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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04575805
Other study ID # 120K044
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date September 15, 2020
Est. completion date March 1, 2021

Study information

Verified date August 2023
Source Dokuz Eylul University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

A factorial randomised controlled trial comparing internet-delivered combined cognitive bias modification intervention (iCBM-C) versus internet-delivered CBM-interpretation intervention (iCBM-I), internet-delivered CBM-attention intervention (iCBM-A) and wait-list control on obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptoms, OC-beliefs, OC-related interpretation and attention biases


Description:

Cognitive behavioral therapy, consisting of exposure and response prevention and cognitive restructuring, is still one of the most effective treatments for obsessive compulsive disorder. However, some patients do not fully benefit from the treatment. This condition results in more search for novel approaches that can contribute to effectiveness of standard treatments. In this regard, the use of technology-based methods in recent researches is noteworthy. Cognitive bias modification (CBM) is one of these current efforts of technology-based methods. CBM involves computerized tasks designed to modify some cognitive biases such as attention and interpretation associated with psychopathology, particularly anxiety disorders. Researches have generally demonstrated that cognitive bias modification can be effective way to alter cognitive biases and to reduce anxiety symptoms. In recent years, there have been also some studies to investigate the potential effects of cognitive bias modification for obsessive compulsive disorder.The results of both CBM-Interpretation (CBM-I) and CBM-Attention (CBM-A) studies have shown that it is an effective and promising method in reducing cognitive biases in obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). Although these studies are highly informative, they do not provide information about the causal role one bias has during the operation of another. In recent years, there has been a growing consensus that both biases arise from the same system, thereby, it is possible that modifying the system to alter one bias (e.g., attention), will also impact on the presence of the other bias.). In line with this notion, there are a couple of studies to test the effect of Combined Cognitive Bias Modification (CBM-C) which is combination of both CBM-A and CBM-I in intervention programs. The results of these studies are generally very positive. Although it is well established that attention bias and interpretation bias each have a key role in the development and maintenance of OCD, only one bias is targeted in CBM studies of OCD. Considering that a "combined cognitive bias" may contribute to the maintenance of several disorders, in order to try to maximise the potential clinical impact, the present research aims at exploring whether the combination of the CBM-A and CBM-I procedures would be more effective in reducing cognitive biases and OC symptoms than either alone. It is expected that internet-delivered CBM-C (iCBM-C) will result in superior treatment outcomes as indexed by internet-delivered CBM-I intervention only (iCBM-I), internet-delivered CBM-A intervention only (iCBM-A), and wait-list control (WLC).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 94
Est. completion date March 1, 2021
Est. primary completion date March 1, 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 40 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Fluent in written and spoken Turkish - Daily access to the internet by computer - No participation on any other interventional study or clinical trial - The presence of high obsessive compulsive symptoms (Turkish version of Padua Inventory-Washington State University Revision scores > 65.81). Exclusion Criteria: - The absence of high obsessive compulsive symptoms (Turkish version of Padua Inventory-Washington State University Revision scores < 65.81) - Suicidal ideation and severe psychotic symptoms (a rating of slight (i.e., 1) or greater on any item within the domain based on their responses to The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) Self-Rated Level 1 Cross-Cutting Symptom Scale-Adult Version - No access to the internet and computer - Color blindness - A current diagnosis of neurological and psychiatric disorder - Ongoing psychological/psychiatric treatment - Ongoing participation in other interventional study or clinical trial

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Internet-delivered Combined Cognitive Bias Modification (iCBM-C)
The iCBM-C is online CBM intervention which is the combination of iCBM-I and iCBM-A interventions for obsessive-compulsive symptoms delivered in eight sessions, twice per week for 4 weeks. The presentation order of the two intervention components will be counterbalanced to allow exploration of any order effects. Thereby, half of the participants in iCBM-C group will complete the iCBM-A task followed by iCBM-I, while the other half will complete the iCBM-I task followed by iCBM-A during each session.
Internet-delivered Cognitive Bias Modification-Interpretation (iCBM-I)
The iCBM-I is online CBM intervention for obsessive-compulsive symptoms comprised of delivery of OCD related scenarios taking place over eight sessions, twice per week for 4 weeks.
Internet-delivered Cognitive Bias Modification-Attention (iCBM-A)
The iCBM-A is online CBM intervention for obsessive-compulsive symptoms comprised of delivery of the modified dot-probe task taking place over eight sessions, twice per week for 4 weeks.

Locations

Country Name City State
Turkey Dokuz Eylul University Izmir

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Dokuz Eylul University The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Turkey, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Feedback Form Questionnaire Measure of intervention acceptability and credibility. As well as items that are rated on continuous scales, there are open-ended questions to provide feedback on aspects they found helpful, unhelpful, liked, disliked and general improvements. post-intervention at week 4
Primary Change in Padua Inventory-Washington State University Revision Self-report questionnaire of obsessive compulsive symptoms composed of 39 items on a 5-point scale. Total score ranges from 0 to 156. Higher scores indicate greater severity of obsessive-compulsive symptoms (worse outcome). Screen, Baseline (pre-intervention), post-intervention at week 4, 1-month follow-up
Primary Change in Obsessive Beliefs Questionnaire-44 Self-report questionnaire of maladaptive obsessive-compulsive beliefs composed of 44 items on a 7-point scale. Total score ranges from 44 to 308. Higher score indicates that the individual has more maladaptive obsessive-compulsive beliefs (worse outcome). Baseline (pre-intervention), post-intervention at week 4, 1-month follow-up
Primary Change in OC bias index Measure of interpretation biases. It is a computerized task that requires participants to read and imagine themselves in 10 OC-relevant test scenarios and 10 non OC-relevant scenarios with a title and missing letter in the final word of the sentence. Participants are then provided with a recognition rating form where they see the title of only the 10 OC-relevant scenarios in which they had previously imagined themselves. Each title corresponds with four different interpretations; target bias (OC-Positive and OC-Negative), and foil bias (Foil Positive and Foil Negative). Participants are asked to rate (on a 4-point scale) each sentence independently in terms of how similar each interpretation option is to the meaning of the scenario they had previously read. Target and Foil Bias Index scores are calculated by subtracting ratings for negative items from ratings for positive items. A positive score indicates that the individual has more OC-positive interpretations (better outcome). Baseline (pre-intervention), post-intervention at week 4
Primary Change in dot-probe task Measure of attention biases. Participants are presented 48 trials comprising all combinations of probe type ("?" or "?"), probe position (top or bottom), and picture type (neutral or threat). Each trial begins with the presentation of a central fixation cross for 500 ms. The cross is then replaced by a picture pair presented in the center of the screen for 500ms. After 500 ms, both stimuli disappear and a probe is shown in the location of one of the stimuli. Participants are instructed to indicate as quickly as possible which probe was shown via using keyboardResponse latencies are averaged to provide a single mean reaction time score for each participant. Scores are calculated by subtracting response latencies for trials in which the probe replaces threat stimuli from response latencies for trials in which the probe replaces neutral stimuli. subtracting the average. A negative bias score indicates an attention bias away from threat-related pictures (better outcome). Baseline (pre-intervention), post-intervention at week 4
Secondary Change in Depression Anxiety Stress Scale-21 Self-report questionnaire of the negative emotional states of depression, anxiety and stress composed of 21 questions on a 4-point scale. There are three subscales; (1) depression, (2) anxiety, and (3) stress. There are seven items in each of the subscales; the score of which ranges from 0 to 21. Higher scores indicate greater depression, anxiety anda stress (worse outcome). Baseline (pre-intervention), post-intervention at week 4, 1-month follow-up
Secondary Change in Positive and Negative Affect Schedule Self-report questionnaire of positive and negative affect composed of 20 items with 10 positive and 10 negative affective descriptors on a 5-point scale. The positive and negative affect scales each have a potential range of 10-50. Higher scores on positive affect scale indicate higher positive affect (better outcome) whereas Higher scores on negative affect scale indicate higher negative affect (worse outcome). Baseline (pre-intervention), post-intervention at week 4, 1-month follow-up
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