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Clinical Trial Summary

The aim of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to assess whether mindfulness training reduces early stage internalizing problems such as anxiety, worrying, and low mood in help-seeking youth. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: 1) mindfulness + care-as-usual (CAU) or 2) CAU-only. The mindfulness program was developed specifically for youth with internalizing problems. The 8-week training program consists of weekly 2-hour sessions, with mindfulness, yoga, and mindful active movement in each session. In addition, participants are invited to practice at home in between sessions for around 20 minutes per day. Data will be collected at baseline (T0), end-of-treatment (T1) (or 2-3 months after baseline for the CAU-only group), and at 2 months follow-up (T2) and 6 months follow-up (T3). Measurements will include: - Self-report questionnaires (T0, T1, T2, T3) - Psychiatric diagnostic interview (T0, T3) - MRI scans (T0, T1) - Cognitive tasks (T0, T1) The primary outcome parameter is the total number of internalizing problems measured with the Adult Self Report (ASR) at end-of-treatment. The effect of mindfulness training (mindfulness + CAU vs. CAU-only) on internalizing problems at T1 will be assessed using a linear-mixed effects model.


Clinical Trial Description

The main aim of this study is to assess whether mindfulness training reduces early-stage mental problems such as anxiety, worrying, and low mood in help-seeking youth. Background The majority of mental illnesses (75%) emerge before the age of 25 and many have a life-long impact on health and functioning. Early intervention may be more effective than treatment required in later stages. The early stage of mental illness is typically characterized by mild, non-specific complaints such as anxiety, worrying, and low mood. These "internalizing problems" are increasingly common in youth and associated with various adverse outcomes including mental illness development and therefore represent an important target for early intervention. Internalizing problems are observed in the early stages of various mental disorders. Help-seeking youth with internalizing problems may thus reflect an early stage of mental illness development. Mindfulness training is effective in the treatment of a range of mental disorders including major depression and may promote resilience by acting on underlying mechanisms. In mindfulness training, participants learn to focus and sustain attention on present-moment experiences in a non-judgmental manner. This process fosters awareness of automatic patterns of behavior and improves cognitive flexibility and emotion regulation. Research shows that a network of brain regions involved in the processing of self-related information (i.e., Default Mode Network; DMN) is hyperactive in people with serious mental illness. Individuals who are at risk for depression are prone to interpret experiences in a negative, self-critical manner. MRI studies have shown that mindfulness reduces activity of the DMN during processing of self-relevant information. Mindfulness training may thus normalize abnormalities in self-referential processing and thereby reduce risk of mental illness development. Study design This study is a Randomized Controlled Trial. Participants are randomly assigned to one of two groups: 1) the intervention group, who receives mindfulness training in addition to care-as-usual (CAU) and 2) the control group, who receives CAU-only. Research team members who perform clinical follow-up assessments are blind to group-allocation. Data is collected at 4 time points: baseline (T0), end-of-treatment (T1) (within 1 month after completing the mindfulness training intervention group, and approximately 3 months after the baseline measurement for the control group), 2-months follow-up (T2), and 6-months follow-up (T3). Assessments include clinical interviews, self-report questionnaires, and cognitive tasks and MRI scans (at baseline and end-of-treatment only). The main outcome is the total number of internalizing problems at T1 as measured with the Adult Self Report (ASR). Secondary data include self-report questionnaires on comorbid symptoms, rumination, self-esteem, experiential avoidance, mindfulness skills, self-compassion, social and emotional well-being and resilience. MRI and experimental task data are acquired to assess (changes in) underlying neurocognitive mechanisms and neural correlates. MRI scans are acquired at baseline and T1 and include an anatomical scan, diffusion-MRI scan, and resting-state fMRI scan. In addition, the Self-Referent Encoding Task (SRET), which measures biases for positive and negative self-related information, is acquired in the scanner. Furthermore, participants perform an aversive go/no-go task to measure escape/avoidance behavior in the context of aversive cues. In addition, participants are invited to perform a Pavlovian-to-Instrumental Transfer (PIT) task and Control Belief Updating (CBU) task online. The PIT task measures how Pavlovian biases influence instrumental approach and withdrawal behavior. The CBU measures the extent to which one can flexibly update beliefs about the controllability of their environment. Study population Help-seeking youth (16-25 years of age) will be recruited from primary (mental) health care providers, including student psychologists, general practitioners (GPs), and mental health nurse practitioners. As both internalizing problems and interest in mindfulness training are more common in women, an imbalance in sex (more women than men) is accepted. Sample size calculations to ensure adequate power to detect small to medium-sized group-differences in internalizing problems from baseline to T1, resulted in a required sample size of N = 155. Interventional treatment The mindfulness program used in the study is the Learning to Offset Stress (LOS; in Dutch: Leren Omgaan met Stress) program. This 8-week mindfulness training program was designed specifically for youth with internalizing problems. The program consists of weekly 2-hour sessions, with mindfulness exercises, yoga and mindful physical activity in each session, and daily at-home practice (~20 min). Care-as-usual Care-as-usual comprises all care from primary mental health care providers or secondary mental health services following referral. Primary mental health care typically involves supportive counseling and/or behavioral activation. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation The risks and discomfort associated with participation in this study are estimated as low. The main burden consists of repeated non-invasive assessments and MRI scanning, which may be uncomfortable for some participants. Hypothesis The main hypothesis is that mindfulness training + CAU relative to CAU-only will reduce internalizing problems at T1 as measured with the ASR. Hypotheses on cognitive and MRI data will be described in detail elsewhere (aspredicted.com). Briefly, it is hypothesized that higher internalizing problems at baseline will be associated with higher negativity bias in endorsement and recall of self-related information on the SRET, exaggerated escape and avoidance responses on the aversive go/no-go task, increased aversive Pavlovian influence over instrumental behavior on the PIT, and a bias towards reduced controllability on the CBU task and that these effects will be attenuated following mindfulness training (+CAU) as compared to CAU-only. ;


Study Design


NCT number NCT05916651
Study type Interventional
Source Radboud University Medical Center
Contact Guusje Collin, MD, PhD
Phone +31 24 30 98988
Email guusje.collin@radboudumc.nl
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date July 7, 2023
Completion date July 1, 2025