MedPath

Hoarding Older Adults

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Compulsive Hoarding
Interventions
Behavioral: Case Management
Behavioral: Cognitive Rehabilitation and Exposure Therapy for Compulsive Hoarding
Registration Number
NCT01227057
Lead Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development
Brief Summary

The purpose of this investigation is to examine treatment outcome of a new intervention for hoarding in older adults compared to standard case management for hoarding. The new intervention combines exposure therapy and cognitive remediation.

Detailed Description

Research has shown that hoarding disorder (HD) is debilitating chronic and progressive condition that has significant public health implications. Older adults represent the largest group of HD suffers due to increasing severity with age. Often, Veterans with HD are seen in the VA system and the status of their hoarding is never assessed. Providers are treating patients for other health and social service issues yet missing an important source of disability and distress. This insidious, often undetected condition leads to greater medical and social disability and is costly to the VA system as patients continue to decompensate. When HD is even detected, patients in the VA receive indefinite case management and inadequate treatment. The cases the investigators know about have caused significant financial burden to the investigators' system. Most importantly, HD causes significant impairment and poor quality of life for the Veterans, particularly older Veterans. Unfortunately, the investigators know nothing about how to treat late life HD. Nor do the investigators know how neurocognitive features impact treatment response, which the investigators strongly suspect influence treatment outcome. HD is a potentially treatable source of disability in the VA system - one that the VA must research and treat. This study represents the first randomized controlled trial of a novel intervention for the treatment of HD in older Veterans. The main objective of this proposal is to further refine and test a new treatment for hoarding in older Veterans (age 60-85) which will be accomplished through a series of treatment development phases (case series, open labeled trial) and a randomized controlled trial. The new treatment (Cognitive Remediation and Exposure Therapy for hoarding; CogRET) is hypothesis driven and based on late life anxiety literature, consultation with mentors, results of the pilot study using a standard cognitive-behavioral intervention, and several case series that will be completed prior to the start of the Career Development Award (CDA). The first draft of CogRET is complete and is currently being used with several case studies. The research and training plan is divided into 5 phases; 1) training and preparation 2) training, further case studies using CogRET, further modification of CogRET 3)training, open label trial of CogRET, further modification of CogRET 4) randomized controlled trial and 5) presenting, publishing, dissemination of results and submission of a VA Merit grant. Primary hypotheses include 1) when randomized to CogRET, older Veterans with HD will show significant decreases in acquisition, difficulty discarding, and excessive clutter compared to those randomized to case management and 2) executive functioning (EF) is a significant moderator of treatment response. Other mediators and moderates of treatment response (psychiatric, medical, demographic, etc.) will be explored.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
58
Inclusion Criteria

Participants must be between the ages of 60 - 85 years old and meet clinical criteria for Compulsive Hoarding (CH) developed by the Steketee and Frost (2000) research group. These criteria include:

  • significant amount of clutter in active living spaces
  • the urge to collect, buy, or acquire things
  • an extreme reluctance to part with items
  • clutter accumulation that causes distress or interferes with functioning
  • symptom duration of at least 6 months
  • the reluctance to part with items is not accounted for by other psychiatric conditions.

To be enrolled, patients must have:

  • a score of 20 or greater on the University of California, Los Angeles Hoarding Severity Scale (UHSS)
  • 40 or greater on the Savings Inventory-Revised (SI-R)
  • severity rating of 4 or higher on the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule (ADIS-IV) rating scales for clutter and difficulty discarding
  • and diagnosis confirmed at a consensus conference including at least two licensed professionals with expertise in CH (myself and at least one mentor).
Read More
Exclusion Criteria
  • Individuals with moderate to severe cognitive deficits (scores below 23 on the MMSE) will be excluded.
  • Prospective participants must not have active substance abuse problems.
  • Participants will also be excluded if they are currently in other forms of psychotherapy.
  • Participants must have no change in any psychotropic medications for at least three months prior to the initial assessment.
  • Patients with current psychosis or mania will be excluded.
  • Mood and anxiety disorders are permitted as long as compulsive hoarding is the primary diagnosis.
  • Participants will are not eligible if they have active suicidal ideation, those participants will be given immediate medical or mental health attention.
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Arm 2: Case ManagementCase ManagementCase management
Arm 1: Cognitive RehabilitationCognitive Rehabilitation and Exposure Therapy for Compulsive HoardingCognitive rehabilitation and exposure therapy for hoarding
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Hoarding Symptom Severity as Measured by the Saving Inventory-Revised (SI-R) at 6 Months6 months

Hoarding symptom severity (primary outcome) will be measured using the Savings Inventory-Revised (SI-R), a 23-item self-report measure used to assess common hoarding symptoms. Subtests include excessive clutter, compulsive acquisition, and difficulty discarding. The SI-R has demonstrated good internal consistency, divergent validity, concurrent validity, divergent validity, test-retest reliability in clinical samples with hoarding. The total score will be used for analyses. The range of the total score is 0-92, with higher scores indicating worse hoarding severity.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Executive Functioning as Measured by the Delis Kaplan Executive Functioning System (D-KEFS) at 6 Months6 months

The D-KEFS Trail Making Test Condition 4: Number-Letter Switching Scaled Score was used to assess executive functioning. Scaled scores range from 1-19. Higher scores represent less impairment.

The Activities of Daily Living in Hoarding (ADL-H)6 months

The Activities of Daily Living in Hoarding (ADL-H) was used to assess functional impairment. Higher scores represent increased impairment. Mean score is 1-75, with higher scores indicating worse impairment due to hoarding.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, CA

🇺🇸

San Diego, California, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath