Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Meditation Versus Education for Improving Depression in Chronic Pain, a Randomized Controlled Trial
Verified date | October 2023 |
Source | Mount Sinai Hospital, Canada |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
In this study two possible treatment options available for depression and chronic pain will be explored. Both of these treatments will be offered through online group video calls, which could translate to cost-savings for the health care system. The two treatment options are: 1. The Health Enhancement Program (HEP). Designed to give participants information and guidance on how to lead a healthy lifestyle, which could be beneficial in treating depression. 2. Sahaj Samadhi Meditation (SSM). A unique and easy-to-learn meditation technique that reduces stress and provides deep relaxation which could be beneficial in treating depression. This study will use a hybrid type 1 evaluation design that primarily focuses on a single-site, single-blinded (investigator, and clinician), 12-week randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing SSM (n=80) versus HEP (n=80) in 160 adults with depression and chronic pain. Participants will be blinded to the treatment hypothesis while investigators, raters and treating clinicians will be additionally blinded to the intervention. Evaluations of depression (PHQ-9), pain symptoms (BPI), quality of life (SF-36), and opioid use will be collected at baseline, intervention completion (12 week), and at 24 week follow-up. An implementation evaluation will draw from four key study populations: (1) the participants of the RCT; (2) the expert meditation instructors facilitating the intervention; (3) the site staff and investigators involved in supporting the logistics of the intervention arm of the RCT.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 108 |
Est. completion date | March 31, 2023 |
Est. primary completion date | February 28, 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. =18 years of age; 2. 2. Significant depressive symptomology (PHQ-9 score =10); 3. Chronic pain (pain =3 months duration in any body region, by self-report); 4. Be willing and able to attend all 4 training sessions of SSM/HEP and 75% of follow-up sessions; 5. Understanding of English language (spoken and written); 6. Able to sit for 20-25 minutes without significant discomfort; 7. Regular access to internet and ability to participate in video calls Exclusion Criteria: 1. Other major psychiatric conditions including substance use disorder, psychosis and cognitive impairment as excluded by the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) Screening and Standard tool; severe depression (PHQ-9 =20) and risk of imminent suicide as per MINI and/or PHQ-9; 2. Non-correctable, clinically significant sensory impairment; 3. Acutely unstable medical illnesses, including delirium or acute cerebrovascular or cardiovascular events within the last 6 months; 4. A terminal medical diagnosis with prognosis of less than 12 months; 5. Currently practising any form of mind-body intervention; 6. Inability to provide informed consent |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Bridgepoint Collaboratory, Sinai Health | Toronto | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Mount Sinai Hospital, Canada | Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Canadian Mental Health Association, Lunenfeld Tanenbaum Research Institute, Rivlin Medical Group, The Art of Living Foundation, University of Toronto |
Canada,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Change in Medication Information | Opioid dose will be collected via patient log is the most common measure of opioid use in clinical research trials as per our current review of multidisciplinary care for opioid tapering. Given that patients are on a variety of distinct opioids and that single patients may be on >1 formulation, there is a need for common reporting as provided by morphine equivalent doses. Other prescription medications will also be recorded | Baseline (Week 0), Follow-up 1 (Study completion; Week 12-13), Follow-up 2 (Week 24) | |
Other | Change in Health-Related Quality of Life | The SF-36 is validated as a QoL measurement in the chronic pain population and is recommended by IMMPACT. Included here as an exploratory outcome with expected positive findings from pilot data collected by co-I Vasudev (unpublished) and other meditation interventions, which demonstrate moderate to large effect sizes. This measure is well-aligned to the intervention which is designed as a means of improving overall QoL more than as a disease treatment. | Baseline (Week 0), Follow-up 1 (Study completion; Week 12-13), Follow-up 2 (Week 24) | |
Primary | Change in Health and Depression Symptomology | The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) is a well-validated and widely used self-report scale used in depression and chronic pain clinical care and research. Reduction in a continuous outcome score is a more sensitive test viz a viz percent reduction in scores which has been reported in some depression studies. | Baseline (Week 0), Follow-up 1 (Study completion; Week 12-13), Follow-up 2 (Week 24) | |
Secondary | Change in Pain Severity and pain-related function | The Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) is a validated self-report scale used in pain trials and clinical pain practice and is a core outcome measure per the Initiative on Methods, Measurement, and Pain Assessment in Clinical Trials (IMMPACT) recommendations. Two independent measures are included: pain severity and pain interference with function - both are clinically relevant outcomes. | Baseline (Week 0), Follow-up 1 (Study completion; Week 12-13), Follow-up 2 (Week 24) |
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