Mobile App-assisted Behavioral Treatment in Children and Adolescents With Tics
- Conditions
- Tic Disorders
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Mobile app-assisted behavioral treatment
- Registration Number
- NCT05390268
- Lead Sponsor
- Aarhus University Hospital
- Brief Summary
Chronic tic disorders are neurodevelopmental disorders affecting 0.5-1% of children and adolescents. Tics present as sudden, rapid, repetitive non-rhythmic movements or vocalizations or a combination. Tics may be extremely distressing in a child's life, but the severity of tics is often variable. The group of children/ adolescents with tic disorders are heterogenous when it comes to symptom presentation, comorbid conditions and social status. This places great demands on professionals to offer the right treatment at the right time. The aim of the current project is to make optimal tics training more accessible, including for patients managed in primary care, to make optimal treatment available in the immediate environment, and to ensure increased adherence to treatment.
As part of this project, an app has been developed and the study aims to evaluate mobile app-assisted behavioral treatment as an efficient and feasible approach that may be a valuable tool together with other treatment approaches. The mobile app-assisted training is based on the manual "Niks til Tics", which describes training with a combination of Habit Reversal Training (HRT) and Exposure Response Prevention (ERP) over eight sessions, and a booster session. Both HRT and ERP are known to be effective treatments of tics.
In this project a randomized controlled superiority trial evaluates the effect of app-assisted training versus an educational approach. Participants are randomized to manualised treatment combining HRT and ERP as app-assisted training, or to psychoeducation. The participants are included according to the same criteria as in a pilot trial, and primary outcome measure is YGTSS at session 8. Furthermore, the change in tics intensity from the first contact to baseline will be included as to evaluate the effect of being admitted and examined at the hospital.
This project contributes to increased knowledge about tics and tic treatment especially treatment using digital based interventions. An app has been developed for this project and the hypothesis is that a mobile app-assisted tic training program requiring minimal hospital contacts is superior to app-based psychoeducation alone, which is the most likely intervention that these patients will be offered.
This registration encompasses a project that collects information/data for multiple publications. As such, a number of publications are planned including a description of acute outcome, potential predictors, and longterm treatment effect
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 60
- a primary diagnosis of a chronic motor/vocal tics disorder including Tourette syndrome according to the WHO ICD-10 diagnostic criteria and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
- a total tic score higher than 13 on the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS), or above a tic score of 9, if only motor or vocal tics are present
- psychotic disorder
- primary severe depression
- suicidal ideation or attempts
- primary severe eating disorder
- IQ below 70 (mental retardation)
- participation in tic training based on HRT/ERP treatment within 6 months
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description digital tic learner Mobile app-assisted behavioral treatment The control arm including apps released in the first session digital tic training Mobile app-assisted behavioral treatment The active treatment including apps released for every session
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change of baseline Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS) at 5 weeks, 15 weeks, 23 weeks, 75-96 weeks Baseline, 5 weeks, 15 weeks, 23 weeks, 75-96 weeks YGTSS - a clinician-administered semi-structured interview including a checklist of all tic symptoms
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change of baseline premonitory urge scale (PUTS) Baseline, 5 weeks, 15 weeks, 23 weeks, 75-96 weeks PUTS is a short self-reporting scale with nine items
Change of baseline beliefs about tics scale (BATS) Baseline, 5 weeks, 15 weeks, 23 weeks, 75-96 weeks BATS is a self-reporting scale with 20 items
Change of baseline parent and child self-evaluating questionnaire Baseline, 5 weeks, 15 weeks, 23 weeks, 75-96 weeks Based on PTQ - a parent evaluating questionnaire
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
AarhusUH
🇩🇰Aarhus N, Risskov, Denmark