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Clinical Trials/NCT00958217
NCT00958217
Completed
Not Applicable

Intervention for Veterans With Depression, Substance Disorder, and Trauma

VA Office of Research and Development1 site in 1 country154 target enrollmentDecember 2009

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Depressive Symptoms
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development
Enrollment
154
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Symptoms
Status
Completed
Last Updated
10 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

This study will compare two different types of psychotherapy for Veterans with depression, addiction, and a past traumatic experience. Everyone in the study will receive 12 weeks of group cognitive behavioral therapy focused on depression and addiction, followed by 12 weeks of individual psychotherapy sessions. For the second 12 weeks, half of the people will receive a review of the initial therapy, and half will receive a cognitive behavioral therapy focused on trauma. Everyone will complete research interviews every 3 months for a total of 18 months.

Detailed Description

The goal of this study is to evaluate whether a second disorder-specific intervention improves longer term (up to 18 months) treatment outcomes for male and female Veterans with co-occurring depression and alcohol/substance disorders and trauma history (with or without PTSD diagnosis). This 4 years randomized two-group design uses repeated assessments at baseline and every 3 months for a total of 12 months. The investigators are providing their recently developed integrated intervention for comorbid depression and substance disorders for the initial 12 weeks in group format (Integrated Cognitive Behavioral Therapy; Phase I). After the 12 week group intervention, participants will be randomized to receive either a review of the initial intervention in individual sessions, or a trauma-specific intervention, Cognitive Processing Therapy, with integrated addiction treatment components. Length, duration, and setting of both interventions will be the same, and all participants will meet with the program psychiatrist for medication appointments. No medications are under study and no placebo is used; medications will be prescribed using standard VA protocol. Research assessments will document diagnosis, recent substance use, depression and PTSD symptoms, medication adherence, and life stress.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
December 2009
End Date
May 2014
Last Updated
10 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Veterans 18 years of age and older living in the San Diego, California area
  • Who are able to attend in-person therapy sessions
  • Have depression, alcohol or substance addiction, and a past traumatic experience

Exclusion Criteria

  • Non-veterans
  • Individuals with schizophrenia or severe memory impairment

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Symptoms

Time Frame: Assessed quarterly; trajectories analyzed total scores from randomization through end of study (6 timepoints covering approximately 15 months)

The Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist - Civilian version (PCL-C) is a 17 item self-report checklist of PTSD symptoms experienced in the past month rated on a 1 (not at all) to 5 (extremely) scale; total score is summed from the item scores and range from 17 (none) to 85 (most severe). . Civilian version was selected as it allows for a variety of trauma types. Scores above 50 are considered clinical levels. We tested whether treatment group interacted with time to examine whether trajectories of symptom scores differed across treatment conditions. Linear mixed effects models were used to ascertain trajectories of total scores. This analytic approach was advantageous in that it provided examination of change in PTSD across all quarterly assessments. Models were estimated with maximum likelihood methods. Total score at the time of randomization is reported in Data Table and coefficient estimates for trajectories are reported in Statistical Analysis.

Depression Symptoms Were Assessed With the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale.

Time Frame: Assessed quarterly; trajectories analyzed total scores from randomization through end of study (6 timepoints covering approximately 15 months)

Depression symptoms were assessed using a structured clinical interview assessment consisting of 21 items. Depression symptoms experienced in the past week are rated on a 0 (none) to 4 (most severe) scale. The total score is summed from the item scores and range from 0 (none) to 84 (most severe). We tested whether treatment group interacted with time in order to examine whether trajectories of symptom scores differed across treatment conditions. Linear mixed effects models were used to ascertain trajectories of total scores from randomization through end of study (6 timepoints across approximately 15 months). This analytic approach was advantageous in that it provided examination of change in depression across all quarterly assessments. Models were estimated with maximum likelihood methods. Total score at the time of randomization is reported in Data Table and coefficient estimates for trajectories are reported in Statistical Analysis.

Timeline Followback

Time Frame: Assessed quarterly; trajectories analyzed from randomization through end of study (covering approximately 15 months)

The Timeline Followback is a calendar-assisted structured interview that assesses the frequency of alcohol and drug use on a daily basis and the quantity of alcohol use. Summary proportion of days abstinent were calculated at each time point. Trajectory analyses examine two substance use outcomes: probability of any alcohol or drug use on a given day and probability of heavy drinking (5 or more drinks consumed in a day) on a given day. Trajectories of substance use (any alcohol or drug use on a particular day) and heavy drinking (\>5 drinks on a particular day) were modeled as dichotomous outcomes, using logit links to predict the probability of substance use or heavy drinking on a particular day. Data Table reports starting proportion of days abstinent at time of randomization.

Study Sites (1)

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