ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Bipolar Disorder Measures in Clinical Care

University of Cincinnati logo

University of Cincinnati

Status

Completed

Conditions

Bipolar Disorder

Treatments

Other: Measurement based care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05300919
1R34MH125935-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
STUDY00014960

Details and patient eligibility

About

Measurement based care (MBC) is an emerging best practice involving serial assessment of clinical status and using those findings to inform clinical decision making. However, there is a lack of research on how to best apply principles of MBC for patients with bipolar disorder. The proposed project goal is to assess the feasibility of comparing effectiveness of measurement-based care (MBC) to enhanced usual care in a randomized trial. Many individuals with bipolar disorder experience fluctuating depressive and manic symptoms which can impair functioning and reduce quality of life. The main hypothesis is that treatment adjustments will occur more often in the MBC group than the enhanced usual care group. The exploratory hypothesis is that symptoms of bipolar disorder will decrease more in the MBC group than the enhanced usual care group.

Full description

Study setting: Five primary care clinics with integrated psychiatric and psychological services.

Study population: Goal recruitment is 30 patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder currently receiving treatment in study sites. Patients will be identified through clinician referrals, chart review, and searching the Epic patient panel functionality of the IBH service.

Study design: This pilot randomized effectiveness trial will assess feasibility (whether the intervention can be practically used in a setting) and acceptability (view that the intervention is agreeable or satisfactory) of the research procedures (e.g., recruitment, enrollment, consent, inclusion/exclusion criteria, randomization, participation, data collection). The investigators will use block randomization at the patient level. Within the five clinics, blocks of 3 will be used to ensure equal numbers of intervention and control patients. This will allow for the 30 patients to be randomly assigned to the 2 arms of the study, with equal numbers within clinics.

The investigators propose an effectiveness trial design with broad inclusion criteria and limited exclusion criteria. The investigators will use intent to treat analyses. To avoid contamination, the research coordinator will administer the measures to patients in both trial arms (enhanced usual care, and MBC with preferred measure) at clinic visits. The intervention patients will receive measures for manic and depressive symptoms, and the control patients will receive a measure of depressive symptoms. Usual care will be enhanced by the research coordinator consistently administering the depressive symptom measure to control arm participants, which is not part of usual care.

Fidelity Measurement: Chart review will be used to assess fidelity in both arms based on whether the patient completed the measure, whether the clinician reviewed measure results, and whether the clinician compared current symptom severity to past symptom severity.

Data collection and management: Individuals approached regarding the study will have an established case record to track eligibility, enrollment, and attrition. REDcap will be the primary data management database. The investigators will also pilot the survey instrument to collect independent measures of clinical outcomes. The dependent variable ISS will also be administered at 6-month follow-up. The ISS is a standard outcome measure in clinical trials, where it was highly sensitive to change. The ISS is excellent for research assessment. The investigators will pilot test other instruments for future use including alcohol use (AUDIT-C), drug use (DAST), posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms (PC-PTSD5), and anxiety symptoms (GAD-7). At baseline, the investigators will also measure socio-demographics and prior treatment history. Outcome assessments will be conducted in person or online at baseline pre-randomization, and online at 6 months to mask assessment. At follow-up, chart review will assess treatment changes, and type and frequency of services received during the 6-months.

Hypotheses: The primary hypothesis is that more treatment changes will occur for patients randomized to MBC with manic and depressive symptom measures compared to enhanced usual care (control condition). Exploratory analysis will evaluate the probability of being in remission as defined by euthymic classification on the ISS. An exploratory hypothesis is that there will be a greater decrease in symptom severity in those randomized to MBC compared to enhanced usual care.

Sample size: The sample size of 30 is sufficient to assess feasibility. There will not be sufficient power for statistical tests unless a large effect size is observed.

Attrition: The investigators will use established practices such as telephone follow-up and financial incentives to maximize retention.

Statistical analyses: Primary data analysis is to assess acceptability and feasibility. The investigators will report eligibility percentages, enrollment rates, attrition rates, proportion of appointments attended, fidelity in both arms, number of treatment changes made per patient, and descriptive statistics and data missingness for patient reported outcomes. The investigators will descriptively summarize these feasibility measures and conduct chi square tests to test baseline differences in rates between the two groups. The investigators will perform intent to treat analyses using a negative binomial regression to model total count of treatment changes in the prior six months specified as the dependent variable and group randomization status as the explanatory variable. To assess successful randomization, the investigators will compare baseline variables for significant differences. If significant differences exist, the investigators will control for those differences in analyses. Because it is pilot study, the investigators have not conducted a power analysis, as the investigators do not expect to have power to detect anything except very large effect sizes.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • clinician diagnosis of bipolar disorder, and elevated symptoms of bipolar disorder based on classification by the Internal State Scale (ISS) as depressed, mixed manic-depressive, or (hypo)manic state, planned continued care in the same primary care clinic, and either a new consultation by or referral to the integrated behavioral health (IBH) mental health clinicians, or a recent change in bipolar disorder medication treatment,

Exclusion criteria

  • Inability to consent to participation in research, not planning to return for follow-up in the same primary care clinic

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

30 participants in 2 patient groups

MBC for depressive and manic symptoms
Experimental group
Description:
Measurement-based care (MBC) is a clinical strategy involving consistent assessment of clinical status and using those findings to drive clinical decision making. MBC involves clinic staff providing the measure to the patient at each visit which the patient completes and returns, staff enters results into the electronic medical record, clinician reviews current results and compares to past results, and discusses with the patient. The experimental condition patients will receive MBC for manic and depressive symptoms.
Treatment:
Other: Measurement based care
MBC for depressive symptoms only
Active Comparator group
Description:
The active comparator arm patients will receive MBC for depressive symptoms.
Treatment:
Other: Measurement based care

Trial contacts and locations

2

Loading...

Central trial contact

Joseph Cerimele, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2025 Veeva Systems