Psychosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Brief Mindfulness-Based Intervention for Early Psychosis: A Randomized Controlled Study
Depressive mood and anxiety are prevalent in patients suffering from early psychosis.
Treatments focused on these dimensions are rarely seen. Meanwhile, growing evidence showed
Mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) as an effective option in handling depression and
anxiety. There is a great possibility that MBI is also useful in depression and anxiety
associating with early psychosis. Given that cost-effectiveness is widely concerned in Hong
Kong or any other countries, a brief intervention is more favored. Current paper is a study
protocol for a randomized controlled trial which assess the feasibility of a 7-week
mindfulness-based intervention in patients with early psychosis targeting on their
depressive mood and anxiety.
In this RCT, 60 patients aged 18-65 with early psychosis less than 5 years' duration and
mild depressive mood or anxiety will be invited to join this single blind randomized
controlled trial. After baseline assessments, eligible participants will be, using third
party simple randomization, randomly assigned to either the 7-week Mindfulness-based
Intervention (MBI), or the psychoeducation group as control.
The primary outcome is depressive mood and anxiety levels at post-intervention and 3 months.
The secondary outcomes include life functioning, quality of life, other general clinical
symptoms and mindfulness ability. Qualitative interviews will help evaluate and measure the
feasibility of the intervention. Data will be analyzed according to the intention-to-treat
principle.
This randomized trial offers an insight into mindfulness-based intervention and its
effectiveness on psychosis concomitants. It provides the foundation for future evaluation
and implementation of an effective and cost-efficient treatment option.
Psychosis is a set of symptoms associated with distorted perception and cognition. Clinical
treatments that focus on positive symptoms, hallucination, and delusion are increasingly
well developed throughout the century. However peripheral facets such as depressive mood
(post-psychotic depression to its extreme) and anxiety have never been the foci of
attention; they are often viewed as less important than positive, negative, or cognitive
symptoms, if not entirely ignored. Sadly, depression and anxiety are prevalent in early
psychotic patients. Depression was found in 22% of people with First Episode Psychosis
(FEP), and anxiety disorders of social phobia was found in 32%, and obsessive compulsive
disorder in 4-15% of people with FEP. These adverse conditions after the early acute stage
of psychosis are linked with poor engagement in treatment services and adverse impact on the
change process, resulting in poor treatment outcomes, lowered quality of life, and increased
likelihood of suicide. Given the high prevalence and extensive impact, there is a need to
explore adjunction intervention that targets mood and anxiety symptoms following onset of
psychotic disorders.
Mindfulness is the awareness that emerges from paying attention to the present moment
without judgment. It is a skill that can be achieved through meditation practices, and has
been shown to improve general well-being. Mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) has been
referred to as the "third wave" of psychological interventions after the first wave
behavioral and the second wave cognitive interventions. Research relating to MBIs has
increased exponentially in the past decade. Key, fully developed, MBIs in the literature
include mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
(MBCT) and acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT). These interventions are increasingly
used with individuals suffering from depression or anxiety and have gained positive
findings. Hofmann and colleagues conducted an effect size analysis on 39 studies of MBI for
anxiety and mood symptoms in clinical samples. They found a moderately strong uncontrolled
pre-post effect size of MBIs on reducing anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms among
individuals with disorders not limited to anxiety disorders or major depression. The authors
postulated that MBIs may not be diagnosis-specific. Rather it is effective in reducing
stress in general and hence improves symptoms of anxiety and depression across a relatively
wide range of conditions.
Since MBIs are efficacious in reducing mood and anxiety symptoms across various disorders,
it has potential intervention value for early psychosis as well. In a recent meta-review,
Khoury and colleagues concluded that MBIs have moderate therapeutic effects for psychosis.
At the same time, there are arguments against mindfulness practices on active psychotic
patients, and in people at risk of developing psychosis. In response, Chadwick et al.
demonstrated in a feasibility study the safe use of a mindfulness intervention on nine
active psychotic patients. Given the small sample size, further careful research, especially
randomized controlled trials (RCTs), is needed to support its usage .
Evidence on mindfulness-based interventions in treatment of mood and anxiety symptoms is
encouraging. Yet, only a small number of RCTs have been conducted on patients with early
psychosis to date. Further, with the limited resources available to the health system in
Hong Kong, we aimed to create a simple MBI specific for early psychosis patients, with a
user-friendly protocol that can be operated by health practitioners after sufficient yet
time-efficient training. Therefore, the current RCT protocol in assessing the efficacy of a
brief MBI on patients with early psychosis is of value.
The primary research question is whether positive changes on depressive and anxiety symptoms
can be obtained through a 7-week MBI program designed for early psychotic patients.
Specifically, we hypothesized that the anxiety level and depressive mood can be
significantly reduced by our MBI. The second question we sought to answer is whether this
change can be maintained, as reflected in a 3-month follow up. Our secondary hypotheses are
that since depression and anxiety are lowered, those receiving the MBI will perceive having
better quality of life and overall functioning as a result
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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