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RCT of the Clinical and Cost Effectiveness of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) Delivered Remotely Versus Treatment as Usual in Adolescents and Young Adults With Depression Who Repeatedly Self-harm

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Depression and Self-Harm
Interventions
Behavioral: Problem solving cognitive behaviour therapy (PS CBT)
Registration Number
NCT02377011
Lead Sponsor
University of Nottingham
Brief Summary

A randomized controlled trial to test the whether remote delivery of cognitive based therapy (CBT) is clinically and cost effective when compared to treatment as usual in adolescents and young adults with depression who self-harm.

Detailed Description

Self harm is one of the five leading causes of admission to acute hospital with rates increasing by nearly 50% from 2003-2009 (South West Public Health Observatory, 2012). Re-admission within 30 days is frequent. People who repeatedly self harm are at high risk for suicide and and as a result suicide, self-harm and crisis are priorities for CCGs and HWBs in the East Midlands.

The NICE Clinical Guideline 133 on longer-term treatment of self-harm recommends between 3 to 12 sessions of psychological treatment involving problem solving and alternative coping. Presently however, the biggest at risk group for self-harm and suicide is not offered any psychological treatment.

Studies have shown that mobile phones are a highly acceptable method of engaging adolescents with depression in psychological treatments such as CBT (Whittaker et al 2012). Furthermore a systematic review has show that treatment delivery via remote technology is just as effective as face-to-face in people with anxiety or depression (Bee et al, 2008).

The study therefore has the following aims and objectives:

1. To optimise and determine the acceptability and feasibility of engaging and retaining patients with depression who repeatedly self-harm in a remotely delivered (through video calling/telephone) CBT intervention over 10 sessions.

2. To outline the barriers and drivers to delivering both the study and the remotely delivered PS CBT intervention and how barriers to the interventions are addressed through a network of practice or other means.

3. If the recruitment and retention into the study and the remotely delivered PS therapy are feasible and acceptable, then we will determine the clinical effectiveness and cost effectiveness of the intervention versus treatment as usual.

4. If the intervention (pilot study) proves to be clinically effective and cost effective then the barriers and drivers to implementation in all counties in the East Midlands will be explored using a network of practice linking with NHS organisations, strategic clinical networks, and the AHSN (see qualitative analysis of barriers and drivers to the implementation of the intervention below).

The main hypothesis of this study is:

Adolescents and young adults who receive problem solving cognitive behaviour therapy (plus treatment as usual) will report greater reduction in their depressive symptoms (as measured using Beck depression inventory 2) from baseline to 6 months in comparison to those receiving treatment as usual.

Secondary objectives will be to observe a change over 12 months on measures of depression, hopelessness and suicidality.

Study configuration:

This study will compare two groups: participants will be randomly assigned to the TAU group (control group) or the remotely delivered PS CBT (and TAU) group (intervention group).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
22
Inclusion Criteria
  • >2 self-harm episodes.
  • With high levels of unipolar depressive symptoms (BDI-2 score of 17 or more).
  • Sufficient understanding of English (spoken and written).
  • Ability to give informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
  • Clinical judgement of high level of suicide risk, other risk to self or others requiring other urgent approaches e.g. admission to mental health unit.
  • Other severe mental illness e.g. psychosis, bipolar disorder, substance use disorder or organic mental disorder e.g. secondary to head injury as the primary mental health problem as determined by a structured psychiatric interview (SCID).
  • Currently receiving structured psychological therapy

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
PS CBTProblem solving cognitive behaviour therapy (PS CBT)Problem solving cognitive behaviour therapy (PS CBT) will be delivered remotely by means of telephone or video calling by a cognitive behaviour therapist in addition to their usual care. The duration of the intervention will be 10 sessions. Research measures will be completed at baseline, 3,6,9 and 12 months
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Beck Depression Inventory (V2)Baseline to 6 months

The difference of change in self-rated depression as measured by Beck depression inventory (version 2) from baseline to 6 months, between the control and intervention group.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Beck hopelessness scaleBaseline to 12 months

Hopelessness measured on the Beck hopelessness scale (Beck, 1988)

Columbia Suicide Severity Rating ScaleBaseline to 12 months

Suicidality measured on the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (CSSRS; Posner et al, 2011).

Quality of lifeBaseline to 12 months

Quality of life measured using EQ-5D (EuroQol Group, 1990).

Qualitative InterviewsBaseline to 12 months

Explore reasons why individuals may or may not engage with the study and the PS CBT intervention

Beck Depression Inventory (V2)Baseline to 12 months
Patient Health Questionnaire 9Baseline to 12 months

Depressive symptoms on the PHQ-9 (Kroenke et al, 2001)

Social functioningBaseline to 12 months

Social functioning measured using the work and social adjustment scale (WSAS; Mundt et al, 2002).

Cost EffectivenessBaseline to 12 months

A modified version of the Client Service Receipt Inventory (CSRI; Beecham \& Knapp, 2001): to measure costs, service utilisation, income and related matters to analyse cost effectiveness.

Time to Self-HarmBaseline to 12 months

Time to self-harm, assessed through a self-report measure and verified through medical records where possible

Trial Locations

Locations (4)

Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS foundation Trust.

🇬🇧

Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom

Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust

🇬🇧

Derby, Derbyshire, United Kingdom

Derbyshire Hoispitals NHS Foundation Trust

🇬🇧

Derby, Derbyshire, United Kingdom

Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

🇬🇧

Chesterfield, Deryshire, United Kingdom

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