Psychosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Examining the Effectiveness of Cognitive Remediation in a Supported Education Setting
Verified date | June 2014 |
Source | Centre for Addiction and Mental Health |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Canada: Ethics Review Committee |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this study is to determine whether cognitive remediation as an adjunct to supported education, will result in improved cognitive functioning, symptoms, and performance in academic domains for persons with psychosis compared to supported education given alone.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 37 |
Est. completion date | July 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | July 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Enrollment in the George Brown Redirection Through Education program. - A DSM-IV chart diagnosis of schizophrenia or other psychotic condition - Stable use of medications for at least 3 months without plans of changing medications. - Proficiency in English. Exclusion Criteria: - a psychiatric history of mental retardation, brain injury, or other neurological condition. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Centre for Addiction and Mental Health | Toronto | Ontario |
Canada | George Brown College | Toronto | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health | George Brown College |
Canada,
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* Note: There are 31 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Completion of Academic Semesters | During the study period, course instructors provided information as to whether participants had completed or withdrawn from academic semester 1 and 2. This data was used to determine whether completion of academic semesters might be explained by attending cognitive remediation alongside supported education. At the end of the each semester, course instructors notified the research team as to whether participants had completed or not completed the academic semester. The unit of measure, 'course completed' refers to the completion of the required number of courses in that academic semester to progress through to the next semester. | The end of the semester 1 (3 months following baseline) and semester 2 (6 months following baseline) | No |
Secondary | Positive and Negative Symptoms Scale (PANSS) Score at 3 Months | Symptoms of psychosis will be assessed using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. The 30 item scale is comprised of 3 subscales measuring positive, negative and general psychopathology symptoms. Each item is scored using 7 anchoring criteria; 1=absent, 2=minimal, 3=mild, 4=moderate, 5=moderate severe, 6=severe, 7=extreme. Scores for the positive scale range from 7-49, the negative scale from 7-49, and general psychopathology 16-112, with total summed scores ranging from 30-210. 95>high, 75-95 medium and <75 low symptomology. | 3 months following baseline | No |
Secondary | The Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale Score at 3 Months | The Rosenberg Self Esteem Scale measures self esteem. This is a ten item, four point Likert scale with scores ranging from strongly agree to strongly disagree. Scores can range from 0-30. Total sum scores between 15 and 25 are within normal range; with scores below 15 suggest low self-esteem. | 3 months following Baseline | No |
Secondary | The Positive and Negative Symptoms Scale (PANSS) Score at 6 Months | Symptoms of psychosis will be assessed using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. The 30 item scale is comprised of 3 subscales measuring positive, negative and general psychopathology symptoms. Each item is scored using 7 anchoring criteria; 1=absent, 2=minimal, 3=mild, 4=moderate, 5=moderate severe, 6=severe, 7=extreme. Scores for the positive scale range from 7-49, the negative scale from 7-49, and general psychopathology 16-112, with total summed scores ranging from 30-210. 95>high, 75-95 medium and <75 low symptomology. | 6 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale Score at 6 Months | The Rosenberg Self Esteem Scale measures self esteem. This is a ten item, four point Likert scale with scores ranging from strongly agree to strongly disagree. Scores can range from 0-30. Total sum scores between 15 and 25 are within normal range; with scores below 15 suggest low self-esteem. | 6 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The California Verbal Learning Test at 3 Months | Verbal learning and memory will be assessed with the California Verbal Learning Test. A 9 word list is read to the participant (List A). Participants are asked to immediately free recall List A over 4 trials, then recall after a distractor task (short delay), then after a long delay.In the cued recall section, participants are asked to recall by category. In the long delay yes/no recognition, participants are asked to recall List A items out of a 27 word list. Higher repetitions and intrusions reveal greater impairment. | 3 months following Baseline Assessment | No |
Secondary | The California Verbal Learning Test at 6 Months | Verbal learning and memory will be assessed with the California Verbal Learning Test. A 9 word list is read to the participant (List A). Participants are asked to immediately free recall List A over 4 trials, then recall after a distractor task (short delay), then after a long delay.In the cued recall section, participants are asked to recall by category. In the long delay yes/no recognition, participants are asked to recall List A items out of a 27 word list. Higher repetitions and intrusions reveal greater impairment. | 6 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Trail Making Test Part A at 3 Months | The Trail Making Test Part A is a test involving using lines to connect numbers, it will be used to assess scanning ability and psychomotor speed. For this timed test, participants are scored by the number of seconds taken to complete the task, with high scores revealing greater impairment. | 3 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Trail Making Test Part A at 6 Months | The Trail Making Test Part A is a test involving using lines to connect numbers, it will be used to assess scanning ability and psychomotor speed. For this timed test, participants are scored by the number of seconds taken to complete the task, with high scores revealing greater impairment. | 6 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Digit Span Subtest of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale - III at 3 Months | Short term memory will be evaluated with the digit span subtest of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III. Participants are asked to recall a sequence of numbers, starting with 2 and increasing to a sequence of 9 numbers. If the participant repeats the sequence correctly they score a one, if incorrect then score a zero. There are two lists, one to be repeated forwards and the other backwards. The total score is a sum of sequences recalled correctly. | 3 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Digit Span Subtest of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale - III at 6 Months | Short term memory will be evaluated with the digit span subtest of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III. Participants are asked to recall a sequence of numbers, starting with 2 and increasing to a sequence of 9 numbers. If the participant repeats the sequence correctly they score a one, if incorrect then score a zero. There are two lists, one to be repeated forwards and the other backwards. The total score is a sum of sequences recalled correctly. | 6 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Trail Making Test Part B at 3 Months | The Trail Making Test Part B assesses executive function. Trail Making Part B is similar to Part A but is a more challenging task because it requires subjects to connect consecutively numbered and lettered circles by alternating between the 2 sequences. For this timed test, participants are scored by the number of seconds taken to complete the task, with high scores revealing greater impairment. | 3 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Trail Making Part B at 6 Months | The Trail Making Test Part B assesses executive function. Trail Making Part B is similar to Part A but is a more challenging task because it requires subjects to connect consecutively numbered and lettered circles by alternating between the 2 sequences. For this timed test, participants are scored by the number of seconds taken to complete the task, with high scores revealing greater impairment. | 6 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Wisconsin Card Sorting Test at 3 Months | The WCST is a commonly used test of executive functioning that measures cognitive flexibility and problem solving skills. The 'number of categories' measures the number of correct responses. The percentage of perseverative errors provides the concentration of perseverative errors in relation to the overall test performance. The percentage conceptual level response provides the percentage of consecutive correct responses in runs of 3 or more. | 3 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Wisconsin Card Sorting Test at 3 Months | The Wcst is a commonly used test of executive functioning that measures cognitive flexibility and problem solving skills. The 'number of categories' measures the number of correct responses. The percentage of perseverative errors provides the concentration of perseverative errors in relation to overall test performance. The percentage conceptual level response provides the percentage of consecutive correct responses in runs of 3 or more. | 3 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Wisconsin Card Sorting Task at 6 Months | The WCST is a commonly used test of executive functioning that measures cognitive flexibility and problem solving skills. The 'number of categories' measures the number of correct responses. The percentage of perseverative errors provides the concentration of perseverative errors in relation to the overall test performance. The percentage conceptual level response provides the percentage of consecutive correct responses in runs of 3 or more. | 6 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Wisconsin Card Sorting Task at 6 Months | The WCST is a commonly used test of executive functioning that measures cognitive flexibility and problem solving skills. The 'number of categories' measures the number of correct responses. The percentage of perseverative errors provides the concentration of perseverative errors in relation to overall test performance. The percentage conceptual level response provides the percentage of consecutive correct responses in runs of 3 or more. | 6 months following baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Digit Vigilance Test at 3 Months | The Digit Vigilance test measures sustained attention/vigilance. Participants are asked to cross out either 6s or 9s which appear randomly within 59 rows of 35 single digits. Scores are calculated for Total Time and Total Errors, with higher scores indicating greater impairment. | 3 months following Baseline assessment | No |
Secondary | The Digit Vigilance Test at 6 Months | The Digit Vigilance test measures sustained attention/vigilance. Participants are asked to cross out either 6s or 9s which appear randomly within 59 rows of 35 single digits. Scores are calculated for Total Time and Total Errors, with higher scores indicating greater impairment. | 6 months following baseline assessment | No |
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