Obesity Clinical Trial
— AVATOBOfficial title:
Ambientes Virtuales Como Auxiliares en el Tratamiento de la Obesidad
Participants 60 Patients seeking treatment at the Obesity Unit of the Medica Sur Hospital in
México City, Mexico. Informed consent to participate will be aleatory assigned to a three
different conditions.
Procedures In the initial interview, prospective participants will be provided with detailed
information about the study and the treatments. All patients included in the study will be
randomly assigned to the one (N=20) of the three treatment conditions described below, all
conducted on an inpatient basis. The duration for all treatments will be 6 weeks and will be
administered by two chartered clinical psychologists and one chartered psychotherapist under
the supervision of a senior chartered psychotherapist. The three therapists will be balanced
among the three conditions.
1. Nutritional groups In this condition (NT) the participants (N=20) subjects enter only 5
weekly nutritional groups held by dieticians based on the LEARN manual (Brownell,
1985), whose goal will be to provide practical guidelines for the self-monitoring of
eating and lessons on nutrition (e.g stressing gradual weight loss with the caloric
restriction achieved largely by reductions in fat intake), plus a low-calorie diet
(1,200 kcal/day) and physical training (30 min of walking two times a week as a
minimum).
2. Cognitive-Behavioral therapy CBT group (N=20) will be based on the same treatment
proposed in the first condition plus 15 additional sessions over 6 weeks.
Therapists will follow a detailed manual that outlined the content of each session.
This manual was based on the cognitive—behavioral treatment approach described by
Cooper and colleagues (Cooper & Fairburn, 2002; Cooper et al., 2003). It was developed
during a year of intensive pilot work and adapted to the in-patient setting. Patients
will be taught to self-monitor their food intake and eating patterns and thoughts, as
well as the circumstances and environment surrounding eating (e.g. whether eating alone
or with others, speed of eating, and place of eating). Patients will also be taught to
identify problems in eating, mood, and thinking patterns and to gradually develop
alternative patterns.
In particular, after the first week the patients will enter 5 weekly group sessions
aimed at addressing weight and primary goals, and 10 biweekly individual sessions aimed
at establishing and maintaining weight loss, addressing barriers to weight loss,
increasing activity, addressing body image concerns and supporting weight maintenance.
3. Experiential Cognitive therapy Experiential CT group (N=4) involved the same treatment
proposed in the first condition plus 15 additional sessions over 4/6 weeks.
In the sessions we will use the "20/20/20 rule". During the first 20 minutes, the therapist
focus on getting a clear understanding of the patient's current concerns, level of general
functioning, and the experiences related to food. This part of the session tends to be
characterized by patients doing most of the talking, although therapist guides with
questions and reflection to get a sense of the patient's current status. The second 20
minutes is devoted to the virtual reality experience. During this part of the session the
patient enters the virtual environment and faces a specific critical situation (Kitchen,
Supermarket, Pub, Restaurant, Gymnasium, etc.). Here the patient is helped in developing
specific strategies for avoiding and/or coping with it. In the final 20 minutes the
therapist explores the patient's understanding of what happened in VR and the specific
reactions - emotional and behavioral - to the different situations experienced. If needed,
some new strategies for coping with the VR situations are presented and discussed. To
support the empowerment process, the therapists follow the Socratic style: they use a series
of questions, related to the contents of the virtual environment, to help clients synthesize
information and reach conclusions on their own.
In accordance with informed consent, assessments will be obtained before treatment, at
posttreatment, 3 and 6 months after the treatment conclusion.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 40 |
Est. completion date | December 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2012 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 18 Years to 50 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Patients seeking treatment at the Obesity Unit of the Hospital Medica Sur, Mexico City, Mexico 2. a Body Mass Index higher than 40; 3. written and informed consent to participate. Exclusion Criteria: 1. other concurrent severe psychiatric disturbances (psychosis, depression with suicidal risk, alcohol or drug abuse); 2. concurrent medical condition not related to the disorder; 3. one or more failures in following an obesity treatment. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Mexico | Hospital Medica Sur | Mexico | Distrito Federal |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico | Istituto Auxologico Italiano, Medica Sur Clinic & Foundation |
Mexico,
Riva G, Bacchetta M, Baruffi M, Molinari E. Virtual reality-based multidimensional therapy for the treatment of body image disturbances in obesity: a controlled study. Cyberpsychol Behav. 2001 Aug;4(4):511-26. — View Citation
Riva G, Bacchetta M, Cesa G, Conti S, Castelnuovo G, Mantovani F, Molinari E. Is severe obesity a form of addiction? Rationale, clinical approach, and controlled clinical trial. Cyberpsychol Behav. 2006 Aug;9(4):457-79. — View Citation
Riva G. The key to unlocking the virtual body: virtual reality in the treatment of obesity and eating disorders. J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2011 Mar 1;5(2):283-92. Review. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Anxiety Inventory: State-Trait IDARE | The scale A-Trait Anxiety Inventory consists of twenty statements in which subjects are asked to describe how they feel generally. A-State scale also consists of 20 statements, but the instructions required that subjects indicate how they feel at any given time. Measures two dimensions of anxiety: state (referring to how the subject feels at that moment) and trait (how you feel usually). Instrument validated in Mexico (Spielberger & Diaz Guerrero, 1975) | Change from Baseline in Anxiety Inventory: State-Trait IDARE at 6 weeks, Change from Baseline in Anxiety Inventory: State-Trait IDARE at 6 months | Yes |
Primary | Body Image Questionnaire (BSQ) | Designed by Cooper, Taylor, Cooper and Fairburn (1987), adapted to Spanish population by Raich et al. (1996) and to Mexican women by Galán (2004). Consists of 34 questions scored on a Likert scale of 1 to 6. Lets get an overall score (sum of raw scores of the items) and can be derived 4 subscales: body dissatisfaction, fear of gaining weight, low esteem by the appearance and want to lose weight. | Change frome Baseline in Body Image Questionnaire (BSQ) at 6 weeks, Change frome Baseline in Body Image Questionnaire (BSQ) at 6 months | Yes |
Primary | Weight | Weight loss after the treatment and after the follow-up phase | Changes in weight from de first week will be assessed up to 6 weeks, changes in weight at 6 months | No |
Secondary | BULIT Bulimia Test | Self-administered questionnaire of 36 items designed to assess bulimic symptomatology (Smith & Thelen, 1984). The questions are related to body weight, binge mood and purgative behavior. Adapted to Mexican population (Alvarez & Vazquez-Manzilla, 2000). | Change from Baseline in BULIT Bulimia Test at 6 weeks, Change from Baseline in BULIT Bulimia Test at 6 months | Yes |
Secondary | Three Food Factors Questionnaire (TFEQ) | Questionnaire comprising 51 items that measure three factors: cognitive dietary restraint, ie the perception that food intake is limited constants in an effort to control the body weight, disinhibition and hunger. (Stunkard & Messick, 1985). | Change from Baseline in Three Food Factors Questionnaire (TFEQ) at 6 weeks, Change from Baseline in Three Food Factors Questionnaire (TFEQ) at 6 months | Yes |
Secondary | Opinion on exposure therapy | Questionnaire developed for this study, which will reflect the level of satisfaction with treatment, which will assess how useful it has been each of the components of the treatment program (educational component, relaxation training, exposure component of each virtual scenarios (for conditions with virtual reality exposure). | Opinion on exposure therapy at 6 weeks | Yes |
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