Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of Narrative Reformulation During Cognitive Analytic Therapy: A Randomized Dismantling Trial
Narrative reformulation (NR) is an active ingredient of cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) which is assumed to increase engagement and improve outcomes. This trial sought to test these claims. A randomized and controlled dismantling trial method has been designed to investigate treatments outcomes for depressed patients receiving CAT in an Improving Access to Psychological Therapies service. Participants will be randomized to either treatment as usual (full-CAT) or CAT minus narrative reformulation (CAT-NR). The primary outcome measure is the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), with secondary outcome measures of anxiety, functioning, helpfulness and the alliance. Outcomes will be assessed at screening, every treatment session and at 8-weeks follow-up. The trial will enable as assessment of the utility of NR during CAT. and whether CAT appears suitable for treating depression in Primary Care.
Rationale Despite extensive outcome research validating psychotherapy in general as an
effective treatment, the outcome literature has been slower to identify the effective,
active ingredients of individual therapies. It has been proposed that different active
ingredients within therapy relate to outcomes; and definitive technical features are
hypothesised to gain importance as psychopathology increases. Therefore research is
necessary which compares components of overall treatments to assess their contribution to
outcome.
Cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) is a brief therapy (16 or 24 session intervention) drawing
upon components of cognitive, and psychodynamic psychotherapies. CAT proposes the use of
specific interventions at identified time points within therapy, such as the reformulation
letter after a period of assessment. This narrative account reformulates distress,
explicitly linking problematic repetitive behavioural patterns with their developmental
origins. The client's current life situation is then described alongside target problems and
their underlying maladaptive procedures. The reformulation letter is considered a 'crucial
therapeutic task' and 'powerful agent of change', but its ability to act in such a manner is
largely assumed as the evidence base for these claims has been poorly researched.
Reformulation Despite numerous claims regarding the benefits of cognitive case formulation,
there is a paucity of methodologically sound research. This is magnified when looking
specifically at the CAT reformulation process. Existing research focuses on accuracy, and
whilst some research does exist regarding the impact of reformulation, these are narrative
case studies and cannot be generalised. Research utilising the single case experimental
design methodology has identified evidence of sudden gains at the point of reformulation.
Depression The introduction of the Increasing Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT)
initiative has focussed on the use of brief, evidence based therapies for this client group
and particularly CBT at step 3 of a stepped care model. However, CAT is increasingly used in
primary care settings where a naturalistic evidence base is growing regarding its
effectiveness for treating depression. The contract can be shortened where 'the threshold to
consultation is low' and patients symptomology suggests mild disturbance. Working with
predetermined time limits acts to heighten the therapeutic process whilst protecting against
over-dependence; hence time-limited interventions can be as clinically effective as lengthy
therapy for most people. Brief CAT interventions may therefore be of use for mild to
moderate depression.
Aims
The proposed study aims to:
1. Investigate the impact of reformulation letters with mild-moderately depressed clients
in terms of the therapeutic alliance and the helpfulness of therapy
2. Compare the outcomes (symptom amelioration) for depressed clients receiving a
reformulation letter as part of therapy and those who don't receive the reformulation
letter over time including follow-up.
3. Provide initial practice-based evidence of the effectiveness of 8-session CAT in
Primary Care with depressed clients.
Hypotheses
Clients receiving a reformulation letter will:
1. Display enhanced therapeutic alliances in comparison to clients receiving CAT without
the letter.
2. Perceive therapy as more helpful in comparison to clients receiving CAT without the
letter.
3. Achieve better outcomes (greater symptom amelioration) in comparison to clients
receiving CAT without the letter.
Theoretical and Clinical Implications The proposed study will add to the nascent evidence
base for CAT, with regard to the impact of the reformulation letter on therapeutic
processes, outcome and effectiveness. Comparing the impact of receiving a reformulation
letter versus excluding this specific event allows its effects to be isolated. This
contributes to theoretical understandings of the active ingredients of CAT, and more
particularly the role of this specific tool. In addition this may inform the debate
surrounding the role of specific versus non-specific contributions in therapy. Identifying
tools that augment treatment effectiveness offers the potential to improve therapeutic
outcomes.
Improved understanding of how specific tools augment therapeutic processes and affect
outcomes has clinical utility. Producing and negotiating reformulation letters takes
valuable therapist, and in-session time. Their use, impact and perceived helpfulness are
therefore important to investigate thoroughly. This is perhaps of greater importance in
brief therapies, where time is a valuable resource. Furthermore, exploring the potential
utility of a brief 8-session CAT for primary care mental health problems provides a test of
whether CAT could be further adapted and shortened to match the service demands of Primary
Care.
Design Utilising a randomised deconstruction methodology, participants will be randomly
allocated into one of two active study arms (e.g. 'reformulation letter CAT' or 'no
reformulation letter CAT'). Outcome measures will be matched and taken on a
session-by-session basis, prior to, during, and following CAT treatment in both arms to
enable the comparison of relative efficacy.
Method Participants Participants will be recruited via Barnsley PCT's 's Improving Access to
Psychological Therapies (IAPT) service. They will be working age adults (18-65), referred to
primary care mental health services with mild to moderate depression.
The study aims to recruit 24 participants in total.
For supervisory purposes, fidelity to the CAT model will be assessed using:
A measure of CAT competence (CCAT; Bennett & Parry, 2004). The CCAT measures therapist
competence over ten domains related to practice and model characteristics. Validity,
reliability and internal consistency have been established as sufficient (Bennett & Parry,
2004).
Procedure A Consultant Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapist will identify clients meeting
the inclusion criteria for the study. Suitable participants will be provided with an
information sheet explaining the research and inviting them to participate. Clients agreeing
to participate will be asked to sign a consent form. The consent form clarifies that
participants have read the information sheet and had opportunities to ask questions. The
voluntary nature of participation, confidentiality, and right to withdraw at any time is
stated. Consent will be sought to audiotape therapy sessions for supervision purposes. Once
consent to participate has been established the identified clients details will be passed to
the research team for randomisation.
Participants will be randomly allocated into one of two arms ('letter' or 'no letter') using
the GraphPad (2005) computer randomisation software package. Randomised participants will be
offered an 8-session course of CAT. The CAT will be delivered by one of three trainee
clinical psychologists in their final year of training, one of which is the researcher. All
of the trainees have completed a two-day introductory CAT workshop, in addition to standard
clinical psychology training to date. To minimise therapist effects participants in each arm
will be equally distributed among the team.
All participants will receive eight sessions of CAT with a follow-up appointment eight weeks
post-therapy. Assessment will take place over the initial two sessions followed by
reformulation at session three. At the reformulation stage 12 patients ('letter' arm) will
receive a reformulation letter and provisional sequential diagrammatic reformulation in line
with standard CAT practice. 12 patients ('no letter' arm) will receive the SDR without a
reformulation letter at session 3. The remaining intervention and termination procedures
will follow standard CAT procedures. Patients in both arms will receive, and be invited to
produce, a goodbye letter at termination. All participants will be invited to attend a
follow-up session eight weeks post-therapy.
To ensure model adherence all therapy sessions will be taped for supervision purposes and
reviewed by the CAT qualified, and supervisor-trained supervisor. A minimum of one full
taped session from each therapist will be assessed for model adherence by the supervisor
using CCAT. In addition, taped excerpts from sessions will be routinely reviewed in
supervision; therapists will be invited to employ CCAT as a self-reflective tool in
preparation for this. Issues of non-adherence will be considered a training implication,
representative of areas for improvement and addressed via standard supervisory procedures.
Non-adherence will not preclude data inclusion for the purposes of this research; rather it
will be addressed as a limitation of the study related to therapist experience.
Data Analysis To allow comparisons between the two active study arms the primary outcome
variables relevant to each hypothesis will be subject to analysis using ANOVA. Trend
analyses will be additionally conducted on session-by-session data to highlight and compare
patterns of change within the study arms over time. On the pre-post data assessments of
clinical and reliable change in each arm will be calculated and compared using the Reliable
Change Index (RCI; Jacobson & Truax, 1991). Outcome data from the PHQ9 will be used to
calculate the reliable change index (RCI; Jacobson & Truax, 1991). This identifies reliable
and clinically significant changes at small (z > 1.96, p<.05), medium (z > 2.58; p<.01), and
large (z > 3.29, p<.001) effect sizes. Power analysis suggests sufficient power for a
Between x Within Subjects ANOVA, paying particular attention to the Groups x Time-Points
interaction effect. Assuming a 'medium' effect size of f = .25, a significance level of
alpha = .05, and 2 groups of participants providing data at four time points (pre,
reformulation, post, and follow up) the proposed total sample size of 24 gives 80% power.
Power analysis also suggests sufficient power to conduct a trend analysis form of ANOVA to
investigate patterns of change over time (session-by-session data). Assuming a 'medium'
effect size of f = .25, a significance level of alpha = .05, and 2 groups of participants
providing data at eight time points (session-by-session data excluding follow up) the
proposed sample size of 24 will give 95% power.
Hypotheses
Clients receiving a reformulation letter will:
1. Display enhanced therapeutic alliances in comparison to clients receiving CAT without
the letter.
2. Perceive therapy as more helpful in comparison to clients receiving CAT without the
letter.
3. Achieve better outcomes (greater symptom amelioration) in comparison to clients
receiving CAT without the letter.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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