Acquired Brain Injury Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Hypnotic Suggestion on Return to Work, Functioning, and Cognition Following Acquired Brain Injury or Concussion: A Randomized Controlled Trial
NCT number | NCT05142007 |
Other study ID # | 342096 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | May 11, 2017 |
Est. completion date | October 29, 2021 |
Verified date | August 2022 |
Source | Aalborg University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
A recent randomized clinical trial (RCT) demonstrated large effects of hypnotic suggestion on working memory following acquired brain injury. However, no studies have investigated long-term effects (> 2 months) effects on return to work (RTW). Therefore the aim is in a RCT to study the effect of hypnotic suggestion on RTW in employed individuals with acquired brain injury or concussion, that were referred to an out-patient municipal vocational rehabilitation center in Denmark. Participants were randomized to a passive (treatment as usual), active comparison (a weekly treatment session of mindfullness-based stress reduction for four weeks) or intervention group (a weekly treatment session of targeted suggestion for four weeks). Intention-to-treat analysis of the hypnosis effect on return to work within six months follow-up will be performed. Results Participants (N=77) have accepted and participated in the study. Effect measures are to be analysed.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 77 |
Est. completion date | October 29, 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | November 6, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 62 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Documented concussion or acquired brain injury which is at least 6 months old at the first (potential) therapy session. - Employment more than 50% of the time after finishing the latest education and employed at least 6 consecutive months immediately preceding the injury - If the patient is currently fully employed, he/she must have substantial risk of decreasing vocational status. - No substance abuse or issues currently in- or requiring- psychiatric treatment. Exclusion Criteria: - Progressive injuries are excluded, including dementias. - Pensioned or recommended for pension at the time of inclusion, |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Denmark | Aalborg University | Aalborg |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Aalborg University | Defactum, Central Denmark Region |
Denmark,
Cedercreutz C, Lähteenmäki R, Tulikoura J. Hypnotic treatment of headache and vertigo in skull injured patients. Int J Clin Exp Hypn. 1976 Jul;24(3):195-201. — View Citation
Kihlstrom JF, Glisky ML, McGovern S, Rapcsak SZ, Mennemeier MS. Hypnosis in the right hemisphere. Cortex. 2013 Feb;49(2):393-9. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2012.04.018. Epub 2012 May 15. — View Citation
Laidlaw TM. Hypnosis and attention deficits after closed head injury. Int J Clin Exp Hypn. 1993 Apr;41(2):97-111. — View Citation
Lindeløv JK, Overgaard R, Overgaard M. Improving working memory performance in brain-injured patients using hypnotic suggestion. Brain. 2017 Apr 1;140(4):1100-1106. doi: 10.1093/brain/awx001. — View Citation
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Return to work | The probability of returning to work is based on registry-based data. Dichotomous outcome: 0 (no), 1 (yes). | Within one year of follow-up | |
Secondary | WAIS-IV Working Memory Index | Range of outcome: 50 (worst) to 150 (best). Age-corrected index computed from the performance on three tasks: mental arithmetic, letter span, and letter-number sequencing. They are scored, aggregated, and converted to index scores according to the WAIS-IV manual (Wechsler, 2008). Briefly, the manual contains tables where raw scores are converted to age-corrected scaled scores, the sum of which corresponds to an index value. | Six months follow-up | |
Secondary | Trail Making Test (executive component of working memory) | Trail Making Test is scored by how long it takes to complete the test (max 5 minutes). Executive task switching is assessed using the log(B-A) index of the Trail Making Task form A and B. Range of outcome: -Infinity (worst) to +Infinity (best) log-seconds with expected values in the range [0, 4] log-seconds.
The outcome is the log-difference score between reaction times (outcome = log(B - A)). |
Six months follow-up | |
Secondary | Go-nogo reaction time difference | Executive inhibition is assessed as go-nogo reaction time minus simple reaction time.
Range of outcome: The difference score between simple reaction time and discrimination time (complex reaction time). From -Infinity (best) to Infinity (worst) with expected mean differences in the range [0.1, 0.5], [best, worst]seconds. It will be modelled as a shifted log-normal, so parameter estimations and inferential tests are conducted on values expected to fall in the range [-3, 0], [best, worst]. |
Six months follow-up | |
Secondary | Story recall - immediate recall | This is an "ecologically valid" test of short term memory. A story with 25 semantic units is read aloud and the participant re-tells the story immediately. The score is the number of items correctly recalled, i.e., 0 to 25.
Two stories were used; one was read aloud as usual. The other was read aloud while a radio program was playing in the background. Range of outcome: 0 (worst) to 25 (best). |
Six months follow-up | |
Secondary | Working memory | Subjective experience of working memory is assessed using the Working Memory Questionnaire (Vallat-Azouvi, Pradat-Diehl, & Azouvi, 2012). A global score, and three subscales (attention, storage and executive) is computed as mean sumscores.
Range of outcome: 0 (not at all a problem, best) to 4 (Extremely a problem, worst) Range of outcome: |
Six months follow-up | |
Secondary | Brain injury symptoms | Brain injury symptoms assessed by close relatives, were derived from the European Brain Injury Questionnaire (EBIQ). Eight subscales were calculated by mean sumscores:
"Core": global brain injury symptomatology (32 items) "Somatic" (7 items) "Cognition" (11 items) "Impulsivity" (10 items) "Depression" (5 items) "Communication" (4 items) "Difficulties in social interactions" (5 items) "Fatigue" (8 items). Outcome range: From 0 ("not at all", best) to 2 ("a lot", worst). |
Six months follow-up | |
Secondary | Fatigue | Fatigue is assessed using the Mental Fatigue Scale sum score (Birgitta Johansson, Starmark, Berglund, Rödholm, & Rönnbäck, 2010).
A total of 14 items are scored as a sumscore and values above 10.5 are considered problematic. Outcome range: 0 (best) to 42 (worst). |
Six months follow-up | |
Secondary | Stress, Anxiety, and Depression | Stress, Anxiety, and depression is assessed using the sum scores of the three individual scales of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales questionnaire (Lovibond & Lovibond, 1995). Each subscale contains 7 items scored from 0-3. To get the final scores the sumscores are multiplied by 2.
Range of outcome (stress): 0 (best) to 42 (worst) Range of outcome (anxiety): 0 (best) to 42 (worst) Range of outcome (depression): 0 (best) to 42 (worst) |
Six months follow-up | |
Secondary | Functioning | Functioning is assessed using the Impact on Participation and Autonomy questionnaire (Cardol, Haan, Bos, Jong, & Groot, 1999). Three subscales were used (Family, Social, and work scale) containing 7, 7 and 6 items respectively.
Outcome range: each item is scored between 0 (very poor, worst) to 4 (very good, best). Sumscores are calculated and dichotomized by the 50th percentile. |
6 months follow-up |
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