Eating Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Effectiveness of CBT-T vs CBT-E in a Community Clinic of Individuals With Eating Disorders
| NCT number | NCT03984539 |
| Other study ID # | 6278 |
| Secondary ID | |
| Status | Recruiting |
| Phase | N/A |
| First received | |
| Last updated | |
| Start date | June 15, 2021 |
| Est. completion date | January 1, 2023 |
Eating disorders are a difficult to treat illness with significant psychological and physical sequelae. Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) has been the most researched and supported intervention for eating disorders. A particular version of CBT for eating disorders, CBT-E (Fairburn, 2008), has been the focus of much research over the past decade. Despite promising results from initial CBT-E trials these findings have not always replicated well and evidence points to high drop-out in real-world settings. Further, CBT-E is a resource-intensive intervention, which may contribute to poorer access to care. In an attempt to overcome some of these barriers related to CBT-E, Waller and colleagues (2018) recently developed a brief (10 session) version of CBT for non-low-weight eating disorders (e.g., bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder), referred to as CBT-T. Preliminary evidence from a case series of adult patients suggests that CBT-T has similar efficacy to CBT-E with low rates of drop-out. However, further evaluation of this brief treatment is needed, including direct comparisons with CBT-E. Indeed, given that no comparison group was included in the initial case series, it is unknown whether either CBT-T or CBT-E may be superior to the other. Thus, the aim of the current project is to examine CBT-T's efficacy in comparison to CBT-E as it has been implemented at the eating disorders service at London Health Science's Centre, and to determine whether either intervention is superior based on treatment outcome and treatment drop-out. Non-low-weight individuals with eating disorders assessed at the Adult Eating Disorders Service will be eligible to participate in the study. The principle investigator is Dr. Philip Masson, Ph.D., C. Psych., 519-685-8500 ext. 74866.
| Status | Recruiting |
| Enrollment | 60 |
| Est. completion date | January 1, 2023 |
| Est. primary completion date | January 1, 2023 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | 17 Years and older |
| Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Non-underweight (BMI > 19) adults (aged > 17 years) 2. Diagnosis of bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder (BED), or otherwise specified feeding or eating disorder (e.g., subthreshold BN, subthreshold BED, purging disorder) Exclusion Criteria: 1. Imminent risk for suicide 2. Profound cognitive impairment 3. Limited English language ability |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | The Adult Eating Disorders Service | London | Ontario |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| Lawson Health Research Institute | University of Western Ontario, Canada |
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* Note: There are 28 references in all — Click here to view all references
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Change in the frequency of Binge Eating | Assessed using EDE (Fairburn, Cooper, & O'Connor, 2008) objective binge eating frequency for past month. Clients can answer anywhere from 0 binges to an infinite number of binges. | Will be assessed Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E), 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E | |
| Primary | Change in the frequency of Vomiting | Assessed using EDE (Fairburn, Cooper, & O'Connor, 2008) vomiting frequency for past month. Clients can answer anywhere from 0 vomiting episodes to an infinite number of vomiting episodes. | Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E) 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E | |
| Primary | Change in Eating Disorder Cognitions | Assessed using EDE-Q (Fairburn & Beglin, 2008) Global Score. Lowest possible global score is 0 and highest possible global score is 6. The higher the score the more severe the eating disorder cognitions. | Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E), 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E | |
| Secondary | Binge Eating Change over the Course of Treatment | Binge eating symptoms recorded weekly via the Eating Disorder-15 (Tatham et al., 2015). Clients will indicate frequency of binging on this measure. The higher the number the more often clients are binging. Binge eating frequency is not part of a scale rather, the number indicated represents the number of binges clients report having. | Pre-treatment and weekly while receiving treatment. Once a week for up to 10 weeks of treatment for CBT-T and up to 25 weeks of treatment for CBT-E. | |
| Secondary | Vomiting Change over the Course of Treatment | Vomiting symptoms recorded weekly via the Eating Disorder-15 (Tatham et al., 2015). The higher the number the more often clients are vomiting. Vomiting frequency is not part of a scale rather, the number indicated represents the number of vomiting episodes clients report having. | Pre-treatment and weekly while receiving treatment. Once a week for up to 10 weeks of treatment for CBT-T and up to 25 weeks of treatment for CBT-E. | |
| Secondary | Working Alliance change over the Course of Treatment | Working alliance as measured by the Working Alliance Short-Form (Hatcher & Gillaspy, 2006). Each item is rated on a 1-7 scale, where 1 = 'Not at all', and 7 = 'Completely'. The highest possible score is 84 and the lowest possible score is 12. The higher the score the better working alliance towards therapist and client. | Pre-treatment and weekly while receiving treatment. Once a week for up to 10 weeks of treatment for CBT-T and up to 25 weeks of treatment for CBT-E. | |
| Secondary | Change in Depression symptoms | Assess via the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9; Kroenke, Spitzer, & Williams, 2001). The highest possible score is 27 and the lowest possible score is 0. The lower the score the less depression symptoms. | Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E), 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E | |
| Secondary | Change in anxiety symptoms | Assess via the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire (Spitzer, Kroenke, Williams, & Lowe, 2006). The highest possible score is 21 and the lowest possible score is 0. The lower the score the less anxiety symptoms. | Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E), 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E | |
| Secondary | Change in Loss of Control over Eating | Assessed using the Loss of Control over Eating Scale-Brief (LOCES-B; Latner et al., 2014). The brief version of the LOCES is a 7-item measure used to assess severity of loss of control over eating. Example items include "I continued to eat past the point when I wanted to stop" and "I felt I could not do anything other than eat." Items are scored on 5-point Likert scale ranging from 1=never to 5=Always. 7 is the lowest possible score and 35 is the highest possible score. The lower the score the better as this indicates better control over eating. The higher the score the worse as this indicates the inability to control eating. | Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E), 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E | |
| Secondary | Change in Motivation | Assessed via the Readiness and Motivation Questionnaire (Geller et al., 2013). Overall scores can be calculated to determine precontemplation, action, internality, and confidence for changing symptoms. Scores range from 0% to 100%, where higher scores indicate more of the construct. | Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E), 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E | |
| Secondary | Change in Impulsivity | Assessed via the the negative urgency scale (from the full version of the UPPS-P). Ranges from 1 strongly agree, 2 somewhat agree, 3 Disagree and 4 Disagree Strongly. 12 is the lowest possible score and 44 is the highest possible score. The lower the score the better as this indicates less impulsivity. The higher the score the worse, as this indicates high impulsivity. | Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E), 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E | |
| Secondary | Change in overall perceived quality of life | Assessed via the world health organization quality of life scale-brief (WHOQOL-BREF). The WHOQOL-BREF produces a quality of life profile. It is possible to derive 4 domains. 2 items are examined separately- question 1 asks about an individuals overall perception of quality of life and question 2 asks about an individuals overall perception of their health. The 4 domain scores denote an individuals perception of quality of life in each particular domain. Domain scores are scaled in a positive direction (higher scores denote higher quality of life). The mean score of items within each domain is used to calculate the domain score. Mean scores are then multiplied by 4 in order to make domain scores comparable with the scores in the WHOQOL-100 (full version of the scale). | Pre-Treatment; Post-Treatment (On average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E), 3, 6, 12, 24 months post treatment. Treatment is on Average 10 weeks for CBT-T and 25 weeks for CBT-E |
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