006976 -
A Naturalistic Trial of Nudging Clinicians in the Norwegian Sickness Absence Clinic. The NSAC Nudge Study
|
N/A | |
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT03276585 -
Night in Japan Home Sleep Monitoring Study
|
||
Terminated |
NCT03275571 -
HIV, Computerized Depression Therapy & Cognition
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03167372 -
Pilot Comparison of N-of-1 Trials of Light Therapy
|
N/A |