Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Clinical Trial
— OPTYCOfficial title:
Online PTSD Treatment for Young People and Carers - Case Series
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is prevalent and impairing in children and young
people. Effective face to face treatments exist, including Cognitive Therapy for PTSD
(CT-PTSD), developed by the researchers' group. However, few young people access effective
treatments.
The researchers are therefore developing a website and smart-phone App that will improve
accessibility of this treatment by allowing trained therapists to deliver CT-PTSD over the
internet (iCT) to young people (12-17 years old) with PTSD. This study aims to provide an
initial evaluation of iCT. This will be done by running an uncontrolled case series with 6
young people.
The objectives of the case series are to: to gauge acceptability of the programme to young
people, carers, and therapists; to measure adherence to the programme; to test the battery of
measures for acceptability; and to obtain estimates of clinical change.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 6 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | September 30, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 12 Years to 17 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Participant is aged 12-17 years old - Main presenting problem is PTSD and there is a not a co-morbid problem that would preclude treatment of PTSD. - PTSD symptoms related to a single trauma - Participant has access to compatible smartphone and larger computing device (e.g. laptop, desktop computer, iPad) with internet access. - Participant is proficient in speaking and writing in the English language, sufficient to participate in treatment without an interpreter. Exclusion Criteria: - Brain damage assessed by clinical interview with parents / carers - Intellectual disability assessed by clinical interview with parents / carers - Pervasive developmental disorder or neurodevelopmental disorder assessed by clinical interview with parents / carers - Other psychiatric diagnosis that requires treatment before PTSD, determined by clinical interview and questionnaires - Moderate to high risk to self assessed in clinical interview - Ongoing trauma-related threat assessed in clinical interview - Started treatment with psychotropic medication, or changed medication, within the last 2 months, assessed in clinical interview - Currently receiving another psychological treatment, assessed in interview - Have already received Trauma Focused CBT in relation to the same traumatic event that the young person is currently seeking treatment for. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | King's College London/ South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust | London | |
United Kingdom | University of East Anglia/ Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust | Norwich |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
King's College London | Medical Research Council, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust |
United Kingdom,
Foa EB, Johnson KM, Feeny NC, Treadwell KR. The child PTSD Symptom Scale: a preliminary examination of its psychometric properties. J Clin Child Psychol. 2001 Sep;30(3):376-84. — View Citation
Goodman R. Psychometric properties of the strengths and difficulties questionnaire. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2001 Nov;40(11):1337-45. — View Citation
McKinnon A, Smith P, Bryant R, Salmon K, Yule W, Dalgleish T, Dixon C, Nixon RD, Meiser-Stedman R. An Update on the Clinical Utility of the Children's Post-Traumatic Cognitions Inventory. J Trauma Stress. 2016 Jun;29(3):253-8. doi: 10.1002/jts.22096. Epub 2016 May 18. — View Citation
Perrin, S., Meiser-Stedman, R., & Smith, P. (2005). The Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES): validity as a screening instrument for PTSD. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 33(4), 487-498.
Pynoos, R. S., Weathers, F. W., Steinberg, A. M., Marx, B. P., Layne, C. M., Kaloupek, D. G., Schnurr, P. P., Keane, T. M., Blake, D. D., Newman, E., Nader, K. O., & Kriegler, J. A. (2015). Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5 - Child/Adolescent Version.
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | PTSD symptom scale: Clinician Administered PTSD Scale for Children and Adolescents (CAPS-CA-5, Pynoos et al., 2015) | Clinician Administered. The time period covered is the past month. Items are rated 0-4 based on frequency and severity of symptoms (0=absent, 1= mild, 2=moderate, 3 = severe, 4 = extreme). PTSD diagnostic status is determined by first dichotomizing each symptom as "present" (if the symptom severity is rated 2 or higher) or "absent" (rated 0 or 1). Items pertain to the 4 criterion of PTSD outlined in the DSM-V; criterion B (items 1-5), criterion C (items 6-7), criterion D (items 8-14) and criterion E (items 15-20). PTSD may be diagnosed if the young person has at least one criterion B, one criterion C, two criterion D and two criterion E symptoms and if the disturbance has lasted for more than one month and causes clinically significant distress or functional impairment. | Baseline | |
Primary | PTSD symptom scale: using the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale for Children and Adolescents (CAPS-CA-5, Pynoos et al., 2015) | Clinician Administered. The time period covered is the past month. Items are rated 0-4 based on frequency and severity of symptoms (0=absent, 1= mild, 2=moderate, 3 = severe, 4 = extreme). PTSD diagnostic status is determined by first dichotomizing each symptom as "present" (if the symptom severity is rated 2 or higher) or "absent" (rated 0 or 1). Items pertain to the 4 criterion of PTSD outlined in the DSM-V; criterion B (items 1-5), criterion C (items 6-7), criterion D (items 8-14) and criterion E (items 15-20). PTSD may be diagnosed if the young person has at least one criterion B, one criterion C, two criterion D and two criterion E symptoms and if the disturbance has lasted for more than one month and causes clinically significant distress or functional impairment. | post-intervention (at 4 months) | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Child Post Traumatic Stress Scale (CPSS-5; Foa et al. 2001) | A self-report questionnaire with 27 items relating to the past one month. The first 20 items evaluate the frequency and severity of PTSD symptoms. Items are rated on a 5-point scale (0= not at all, 1 = Baseline |
| |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Child Post Traumatic Cognitions Inventory (CPTCI, McKinnon et al 2016) | A self-report questionnaire with 10 items. The CPTCI measures PTSD symptoms since the traumatic event occurred, on a scale of 1-4 (1= don't agree at all, 2 = don't agree a bit, 3 = agree a bit, 4 = agree a lot). Scores range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 16 or above is considered clinically significant. | Baseline | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Baseline | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Child Post Traumatic Cognitions Inventory (CPTCI, McKinnon et al 2016) | A self-report questionnaire with 10 items. The CPTCI measures PTSD symptoms since the traumatic event occurred, on a scale of 1-4 (1= don't agree at all, 2 = don't agree a bit, 3 = agree a bit, 4 = agree a lot). Scores range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 16 or above is considered clinically significant. | Mid-Treatment (at 6 weeks) | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Child Post Traumatic Stress Scale (CPSS-5; Foa et al. 2001) | A self-report questionnaire with 27 items relating to the past one month. The first 20 items evaluate the frequency and severity of PTSD symptoms. Items are rated on a 5-point scale (0= not at all, 1 = Post-treatment (at 4 months) |
| |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Child Post Traumatic Cognitions Inventory (CPTCI, McKinnon et al 2016) | A self-report questionnaire with 10 items. The CPTCI measures PTSD symptoms since the traumatic event occurred, on a scale of 1-4 (1= don't agree at all, 2 = don't agree a bit, 3 = agree a bit, 4 = agree a lot). Scores range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 16 or above is considered clinically significant. | Post-treatment (at 4 months) | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Post-treatment (at 4 months) | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | 10-month follow up | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Child Post Traumatic Stress Scale (CPSS-5; Foa et al. 2001) | A self-report questionnaire with 27 items relating to the past one month. The first 20 items evaluate the frequency and severity of PTSD symptoms. Items are rated on a 5-point scale (0= not at all, 1 = 10-month follow up |
| |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Child Post Traumatic Cognitions Inventory (CPTCI, McKinnon et al 2016) | A self-report questionnaire with 10 items. The CPTCI measures PTSD symptoms since the traumatic event occurred, on a scale of 1-4 (1= don't agree at all, 2 = don't agree a bit, 3 = agree a bit, 4 = agree a lot). Scores range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 16 or above is considered clinically significant. | 10-month follow up | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 1 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 2 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 3 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 4 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 5 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 6 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 7 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 8 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 9 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 10 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 11 | |
Primary | PTSD symptoms: Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES; Perrin et al., 2005) | A self-report questionnaire with 8 items (4 measuring intrusions, 4 measuring avoidance). The items assess symptoms over the past 7 days on a 4-point scale (0=not at all, 1= rarely, 3=sometimes, 5=often). Intrusion sub-scale is the sum of items 1,3,6 and 7. Avoidance sub-scale is the sum of items 2,4,5 and 8. Scores can range from 0-40 with greater scores indicating greater symptom severity. A total score of 17 or higher indicates PTSD. | Week 12 | |
Primary | Acceptability of iCT: Qualitative interviews | Qualitative interviews with N=6 young people, their carers, and their therapists. | Post-Treatment (at 4 months) | |
Primary | Acceptability of iCT: Likert Scales | Young people will be asked to complete ratings of acceptability on a scale from 0 to 100. | Post-Treatment (at 4 months) | |
Primary | Adherence to online intervention: time spent logged in to programme | Time spent logged on to online programme in seconds:minutes:hours according to the device used (smartphone, tablet or computer). | up to week 12 | |
Primary | Adherence to online intervention: number of times logged on | The number of times a participant logs on to the online programme | up to week 12 | |
Primary | Adherence to online intervention: number of modules completed | The number of online modules the young person completes during the 12 week intervention | up to week 12 | |
Primary | Adherence to online intervention: number of phone calls between therapist and young person | The number of times the participant spoke to the therapist on the phone | up to week 12 | |
Primary | Adherence to online intervention: time spent on phone calls with the therapist | Time spent on phone calls with the therapist in seconds:minutes:hours | up to week 12 | |
Primary | Adherence to online intervention: number of messages exchanged with the therapist | Number of messages exchanged between the patient and the therapist | up to week 12 | |
Secondary | Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS-C; Chorpita & Ebesutani 2014): Measure of young person's anxiety and depression symptoms | A 47-item self-report questionnaire. Items are rated on a 4-point scale (0= never, 1 = sometimes, 2= often, 3 = always). The RCADS can be scored using spreadsheets available from the developer. The young person's school year must be entered (enter the year number according to the US grade system) and a 't-score' is calculated. A t-score of 70 or more is considered clinically significant. The greater the t-score the greater the symptoms. | Baseline | |
Secondary | Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS-P Chorpita & Ebesutani 2014): Measure of young person's anxiety and depression symptoms | A 47-item parent rated questionnaire. Items are rated on a 4-point scale (0= never, 1 = sometimes, 2= often, 3 = always). The RCADS-P can be scored using spreadsheets available from the developer. The young person's school year must be entered (enter the year number according to the US grade system) and a 't-score' is calculated. A t-score of 70 or more is considered clinically significant. The greater the t-score the greater the symptoms. | Baseline | |
Secondary | Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS-C; Chorpita & Ebesutani 2014): Measure of young person's anxiety and depression symptoms | A 47-item self-report questionnaire. Items are rated on a 4-point scale (0= never, 1 = sometimes, 2= often, 3 = always). The RCADS can be scored using spreadsheets available from the developer. The young person's school year must be entered (enter the year number according to the US grade system) and a 't-score' is calculated. A t-score of 70 or more is considered clinically significant. The greater the t-score the greater the symptoms. | post-treatment (at 4 months) | |
Secondary | Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS-P Chorpita & Ebesutani 2014): Measure of young person's anxiety and depression symptoms | A 47-item parent rated questionnaire. Items are rated on a 4-point scale (0= never, 1 = sometimes, 2= often, 3 = always). The RCADS-P can be scored using spreadsheets available from the developer. The young person's school year must be entered (enter the year number according to the US grade system) and a 't-score' is calculated. A t-score of 70 or more is considered clinically significant. The greater the t-score the greater the symptoms. | post-treatment (at 4 months) | |
Secondary | Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS-C; Chorpita & Ebesutani 2014): Measure of young person's anxiety and depression symptoms | A 47-item self-report questionnaire. Items are rated on a 4-point scale (0= never, 1 = sometimes, 2= often, 3 = always). The RCADS can be scored using spreadsheets available from the developer. The young person's school year must be entered (enter the year number according to the US grade system) and a 't-score' is calculated. A t-score of 70 or more is considered clinically significant. The greater the t-score the greater the symptoms. | at 10-month follow up | |
Secondary | Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS-P Chorpita & Ebesutani 2014): Measure of young person's anxiety and depression symptoms | A 47-item parent rated questionnaire. Items are rated on a 4-point scale (0= never, 1 = sometimes, 2= often, 3 = always). The RCADS-P can be scored using spreadsheets available from the developer. The young person's school year must be entered (enter the year number according to the US grade system) and a 't-score' is calculated. A t-score of 70 or more is considered clinically significant. The greater the t-score the greater the symptoms. | at 10-month follow up | |
Secondary | Strength & Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ-P; Goodman, 2001): Measure of young person's emotional and behavioural difficulties | Parent rated questionnaire with 25 items. Items are rated on a 3-point scale (0=not true, 1=somewhat true, 2= certainly true). There are 5 sub-scales each with scores ranging from 0-10. The total difficulties score is calculated by summing 4 of the sub-scales to give a score between 0-40. A total difficulties score of 17 or above is considered clinically significant. The greater the total score, the greater the difficulties experienced. | Baseline | |
Secondary | Strength & Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ-P; Goodman, 2001): Measure of young person's emotional and behavioural difficulties | Parent rated questionnaire with 25 items. Items are rated on a 3-point scale (0=not true, 1=somewhat true, 2= certainly true). There are 5 sub-scales each with scores ranging from 0-10. The total difficulties score is calculated by summing 4 of the sub-scales to give a score between 0-40. A total difficulties score of 17 or above is considered clinically significant. The greater the total score, the greater the difficulties experienced. | post-treatment (at 4 months) | |
Secondary | Strength & Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ-P; Goodman, 2001): Measure of young person's emotional and behavioural difficulties | Parent rated questionnaire with 25 items. Items are rated on a 3-point scale (0=not true, 1=somewhat true, 2= certainly true). There are 5 sub-scales each with scores ranging from 0-10. The total difficulties score is calculated by summing 4 of the sub-scales to give a score between 0-40. A total difficulties score of 17 or above is considered clinically significant. The greater the total score, the greater the difficulties experienced. | at 10-month follow up |
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