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Clinical Trials/NCT02502227
NCT02502227
Completed
Not Applicable

Mechanisms of Mindfulness Training and Stress Reduction

Carnegie Mellon University3 sites in 1 country137 target enrollmentJuly 2015

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Psychological Stress
Sponsor
Carnegie Mellon University
Enrollment
137
Locations
3
Primary Endpoint
Daily life stress assessed via Ecological Momentary Assessment
Status
Completed
Last Updated
9 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

This study is a three-arm randomized controlled trial of a mindfulness stress reduction intervention, with the aim of dismantling the experience-monitoring and nonjudgmental-acceptance elements of mindfulness programs to determine the active treatment component. In addition to enhancing understanding of mechanisms underlying the effects of mindfulness interventions, identifying the therapeutic constituent(s) could inform development of targeted interventions as well as provide strategies to optimize adherence.

Detailed Description

There is a growing body of randomized controlled trial (RCT) evidence indicating that mindfulness training interventions may reduce stress and improve stress-related disease outcomes. Yet little is known about the underlying active training mechanisms of mindfulness training. Although it is generally believed that mindfulness training interventions foster a capacity to monitor and accept present moment experience, debate currently focuses on whether it is the capacity to both monitor and non-judgmentally accept experience that drives the salutary effects observed in mindfulness training interventions. This project will test these putative active mechanisms by comparing two different types of mindfulness meditation training programs. N=135 stressed community adults will be recruited and randomized to either two different types of 8-week Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) programs or a No Treatment Control (assessment only) comparison condition. Participants will complete 3 days of daily experience sampling (Ecological Momentary Assessment) immediately before and after the 8-week intervention period to measure attentional control and stress perceptions in daily life. In order to measure psychological and HPA-axis stress reactivity to a controlled stressor, participants will also complete a standardized acute stress challenge task (the Trier Social Stress Test, TSST) immediately following the 3-day post-intervention assessment period. This project provides the first dismantling study of mindfulness meditation training, it utilizes cutting-edge daily experience sampling of real life stress (using EMA) and stress biomarkers (salivary cortisol), and will provide important initial information for designing more effective (and efficient) mindfulness training interventions in at-risk stressed patient populations.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
July 2015
End Date
January 2017
Last Updated
9 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • English speaking
  • Moderate- to high-stress
  • Owns an internet-enabled smart phone

Exclusion Criteria

  • Diagnosis of chronic mental (e.g. recurrent depression, schizophrenia, personality disorder) or physical disease (e.g. cancer, HIV, diabetes)
  • Hospitalization in past 3 months
  • Medication use that interferes with cortisol activity (e.g. corticosteroids)
  • Current oral contraceptive use
  • Pregnancy
  • Current antibiotic, antiviral, or antimicrobial treatment
  • Travel outside the country within the past 6 months to any country on the Center for Disease Control travel alert list
  • Recreational drug use, excessive alcohol or tobacco use
  • Significant experience with or daily practice of mindfulness meditation or related mind-body practice

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Daily life stress assessed via Ecological Momentary Assessment

Time Frame: change from baseline 3-day period to post-intervention 3-day period, which is an average of 12 weeks

Secondary Outcomes

  • Daily life state attention and acceptance assessed via Ecological Momentary Assessment(change from baseline 3-day period to post-intervention 3-day period, which is an average of 12 weeks)
  • Sustained attention measured by the Dichotic Listening Task(change from baseline to post-intervention, which is an average of 14 weeks)
  • Sustained inattentional blindness measured by the Inattentional Blindness Task(post-intervention only)
  • Subjective stress in response to social evaluative threat(assessed at post-intervention, which is an average of 14 weeks)
  • Blood Pressure reactivity to social evaluative threat (systolic and diastolic blood pressure)(assessed at post-intervention, which is an average of 14 weeks, at 2-minute intervals during session)
  • Salivary Cortisol in response to social evaluative threat(assessed at post-intervention, which is an average of 14, at time 0, and 25, 35, and 60 minutes post-stress challenge)

Study Sites (3)

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