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Cognitive Rehabilitation for Gulf War Illness

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VA Office of Research and Development

Status

Completed

Conditions

Gulf War Illness

Treatments

Behavioral: Health Education
Behavioral: Problem-Solving Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT02161133
SPLD-009-13S

Details and patient eligibility

About

There are almost 700,000 Gulf War Veterans (GWV) with 25-30% suffering from a devastating multi-symptom illness coined Gulf War Illness (GWI). GWV with GWI report significant activity limitations and chronic cognitive problems consistent with problem-solving deficits. Problem-solving is considered the most complex of cognitive abilities and is what enables us to conduct complicated behaviors such as setting goals, sequencing and multi-tasking. As a result studies have found that problem-solving deficits are prospectively related to a greater risk of disability. Despite published reports documenting these problems there are no treatments that target the problem-solving deficits of GWI. This proposal seeks to determine whether Problem-Solving Therapy, a patient centered cognitive rehabilitation therapy, can reduce disability by compensating for problem-solving deficits.

Full description

Gulf War Illness (GWI) is a complex multi-dimensional illness which causes as much disability as other major medical diseases. Previous clinical trials (i.e. cognitive behavioral therapy and graded exercise) for GWI have sought to improve disability by increasing activity regardless of symptom presentation. These previous trials for GWI have shown limited efficacy and poor adherence. An innovative treatment approach is to target a specific component of GWI, namely problem-solving ability, known to be associated with disability.

Impairment in problem-solving ability affects Gulf War Veterans (GWV) with GWI and is prospectively related to greater risk of disability. This impairment is also related to poorer adherence to medical regimes, making it difficult for GWV to manage other aspects of GWI. Problem-solving is considered one of the most complex of cognitive abilities and is related to complicated behaviors such as setting goals, sequencing and multi-tasking. Despite published reports documenting these deficits there are no treatments that target the problem-solving deficits of GWI in order to reduce disability.

The investigators propose a targeted treatment, Problem-Solving Therapy, to compensate for the problem-solving deficits of GWI and thereby reducing disability. Problem-Solving Therapy, a top down approach, teaches patients skills to overcome problems like cognitive dysfunction or physical symptoms that impact problem-solving. Compensating for problem-solving deficits would reduce disability and provide information on the effect of treating one component of GWI on other symptoms of GWI. This is the first trial of cognitive rehabilitation therapy for GWI.

Enrollment

268 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Inclusion:

  • deployed to first Gulf War and meets Kansas definition for GWI (see definition in measures section);
  • scores at least a half a standard deviation worse than the mean on the World Health Organization Disability Schedule (WHO-DAS II).

Exclusion criteria

Exclusion:

  • current suicidal/homicide intent or plan assessed by The Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale, schizophrenia or current psychotic symptoms
  • self-reported diagnosis of a degenerative brain disorder or serious psychiatric or medical illness which may limit generalizability of the findings, limit safety or account for the symptoms of GWI.

Exclusionary medical illnesses include: Class 3 and 4 heart failure, cancer diagnosed within the past year and/or undergoing active treatment (chemotherapy or radiation therapy), chronic renal insufficiency, hospitalization due to myocardial infarct, stroke in the past year, a neurodegenerative disorder, or another medical or psychiatric disorder that may limit generalizability, limit participants safety or account for the symptoms of GWI at the discretion of the PI.

  • a disability that would preclude telephone use.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

268 participants in 2 patient groups

Problem-Solving Therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Problem-Solving Therapy is a treatment approach that teaches patients strategies to address real-life problems.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Problem-Solving Therapy
Health Education
Active Comparator group
Description:
Health education provides didactic information about Gulf War Illness
Treatment:
Behavioral: Health Education

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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