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Assessment of Transcultural Psychotherapy in Child Major Depressive Disorder (EDPT-ADOS)

A

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Major Depressive Disorder

Treatments

Behavioral: Transcultural psychotherapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04206969
2019-A01830-57 (Other Identifier)
P180601

Details and patient eligibility

About

The symptomatic and clinical expression of psychiatric disorders in children and adolescents is strongly influenced by the cultural setting they are growing up in. These cultural variations complicate psychiatric care, especially for migrant children, for whom appropriate care must be designed.

Transcultural psychotherapy is an original psychotherapeutic technique developed to meet these specific requirements in France and in different European and American countries. Its theoretical and methodological foundations rest on the works of George Devereux in ethnopsychiatry (1970). A psychotherapeutic technique intended for first-generation migrants was developed by Tobie Nathan and coll (1986). Marie-Rose Moro and colleagues (1990) have adapted this technique to second-generation migrants.

Indicated as a second-line treatment after the failure of standard management, this technique is fully formalized today. It comprises group consultations for the child and the family as a one-hour session each month, directed by a principal therapist, assisted by a group of co-therapists (of diverse cultural origins and occupations) and an interpreter in the family's mother tongue. The concept of culture is used to establish the therapeutic alliance, decode the symptoms, and propose treatment.

The children and adolescents receiving this treatment have varied psychopathological profiles, mostly involving depressive and/or anxiety disorders. Specifically, migrants' children are especially vulnerable to depression, their psychiatric care is generally longer and less effective than in the general population, and their rate of treatment failure higher.

Transcultural psychotherapy has demonstrated its value in these situations in numerous qualitative studies, but its efficacy has not yet been assessed by a method providing a high level of evidence, such as randomized controlled trials.

Full description

Mixed method study using a multicenter, Bayesian randomized clinical trial with blinded evaluation of the primary outcome. Two parallel groups of 40 children or adolescents from 6 to 20 years-old and their family will be included. In the experimental group, patients will attend six sessions of transcultural therapy in addition to usual care. The improved Clinical Global Impression scale scores at 6 months will be compared across groups. Qualitative analysis of families and therapists' interviews will allow to specify the therapeutic processes and acceptability of the therapy.

Enrollment

80 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 20 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Be a child aged or an adolescent aged 6-20 years-old (this may be a declaratory age at the time of the consultation or based on a document for a residence request if no other identity documents are available)

  • Be a first or second-generation migrant (born abroad or born from at least one parent who is born abroad)

  • Have a psychological and/or psychiatric follow-up by a first-line care

  • Have been referred for transcultural psychotherapy by their first line care to treat depression resistant to standard management.

  • Present a depression according to the clinician who proposes the transcultural treatment (first line therapist), based on usual as well as cultural symptoms criteria of the below list:

    • Sadness
    • Diminish interest or pleasure in most of the usual activities
    • Insomnia or hypersomnia
    • Psychomotor agitation
    • Asthenia, loss of energy
    • Feeling of worthlessness or excessive guilt
    • Recurrent throughs of death
    • School problems (school failure, drop in grades, aggressivity with adult, school refusal...)
    • Mutism, and selective mutism
    • Runaways
    • Aggressivity
    • Impulsivity
    • Violence and delinquency
    • Conflicts with parents and adults from the community
    • Exclusion from family
    • Somatic pains
    • Massive separation anxiety
    • Regressive symptoms - loosing of an already acquired function such as speech, walk, stay alone for a sufficient time in relation to age, manage stress or anxiety for reasonable situations...
    • Denial of medical care for a chronic disease with no evident reasons
    • Cultural designation such as possessed by a spirit, being a child witch, or other cultural designations
    • State of trance The list is not exhaustive, and some other symptoms may be accepted if the first line clinician as well as the referent agree. The patients will be well characterized after inclusion.
  • Present a score >= 4 on the iCGI - Severity at inclusion.

  • Present transcultural issues confirmed by the referent (usual procedure of indirect pre-selection based on the presentation of the situation by referring physician)

  • Have an informed consent signed by both parents/ one parent / tutor / adult patient (cf. 14.1 paragraph)

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient or family has previously had transcultural psychotherapy
  • Patient presents an acute psychiatric disorder which hinders the realization of the transcultural therapy - for example, excited delirium with great psychic disorganization, or high suicidal risk patients. These situations will be excluded during the screening time based on the first line therapist evaluation
  • Patient presents an acute somatic disease which may hinder the well organization of the therapy
  • Patient addressed for a legal expertise
  • Child's/Adolescent's refusal
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding (for women for young women of childbearing age)
  • Participation in another interventional study
  • Patient under guardianship or curatorship

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

80 participants in 2 patient groups

Transcultural psychotherapy
Experimental group
Description:
In addition to usual care, the participants in the treatment group receive transcultural psychotherapy in the inclusion centers, which consists of 5 sessions every 7 weeks (W6, W13, W20, W27, and W34). During all the research process, participants from both groups continue their usual care provided by the referent medical team outside the inclusion center.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Transcultural psychotherapy
standard care
No Intervention group
Description:
usual care provided by the referent medical team

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Marie-Rose MORO, PhD; Jonathan LACHAL, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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