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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04363086
Other study ID # SE TUKEB 5/2017
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date June 12, 2017
Est. completion date June 12, 2018

Study information

Verified date April 2020
Source Semmelweis University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Background Computerized cognitive behavioural therapy (cCBT) is proven to be an effective self-help tool for preventing depression and suicide. Patient adherence is one of the components that the effectiveness of cCBT self-help tools are dependent on and that needs to be researched for understanding and maximizing the effectiveness of computer-based interventions for depression and suicide.

Aims The aims of this study were to compare the adherence of iFightDepression (iFD) online tool user patients with and without an extra weekly phone call consultation and to test predictors of adherence.


Description:

Depressive disorders are recognized as one of the most widespread lifetime disorders and unipolar depression is identified as a leading cause of disease burden . These findings legitimate the importance of reducing depressive symptoms by implementing cost-effective interventions. Despite the fact that cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) is proved to be an efficient treatment for depression, mental health care resources are scarce and cannot fulfil the huge amount of need for face-to-face psychotherapeutic treatments. The aim of increasingly deploying computerized cognitive behavioural therapy (cCBT) is to improve access to psychological treatments, reduce waiting lists, speed up clinical recovery and to bridge the paucity of specialists in small towns. Moreover, guided web-based self-help interventions are proved to be cost-effective and time-saving for mental health care systems as well. Numerous studies have proved the cCBT to be effective in case of depression, however drop-out rates of online self-help interventions are usually high - between 5 and 38.7%. Systematic reviews showed that in web-based self-help treatments extra support obtains higher adherence than no guidance. Treatment-adherence, defined as the amount of a therapeutic intervention that an individual engages with or completes, has clear clinical implications: poor adherence limits the exposure to the full program and increases the required 'dosage' of treatment.

In the comparison of drop-out rates of different psychological treatments, no difference has been found between face-to-face and web-based interventions. Previous research has found that the drop-out risk from cCBT is significantly correlated with gender, educational level and age. Increased drop-out risk included male gender, younger age and lower educational level. This finding has been proved in another research as well, where females have been found to provide more effort to cope with depression compared to males.

With regard to adherence, a low educational level might negatively influence the adherence to cCBT as understanding the content of intervention can be troublesome. Results from previous studies suggested that younger individuals had higher adherence to web-based treatment, whilst some other studies showed that younger age was related to low treatment adherence. Several findings also suggested that additional forms of guidance or support via phone or email increase the level of adherence. In order to offer web-based treatment to patients with the most benefits, it would be useful to identify the predictors of treatment adherence and causes of the relatively high dropout rate.

Insomnia is one of the main symptoms of depression. Studies show insomnia to be one of the risk factors such for development of depression as for reducing response to depression treatment and increasing relapse of depression. Therefore, to quest a correlation between adherence in an online self-help program for depression and sleep disturbances would be subservient.

Our goal in this study was to identify predictors of adherence to a computerized CBT program and to investigate whether sociodemographic variables, hopelessness and sleep disturbances are connected to adherence. Another objective was to compare adherence in web-based self-help intervention with and without weekly follow-up phone-calls as extra support. Our hypothesis was that phone-support would increase adherence level of cCBT.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 73
Est. completion date June 12, 2018
Est. primary completion date September 12, 2017
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 15 Years to 82 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- mild symptoms of depression

Exclusion Criteria:

- acute psychotic episodes

- acute suicidal behavior

- acute substance abuse

- bipolar disorder

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
iFightDepression online self-help tool
Computerized cognitive behavior therapy
Treatment as Usual
TAU
phone call
phone call

Locations

Country Name City State
Hungary Semmelweis University Budapest

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Semmelweis University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Hungary, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Sociodemographic data gender, age, education and place of living 6 weeks
Primary Depression Measured by Beck Depression Inventory; a) no depression; b) mild depression; c) moderate depression; d) severe depression 6 weeks
Primary Hopelessness Measured by Shortened Beck Hopelessness Scale; possible responses: no (0), yes (1) 6 weeks
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