Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT06017700 |
Other study ID # |
MR/W00285X/1 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
September 2023 |
Est. completion date |
June 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2023 |
Source |
Transcultural Psychosocial Organization Nepal |
Contact |
Nagendra Luitel, PhD |
Phone |
9841333725 |
Email |
luitelnp[@]gmail.com |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Globally a third of adolescents are at risk of depression with negative consequences for
their health and development. Most of the world's adolescents live in low- and middle-income
countries (LMICs) where access to treatment for depression is limited. Psychological
interventions are treatments that seek to change behaviours, cognitions and feelings to
improve mental health but few have been tested with adolescents in LMICs. This study will use
a cluster randomised controlled trial approach to test one such intervention, interpersonal
therapy (IPT) for adolescents in Chitwan district, Nepal. The current study will compare
whether adolescents (aged 13-18) with depression who receive group interpersonal therapy
improve more than adolescents who receive information about local mental health services but
no active intervention (enhanced usual care). Adolescents' depressive symptoms will be
assessed eight to ten weeks after IPT has finished using the Patient Health Questionnaire
modified for adolescents (PHQ-A). We will also aim to assess the feasibility and
acceptability of delivering group IPT in secondary schools in Chitwan, Nepal. In addition, in
this trial we aim to refine our hypotheses around why IPT works, how, and for whom, and pilot
the tools which will be used to answer these questions later in the full trial.
Description:
Depression and anxiety are leading causes of disability adjusted life years among adolescents
aged 10-19 and can lead to social and educational impairment, substance misuse and suicide.
The treatment gap for adolescent mental disorders is large, especially in low-and
middle-income countries (LMICs). The WHO Mental Health Gap Action Programme outlines a role
for psychological therapies in the treatment of child and adolescent emotional disorders such
as depression and anxiety, however there is an urgent need to adapt these for use in LMICs.
Between 2018 and 2020, our team including researchers and clinicians from TPO Nepal and
King's College London adapted IPT for adolescents with depression in Nepal. Using an
iterative mixed methods procedure, we adapted the WHO group IPT manual for delivery by school
nurses and lay people in government secondary schools. We conducted an uncontrolled
feasibility study of IPT with 62 adolescent boys and girls aged 13 to 19 in the mountainous
district of Sindhupalchowk. Adolescents attended 82.3% (standard deviation 18.9) of group
sessions. Depression and functional impairment improved between baseline and follow-up at
8-10 weeks post IPT: The Depression Self Rating Scale score decreased by 81% (95% confidence
interval 70-95)Íž functional impairment decreased by 288% (249-351).
Building on this previous research, we have designed a 4-stage, 5-year programme of work. The
overall aim is to test the effectiveness and cost of scaling-up IPT in Nepal taking a
"realist" evaluation approach where we will explore IPT's mechanisms of change and contextual
factors that moderate its effects. This involves using formative research to develop an
intervention theory of change from which we formulate hypotheses about how intervention
mechanisms might interact with context to produce outcomes (context mechanism-outcome
configurations, CMOCs).
According to this programme, Stage 1 (Formative Phase) is already completed. Currently we are
applying for Stage 2, which is a pilot cluster randomized controlled trial (CRCT-pilot) of
IPT for adolescent depression in Chitwan, a district in the lowland region of Nepal. As part
of the current application, we aim to 1) test the feasibility and acceptability of the trial
protocols, 2) pilot the qualitative and quantitative tools and 3) refine the theory of change
hypotheses. Building on it, we will later apply for Stage 3 which will be a full cluster
randomized controlled trial assessing the effectiveness/cost-effectiveness of IPT (CRCT-full)
and Stage 4 which will consist of testing the CMOs using quantitative data from the full
trial.
The study design is a parallel two-arm realist pilot cluster-randomised controlled trial. The
trial will be conducted in eight schools (four intervention and four control). We will assess
participants in intervention and control arms at baseline (week 0), after the second group
session (week 4), after the sixth group session (week 8), at endline (weeks 13-14) and at
follow-up (weeks 25-26). The acceptability of the intervention, randomisation, tools, uptake,
utility of the intervention, facilitators' fidelity to the manual, mental health outcomes,
and cost of design and delivery of the intervention will be assessed. The intervention
process data will be also collected. This will include FGDs and interviews with adolescents
and their parents, facilitators, nurses, teachers, and school principals to explore
feasibility and acceptability of the intervention and study procedures.