Depression Clinical Trial
— TREATED-ACSOfficial title:
Cognitive-behavioral Treatment of Depression in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome
| NCT number | NCT00998400 |
| Other study ID # | 2008.1263 |
| Secondary ID | |
| Status | Completed |
| Phase | N/A |
| First received | |
| Last updated | |
| Start date | September 2010 |
| Est. completion date | April 2019 |
| Verified date | January 2020 |
| Source | University of Bologna |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | |
| Study type | Interventional |
Emotional states of depression in association with ischemic heart diseases, such as myocardial infarction or unstable angina, are risk factors for subsequent cardiac events and mortality. However, the only psychological intervention trial attempting to reduce cardiac risk in depressed ACS patients showed that changes in depression did not translate into improved survival. Such intervention did not address issues such as lifestyle modification and improvement in psychological well-being, which were found to affect individual vulnerability to medical disease. Our research group has developed a well-being enhancing psychotherapeutic strategy, well-being therapy (WBT), which has been validated in a number of clinical trials. The aim of this project is to evaluate the efficacy of cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) together with lifestyle modification and WBT in reducing cardiac risk in depressed and/or demoralized ACS patients compared to a standard clinical procedure of patients' management, the clinical management (CM). The same protocol will be carried out in two centres (Bologna and Torino). 100 patients after a first episode of myocardial infarction or unstable angina, meeting DSM-IV criteria for depressive disorders and DCPR criteria for demoralization will be randomized to one of two treatment groups: 1) CBT supplemented by lifestyle modification and WBT; 2) CM. In both groups, treatment will consist of twelve, 45-minute sessions once a week. A two-year follow-up will be performed. It is expected that psychological treatment may significantly decrease cardiac morbidity and mortality at follow-up compared to clinical management. The findings may entail considerable preventive implications and possible large reductions in health costs.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 100 |
| Est. completion date | April 2019 |
| Est. primary completion date | April 2019 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | N/A and older |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - a current diagnosis of at least one of the following: major or minor depression, dysthymia according to DSM-IV criteria, and demoralization according to DCPR criteria - Mini-Mental State Examination score higher than 24 - written informed consent provided by the patient to participate Exclusion Criteria: - history of bipolar disorder (DSM-IV criteria) - major depression with psychotic features - history of substance abuse or dependency during the previous 12 months - serious suicide risk - current use of antidepressants - current treatment with any form of psychotherapy |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Italy | Maggiore Hospital | Bologna | |
| Italy | Molinette Hospital | Torino |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| University of Bologna | Compagnia di San Paolo |
Italy,
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy as Assessed by Changes in Clinical Interview for Depression, Compared to Clinical Management | Paykel's 20-item change version of the Clinical Interview for Depression (CID) allows a comprehensive assessment of affective symptomatology and contains 20 items rated on 7-point scales with specification of each anchor point based on severity, frequency and/or quality of symptoms. It adds a dimensional description of mental suffering to traditional psychiatric nosography (DSM). The total score is obtained by adding each of 20 items and it may range from 20 to 140. The higher the score, the worse the psychological condition. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy as Assessed by Changes in Symptom Questionnaire ("Anxiety" Subscale), Compared to Clinical Management | Anxious symptoms subscale of Kellner's Symptom Questionnaire (SQ). SQ is a 92-item self-report questionnaire, which yields 4 main scales including 23 items each: "depression", "anxiety", "hostility-irritability" and "somatization". This instrument helps the identification of self-perceived subclinical psychological distress. Answers are dichotomous (YES/NO or TRUE/FALSE) and rated with 0 or 1, therefore each scale score may range from 0 to 23. The higher the total score, the higher the psychological distress. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy Assessed by Changes in Psychological Well-Being Scales ("Autonomy" Dimension), Compared to Clinical Management | Autonomy dimension of the Psychological Well-Being scales (PWB). PWB, an 84-item questionnaire with a multidimensional structure, has been used to evaluate the six psychological well-being dimensions conceptualized by Carol Ryff (autonomy, environmental mastery, personal growth, positive relationships, purpose in life, self-acceptance), which include 14 items each. Every item is defined in terms of high or low agreement on a 6-point Likert scale (ranging from 1 to 6); therefore each scale score may range from 14 to 84, with higher scores corresponding to greater psychological well-being. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy as Assessed by Changes in Symptom Questionnaire ("Depression" Subscale), Compared to Clinical Management | Depressive symptoms subscale of Kellner's Symptom Questionnaire (SQ). SQ is a 92-item self-report questionnaire, which yields 4 main scales including 23 items each: "depression", "anxiety", "hostility-irritability" and "somatization". This instrument helps the identification of self-perceived subclinical psychological distress. Answers are dichotomous (YES/NO or TRUE/FALSE) and rated with 0 or 1, therefore each scale score may range from 0 to 23. The higher the total score, the higher the psychological distress. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy as Assessed by Changes in Symptom Questionnaire ("Somatization" Subscale), Compared to Clinical Management | Somatic symptoms subscale of Kellner's Symptom Questionnaire (SQ). SQ is a 92-item self-report questionnaire, which yields 4 main scales including 23 items each: "depression", "anxiety", "hostility-irritability" and "somatization". This instrument helps the identification of self-perceived subclinical psychological distress. Answers are dichotomous (YES/NO or TRUE/FALSE) and rated with 0 or 1, therefore each scale score may range from 0 to 23. The higher the total score, the higher the psychological distress. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy as Assessed by Changes in Symptom Questionnaire ("Hostility" Subscale), Compared to Clinical Management | Hostility symptoms subscale of Kellner's Symptom Questionnaire (SQ). SQ is a 92-item self-report questionnaire, which yields 4 main scales including 23 items each: "depression", "anxiety", "hostility-irritability" and "somatization". This instrument helps the identification of self-perceived subclinical psychological distress. Answers are dichotomous (YES/NO or TRUE/FALSE) and rated with 0 or 1, therefore each scale score may range from 0 to 23. The higher the total score, the higher the psychological distress. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy Assessed by Changes in Psychological Well-Being Scales ("Environmental Mastery" Dimension), Compared to Clinical Management | Environmental mastery dimension of the Psychological Well-Being scales (PWB). PWB, an 84-item questionnaire with a multidimensional structure, has been used to evaluate the six psychological well-being dimensions conceptualized by Carol Ryff (autonomy, environmental mastery, personal growth, positive relationships, purpose in life, self-acceptance), which include 14 items each. Every item is defined in terms of high or low agreement on a 6-point Likert scale (ranging from 1 to 6); therefore each scale score may range from 14 to 84, with higher scores corresponding to greater psychological well-being. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy Assessed by Changes in Psychological Well-Being Scales ("Personal Growth" Dimension), Compared to Clinical Management | Personal growth dimension of the Psychological Well-Being scales (PWB). PWB, an 84-item questionnaire with a multidimensional structure, has been used to evaluate the six psychological well-being dimensions conceptualized by Carol Ryff (autonomy, environmental mastery, personal growth, positive relationships, purpose in life, self-acceptance), which include 14 items each. Every item is defined in terms of high or low agreement on a 6-point Likert scale (ranging from 1 to 6); therefore each scale score may range from 14 to 84, with higher scores corresponding to greater psychological well-being. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy Assessed by Changes in Psychological Well-Being Scales ("Positive Relations" Dimension), Compared to Clinical Management | Positive relations dimension of the Psychological Well-Being scales (PWB). PWB, an 84-item questionnaire with a multidimensional structure, has been used to evaluate the six psychological well-being dimensions conceptualized by Carol Ryff (autonomy, environmental mastery, personal growth, positive relationships, purpose in life, self-acceptance), which include 14 items each. Every item is defined in terms of high or low agreement on a 6-point Likert scale (ranging from 1 to 6); therefore each scale score may range from 14 to 84, with higher scores corresponding to greater psychological well-being. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy Assessed by Changes in Psychological Well-Being Scales ("Purpose in Life" Dimension), Compared to Clinical Management | Purpose in life dimension of the Psychological Well-Being scales (PWB). PWB, an 84-item questionnaire with a multidimensional structure, has been used to evaluate the six psychological well-being dimensions conceptualized by Carol Ryff (autonomy, environmental mastery, personal growth, positive relationships, purpose in life, self-acceptance), which include 14 items each. Every item is defined in terms of high or low agreement on a 6-point Likert scale (ranging from 1 to 6); therefore each scale score may range from 14 to 84, with higher scores corresponding to greater psychological well-being. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Primary | Depression and Well-being Improvements After Cognitive-behavioral Therapy and Well-Being Therapy Assessed by Changes in Psychological Well-Being Scales ("Self-acceptance" Dimension), Compared to Clinical Management | Self-acceptance dimension of the Psychological Well-Being scales (PWB). PWB, an 84-item questionnaire with a multidimensional structure, has been used to evaluate the six psychological well-being dimensions conceptualized by Carol Ryff (autonomy, environmental mastery, personal growth, positive relationships, purpose in life, self-acceptance), which include 14 items each. Every item is defined in terms of high or low agreement on a 6-point Likert scale (ranging from 1 to 6); therefore each scale score may range from 14 to 84, with higher scores corresponding to greater psychological well-being. | Pre-Treatment, Immediately Post-Treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, 30-month follow-up | |
| Secondary | Number of Participants With Hospitalizations for Cardiac Problems, Revascularization, Recurrent Nonfatal Myocardial Infarction or Cardiac Mortality at 30-month Follow-up. | Frequencies of negative cardiac outcomes, such as re-hospitalizations due to cardiac complications, acute myocardial infarction, unstable angina, angioplasty, cardiac surgery, and cardiac mortality occuring after the first episode of ACS. | 30-month follow-up post-treatment |
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