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Clinical Trials/NCT05410769
NCT05410769
Unknown
Not Applicable

Compassionate Mind Training for Parkinson Patients and Caregivers

Neuromed IRCCS0 sites60 target enrollmentJuly 2022

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Parkinson Disease
Sponsor
Neuromed IRCCS
Enrollment
60
Primary Endpoint
Compassion Mind Training online
Last Updated
3 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a chronic and progressive neurodegenerative disease of the central nervous system. Second only to Alzheimer's in incidence on the population, Parkinson's disease has a negative impact on the quality of life of both patients and caregivers. Despite the prevailing attention to motor symptoms, such as bradykinesia, tremor and rigidity, the typical Parkinsonian symptom includes a wide range of non-motor symptoms that invalidate various aspects of the patient's autonomy, cognitive, behavior and mood that impact on patients' quality of life and that of caregivers.

Detailed Description

Non-motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease are classified in sensory, autonomic, behavioral, cognitive, sleep and psychic disorders. The most frequently presented neuropsychiatric symptoms are anxiety, depression, apathy, and impulsivity. Although there are many false beliefs that patients often construct about their disease, PD patients still maintain a certain lucidity throughout the duration of the disease and its degeneration, improving the anxious-depressive symptoms. Psychic disorders can affect the patient's awareness of self-efficacy and self-regulation, as well as decision making capacity, mechanisms connected with dopaminergic circuits, the main target of PD neurodegeneration. Parallel to the onset of symptoms in the patient, there is a great involvement of the caregivers who, aggravated by the emotional and welfare burden, develop over time stress, burden and burnout syndromes. The quality of life of caregivers undergo an objective impoverishment attributable to the inevitable alterations of free time and social relationships, in addition to a clinical psychophysical outcome. Although there are numerous effective pharmaco-therapeutic approaches for motor symptoms, still little attention is paid to the prevention and treatment of neuropsychiatric symptoms. Although there are still few studies, a new perspective of integrated care has gain attention due to the advantage of being able to be adapted to the needs and characteristics of the individual patient, enabling to choose the complementary / integrated therapy modality that best suits personal needs. Within psychology, mindfulness practices such as MBSR Mindfulness protocols for stress have been successfully applied in different settings and on both patients and caregivers. In the last twenty years, Compassion Focused Therapy practices increased within clinical practice, proving to be an adequate tool for improving psychophysical well-being. Compassion derives from the attachment behavioral system typical of mammals and allows the regulation of basic emotional systems. Compassion is divided into three streams: compassion towards oneself (Self-Compassion), compassion towards others and received from others. In particular, training one's Self Compassion through a Compassionate Mind Training can lead to proactive behaviors that improve the quality of one's life rather than enduring in a condition of passivity. Scientific research shows reliable data on the fact that awareness and compassion practices have physiological as well as psychological effects, acting on digestion, blood pressure, interbeat variability, but also on neuronal circuits. Recent studies correlate the levels of Compassion with a variation in HRV (heart rate variability) levels and has been suggested as a biomarker reliable in detecting the functions of the autonomic system. Variations in HRV values have been associated with autonomic dysfunctions, mood fluctuations and anxiety states in healthy subjects and subjects with generalized anxiety disorder. Due to the persistent and still present pandemic emergency, the psychological symptoms are exacerbated by the general state of anxiety and uncertainty as well as by the inability to access public services. The conception of this "online study" is to allow a considerable possibility of interconnection and exchange, much easier in terms of technological means and timing. This pilot study aims to propose for the first time an online Compassion (Compassion Program for Parkinson) protocol to a group of patients with PD and a group of caregivers and to evaluate its feasibility and effectiveness.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
July 2022
End Date
May 2023
Last Updated
3 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Neuromed IRCCS
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Nicola Modugno

Principal Investigator

Neuromed IRCCS

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • PD diagnosis according to UK Parkinson's Disease Society Brain Bank Clinical Diagnostic Criteria (UKPDS)
  • Ability to provide written informed consent
  • Age between 18 and 80 years (inclusive)

Exclusion Criteria

  • cognitive impairment
  • Inability to provide written informed consent
  • any cardiological condition/drugs that alter the heartbeat
  • Diagnosis of other concomitant neurodegenerative disease or psychiatric diaseases

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Compassion Mind Training online

Time Frame: 6 weeks

Patients and Caregivers report on the Compassion Scale (Gilbert P. Compassion-focused therapy: Preface and introduction for special section. Br J Clin Psychol. 2014 Mar;53(1):1-5. doi: 10.1111/bjc.12045. PMID: 24588759.). CMT is a 6-session program, each lasting about 2 hours, which run on a weekly basis. The program is organized across 3 modules: 1) Our mind according to a compassion-based approach (to provide insight into the evolved and socially shaped mind and the affect regulation systems); 2) Compassionate mind training (understanding and cultivating the attributes and competencies of compassion in its three flows, and addressing its fears); and 3) final session (revising key information and practices and its application to the online routines).

Secondary Outcomes

  • Anxiety state(week 0, week 9, week 12)
  • Change from baseline in isolated heart rate variability at 12 weeks post CMT(week 0, week 9, week 12)
  • Change in quality of life(week 0, week 9, week 12)
  • 2. Beck Depression Inventory - II (BDI-II)(week 0, week 9, week 12)

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