Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Understanding the Person, Exploring Change Across Psychotherapies
Identifying predictors and understanding mechanisms of change will inform referral to psychotherapy, triage and right-siting by helping clinicians to understand how their patients are likely to benefit from clinical interventions. This study will be the first of its kind conducted in an Asian hospital setting to identify the predictors of response to individual, group and internet-delivered CBT for the treatment of depressed and anxious patients in the Institute of Mental Health (IMH), Singapore. With increasing challenges with hospital workload, there is an increasing emphasis on group and online interventions. Understanding of the factors that may predict outcome from these therapies can improve right-siting by identifying who will get better without therapy or who may not benefit from a given form of therapy and guide personalisation of care. An important biological predictor of outcome is likely to be genetic risk as it has been demonstrated that patients with greater melancholia and a family history may not be sufficiently treated with brief courses of therapy. Identifying psychological factors underlying psychological distress and determining the extent to which these factors are addressed by these interventions will help to improve and individualise existing psychotherapy and motivate new psychotherapeutic interventions.
All IMH outpatients who have been referred for psychotherapy will be invited to take part in
this research. Participants will be recruited from triage, outpatient clinics, emergency
services and referrals from therapists. In specific, participants under the iCBT and group
CBT (for e.g. PsychUp) treatment arms will be recruited from the Psychology Department from
triage and those under individual therapy will be recruited from the Psychotherapy
Department.
After indicating interest to participate in the study, potential patients will be contacted
to explain the purpose of the study and its procedures, obtain informed consent to take part
in the study as well as brief them on how to log on and access and complete questionnaires.
Participants will be placed into the study arms (i.e. iCBT, group CBT or individual therapy)
based on the intervention program each has been allocated to. Some participants will also
form a Delayed Waitlist group. Other participants will form the Treatment as Usual (TAU)
group. Participants in the Waitlist group will be recruited from those referred for
psychotherapy and who are not assigned to either group or iCBT and not planned for
psychotherapy at IMH for 8 weeks or more from the point of consent. Participants in the
Treatment as Usual (TAU) group are individuals who are not assigned to psychotherapy at IMH.
They will be recruited from outpatient services and emergency services at IMH.
The Waitlist and Treatment as Usual Groups will serve as the control groups.
For all groups, psychiatric and medical history, pharmacological and other non-psychological
interventions will first be obtained at baseline in order to control for other treatment
effects. Such medical records would be accessed via c-Doc; data will be obtained from
information management and the IMH diagnostics. SAP data at IMH, including demographic data,
postal code, diagnosis, race, clinician names (but not limited to), will be collected for
this study.
For the psychotherapy arms (iCBT, group CBT, and individual therapy), assessments will be
conducted from baseline across the course of participants' psychotherapy interventions as
well as into follow-up. A baseline battery will be completed before the start of therapy. The
baseline battery includes vulnerability measures, around half of which will serve as the
independent variables and the other half will be used to assess outcome, during their first
visit (i.e. triage). This series of baseline measures will take approximately 50 min to
complete. For iCBT, group CBT and individual therapy, there will be study visits after each
session of therapy, whereby participants will be asked to complete a series of additional
measures. The series of weekly measures will take approximately 15 min to complete. Any
measures that the therapists use regularly when sending out the measures will be left out and
the therapist can request for the outcomes to be either emailed or uploaded on C-doc for
their reference. After the last session, participants would complete a post-intervention
battery besides the post-session measures. The series of post-intervention measures, to be
completed above the weekly measures on the last therapy session, will take approximately 45
min to complete.
Mechanisms of change: Process-outcome in Individual Therapy In 30 clients undergoing frequent
individual therapy (ideally once a fortnight or more), in addition to the quantitative
measurement of outcome, consent will be taken to allow audio with or without video recording
of their sessions. Their therapist will also provide consent for recording of sessions.
Sessions will be recorded by their therapist. Sessions will be subsequently transcribed and
coded with scales to assess alliance-building, interventions, and emotional work. Initial
coding will use the comparative psychotherapy process scale, the facilitative interpersonal
scale, and the emotional arousal scale according to a coding manual by trained raters.
For every 3 months for two years (if consented to), participants may complete the follow-up
measures. For iCBT and group CBT, therapy sessions would take place weekly for 8 weeks. For
individual therapy, therapy sessions take place approximately once every fortnight, with 8
sessions in total, according to the agreed-upon schedule.
Buccal swabs will be obtained from consenting participants at baseline and post-therapy to
conduct genome-wide association scanning to construct polygenic risk scores for prediction of
response to therapy and assess epigenetics as a vulnerability factor pre-post therapy.
Timeline and list of measures for waitlist and group TAU (refer to appendix): For
waitlist/TAU, assessments will be completed at Week 0, Week 4, Week 8 and for follow-ups (see
attached Gantt chart).
Participants in the waitlist/ TAU groups will not undergo buccal swabs.
Participants in the waitlist arm would be individuals who have been referred for
psychotherapy but would not be undergoing therapy for at least 8 weeks from the point of
recruitment into this study, and hence will serve as the control group. It is highly likely
that a considerable proportion of participants in the waitlist group would eventually undergo
therapy within the period of study follow up (up to 2 years). In this case, the data
collected from such participants from before they begin therapy would first be retained, and
such participants would also subsequently be recruited into the psychotherapy arm of the
study, where they would complete all procedures of the study.
In the event that TAU participants are referred for psychotherapy over the duration of the
study, the data collected from such participants from before they begin therapy would first
be retained, and also subsequently recruit them into the psychotherapy arm of the study.
Baseline and post-intervention measures will be completed online.
For post-session/ follow-up measures online, Pragmatic Tracker, an official online platform
used by the Institute of Mental Health for administering scales to therapy patients, will be
utilized. Any measures that the therapists use regularly will be left out when sending out
the measures and the therapist can request for the outcomes to be either emailed or uploaded
on Cdoc for their reference.
For all groups, psychiatric and medical history, pharmacological and other non-psychological
interventions will first be verified during follow-up in order to control for other treatment
effects. Such medical records would be accessed via c-Doc. Data will be obtained from
information management and the IMH diagnostics.
Like the therapists, the triage psychologists will also be given a background information
form during triage review that probes their experience as a triage officer and general client
expectations (Therapist/Triage Officer Background Information Form). It is hypothesized that
such evaluations by the triage psychologists may affect treatment outcome. For TAU and
Waitlist, the patient's clinician will assist in completing the GAF.
Incidental findings are not anticipated for any patients from this study. Only DNA will be
extracted after the collection of the buccal swabs, which would not reveal any incidental
findings of potential health and reproductive importance. However, the possibility that a
genetic test will be developed in the future that can use the collected data and predict the
development of a disease in later life with certainty, and which becomes apparent from the
study's analyses, cannot be excluded. This is considered to be unlikely as the study only
looks at common genetic variants in this study. The study informs participants of the
potential to uncover incidental findings in future research in the ICF, and provide for
re-identification of participants in such cases.
There will not be any incidental findings for the therapists as there will not be any
biological/clinical tests that the therapists themselves will complete that may reveal
potential health or reproductive importance.
Hard copies or soft copies of scales may be administered at all time points or may be
administered over the phone, depending on the preference on the participants and licensing
permissions. Scales will be made available for completion online wherever possible, except
for scales such the Anxiety Sensitivity Index (only allowed to be administered on paper) and
EQ5D-L5 (on phone/ paper). Online modes of administration include Pragmatic Tracker, REDCAP
and QuestionPro. QuestionPro and REDCAP are research platforms also used by IMH/SICS and have
the function of scheduling surveys at several time points.
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