DEPENAS: A Psychosocial Intervention for Patients With Medically Unexplained Symptoms
- Conditions
- Somatoform Disorders
- Registration Number
- NCT00130988
- Lead Sponsor
- Basque Health Service
- Brief Summary
General practitioners play a key role in the management of one of the most complex problems facing the health care system: the large group of patients with unexplained medical symptoms, but effective treatment strategies are lacking in primary care. The purpose of this study is to compare a new intervention delivered by the general practitioner versus re-attribution of symptoms, which is the currently recommended best treatment for patients with high levels of medically unexplained physical symptoms.
- Detailed Description
Patients with unexplained medical symptoms are frequently referred to multiple specialists, including psychiatrists, which often prove ineffective. General practitioners play a key role in the management of these patients and techniques of re-attribution of symptoms have been proposed for general practice, but they have only shown partial results in patients with somatised mental disorders who do not believe that their symptoms have a completely physical cause.
Based on the analysis of psychosocial interventions carried out in general practice over the last 10 years by the principal investigator (JMA), the investigators have empirically structured a new sort of intervention, called DEPENAS. This new intervention integrates different psychotherapeutic models. It starts with the attribution of symptoms to a hormonal imbalance (biological aspect) providing a tangible and exculpatory explanation of the patients' symptoms and follows with normalization/justification of any thought/behavior as a logical consequence derived from the personal and family cycle (systemic model). It ends with a proposal for change: to adapt these thoughts, many of them infantile, to objectives of adulthood (transactional model) using cognitive and behavioral techniques in patients ready for change, or paradoxical techniques for non-prepared subjects.
The OBJECTIVE of this randomized clinical trial was to assess the efficacy of this new intervention carried out by family physicians on patients' self-perceived health related quality of life (SF-36). Each doctor randomly allocated to the new intervention group performed six 30-min programmed and standardized sessions with four patients who presented multiple chronic physical symptoms that remained medically unexplained. Health related quality of life was measured at baseline (1 month before starting therapy), after 3 months of the first appointment (once both study groups had completed five sessions), after 8 months (once the intervention was finished) and at 12 months after enrollment.
They will be COMPARED to patients of family doctors randomly assigned to the control group. These doctors also performed six 30-min programmed and standardized sessions, using in this case "re-attribution techniques": reception and explicit acceptance of the patient's symptoms, examination of emotional and psychosocial problems and establishment of a link of the symptoms with identified emotional problems. Patients' outcomes observed in both groups will be compared on an intention to treat basis, and random-effects longitudinal models will be used to estimate the effect of the intervention on quality of life evolution.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 156
- Patients between 18 and 65 years of age, who had presented (over the course of their lives) six or more medically unexplained somatic symptoms for female subjects and four or more for male subjects
- At least one of the symptoms would have continued to be present during the last year
- Dementia
- Psychotic disorders
- Drug dependence
- Bipolar disorder
- Eating disorders
- Malingering patients
- Patients engaged in psychotherapy
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Health related quality of life
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method