Anxiety Clinical Trial
— LENS-PDOfficial title:
Learning Effective New Strategies - Parkinson's Disease
| Verified date | October 2019 |
| Source | King's College London |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | |
| Study type | Interventional |
High rates of anxiety and worry has been observed in people with Parkinson's (PwP). Previous
research outside of PwP has shown that individuals with anxiety have a habit of interpreting
ambiguous information in a negative manner (i.e., interpretation bias), and that it is
possible to encourage a more positive interpretation bias through an online training.
In the current study, the aim is to test the acceptability and feasibility of an online
training program that aims to encourage more positive interpretation bias in high worrying
PwP. Participants complete an online baseline assessment, and are then invited to complete
ten training sessions over a period of three weeks followed by another assessment and
follow-up assessments (at 1 month & 3 months). Participants are randomized into either the
active condition or control condition. Across both conditions, participants will listen to
short, everyday scenarios which are ambiguous (could end positively or negatively). In the
active condition, a positive ending is given in half of the scenarios. In the other half,
participants are instructed to imagine positive endings to ambiguous scenarios. In the
control condition, all scenarios end ambiguously and no instructions are given about
imagining positive endings.
The primary aim of the study is to test the acceptability and feasibility of the online
training platform. Participants will complete a feasibility interview after completing the
training. Specifically, the acceptability of the following will be tested: i) the online
nature of the training (and lack of face-to-face contact); ii) being randomised into one of
the two conditions; iii) the number and duration of the assignments; and iv) the text
messages/e-mail/phone call reminders to complete the assignments. The feasibility of the
online training platform will be judged on the i) rate of recruitment; ii) retention rates
during the training; iii) adherence to the study (i.e., number of assignments completed); iv)
retention rates at follow-up. The secondary aim is to estimate the effect size of the active
condition (vs. control; on worry scores post-training, and at follow-ups) to inform power
analyses for a future randomised control trial.
It is hypothesised that the training will be acceptable and feasible in a high worrying PwP
sample. It is also hypothesised that the training will be effective in reducing worry and
improving interpretation bias.
| Status | Recruiting |
| Enrollment | 60 |
| Est. completion date | March 31, 2020 |
| Est. primary completion date | March 31, 2020 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | 18 Years and older |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Diagnosed with idiopathic Parkinson's Disease - can use a computer independently - have (correct to) normal hearing - scores above 62 on the Penn State Worry Questionnaire Exclusion Criteria: - Those who have previously taken part in lab-based studies at King's College London where measures of interpretation bias were included. - Currently or have recently (past six months) received psychological treatment. - If participants are currently taking anti-depressants or anti-anxiety medication, they need to have been stable on the same dose for at least six weeks. - Participants who score 2 or higher on the ninth item of the Patient Health Questionnaire-- (measuring suicidal ideation) at screening will be excluded. - If individuals do not have regular access to a computer and/or the internet, they will be excluded. - Those who can not concentrated on the questions asked during the Modified Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status, or are confused by the questions asked. |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | King's College London | London |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| King's College London |
United Kingdom,
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Other | Improvement in interpretation bias (scrambled sentences task) | Whether scores on the scrambled sentences task have changed specifically in the training condition. The scrambled sentences tasks involves unscrambling 20 sentences to form either position or negative solutions and is calculated by the proportion of negative solutions to positive solution (i.e., higher scores = more negative interpretation bias). | Comparing baseline scores to post-training (assessment 2; completed approximately 3 weeks later) scores | |
| Other | Improvement in interpretation bias (recognition test) | Whether scores on the recognition test have changed specifically in the training condition. The recognition test involves reading ten (ambiguous) scenarios and subsequently rating 4 sentences per scenario on how similar in meaning the (positive and negative) sentences are to the original scenario. Scores are based on how highly negative sentences are scored compared to positive sentences (i.e., higher scores = more negative interpretation bias). | Comparing baseline scores to post-training (assessment 2; completed approximately 3 weeks later) scores | |
| Primary | Acceptability; rating of online training | Whether participants accept the online nature of the training (extent of positive feedback compared to negative feedback) | At approximately 4 weeks (during the feasibility interview) | |
| Primary | Acceptability; lack of face-to-face contact | Whether participants accept the lack of face-to-face contact | At approximately 4 weeks (during the feasibility interview) | |
| Primary | Acceptability; number of assignments | Whether participants accept the number of assignments | At approximately 4 weeks (during the feasibility interview) | |
| Primary | Acceptability; duration of assignments | Whether participants accept the duration of assignments | At approximately 4 weeks (during the feasibility interview) | |
| Primary | Acceptability; reminders | Whether participants accept the text messages/e-mail/phone call reminders | At approximately 4 weeks (during the feasibility interview) | |
| Primary | Acceptability; randomisation | Proportion of eligible participants who agree to being randomised to those who do not agree | Participants are asked during the eligibility call prior to starting the training if they are happy to be randomised. As such, acceptability to be randomised is at baseline. | |
| Primary | Training feasibility; rate of recruitment | The feasibility of the training based on the rate of recruitment | From recruitment start (moment when Parkinson's UK [United Kingdom] advertise the study) till study close (either end of November, 2019, or when the recruitment target is met; approximately 5 months) | |
| Primary | Training feasibility; retention rates | The feasibility of the training based on the retention rates during the training | Duration of study (approximately 5 months) | |
| Primary | Training feasibility; study adherence | The feasibility of the training based on the adherence to the study (number of assignments completed) | Assignments are completed over three weeks, with a possibility of a one week extension for those who have not completed at least 8 in the three weeks. | |
| Primary | Training feasibility; retention at one-month follow-up | The feasibility of the training based on the retention rates at follow-up (i.e., number of missing cases or drop outs at the one month follow-up) | Duration of study (approximately 5 months) | |
| Primary | Training feasibility; retention at three-month follow-up | The feasibility of the training based on the retention rates at follow-up (i.e., number of missing cases or drop outs at the three month follow-up) | Duration of study (approximately 5 months) | |
| Secondary | Decrease in worry (estimation of effect size); post-training | The extent that worry has changed from before to after training in the active condition compared to the control condition based on the Penn State Worry Questionnaire (scores can range from 16 to 80; higher scores indicate more worry) | Baseline worry scores will be compared to worry scores after the training (assessment 2; completed approximately 3 weeks later) | |
| Secondary | Decrease in worry (estimation of effect size); at one-month follow-up | The extent that worry has changed from before training to the one month follow-up in the active compared to the control condition, as mediated by post-training worry scores, based on the Penn State Worry Questionnaire (scores can range from 16 to 80; higher scores indicate more worry) | Baseline worry scores will be compared to worry scores at the one-month follow-up | |
| Secondary | Decrease in worry (estimation of effect size); at three-months follow-up | The extent that worry has changed from before training to three months after training in the active condition compared to the control condition, as mediated by post-training worry scores, based on the Penn State Worry Questionnaire (scores can range from 16 to 80; higher scores indicate more worry) | Baseline worry scores will be compared to worry scores at the three-months follow-up |
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