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Cognitive Training for Memory Deficits Associated With Electroconvulsive Therapy

N

New York State Psychiatric Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

Electroconvulsive Therapy
Memory Deficits

Treatments

Behavioral: Comparable general mental stimulation
Behavioral: Cognitive Intervention: Memory Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Although electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) remains the most effective treatment for people with severe depression, patients may experience a significant degree of persistent and/or permanent memory problems following ECT. Many patients report the memory problems are the most disturbing and serious side effect of ECT, and that such effects impact their quality of life following treatment and their willingness to consent to further ECT needed to complete a treatment course or to maintain remission. New developments in the field of cognitive remediation have demonstrated the benefits of cognitive training to improve memory performance in various conditions, such as epilepsy. However, these strategies have never been applied to help patients regain memory after ECT. The investigators have designed and piloted a novel cognitive program specifically targeted to the cognitive effects of ECT, based upon a program tailored to people with seizure disorders, a group with memory problems very similar to people who undergo ECT. This Memory Training for ECT (Mem-ECT) is designed to help cognitive functions that may be compromised following ECT remain relatively preserved. In addition, the intervention attempts to help ECT patients quickly regain their general memory skills immediately following ECT. Recent results from our preliminary group of patients who underwent ECT and memory training at New York Presbyterian shows no overall decline in memory function following ECT. On the basis of these promising findings, the investigators propose a more rigorous and larger study to confirm whether this novel memory training program can help alleviate memory problems associated with ECT.

Full description

The investigators propose to enroll 60 patients scheduled to undergo ECT over the course of 3 years. They will be randomly assigned to one of three research conditions (a) participants in Mem-ECT condition will receive memory training before and after their ECT course, (b) participants in the active control condition will work on commercially available puzzle games at the same times prior and after ECT to determine if the developed memory training program is more effective than mere mental stimulation, (c) participants in the "treatment as usual" will not work on the memory training or the puzzle games but just undergo the study evaluations. Participants will be evaluated a few days before ECT, within 2 weeks following ECT, and once again 2 months later. The evaluation will consist of interviews, mental skill testing, and measuring brain waves using an electroencephalograph (EEG) before ECT and 2 months after ECT (no EEG right after ECT). It is our hope that developing a safe and effective strategy to minimize the adverse memory side effects of ECT will make ECT a better and more easily tolerated treatment for patients with severe depression who need this therapeutic option.

Enrollment

59 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder
  • Inpatient at NYSPI or Presbyterian Hospital
  • Scheduled to undergo right-unilateral electroconvulsive therapy in the next two weeks
  • We do not require participants to be psychiatrically stable in terms of their symptoms. They only need to demonstrate capacity to consent and be willing to sit through 3 training sessions prior to ECT and 5 sessions post ECT

Exclusion criteria

  • Significant auditory/visual impairment that would interfere with study procedures
  • Lack of aptitude in English that may interfere with the administration of the tests
  • Changes in the type of antidepressant during the course of ECT or 2 weeks post ECT
  • Chart diagnosis of any other medical or neuropsychiatric illnesses known to impair brain function (e.g. mental retardation, traumatic brain injury, schizophrenia)
  • History of ECT in past 2 months
  • Mental status examination score below 40/57
  • Current substance abuse (e.g. marijuana or crack), excluding nicotine and caffeine.
  • Too agitated to sit through the required tests or training

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

59 participants in 3 patient groups

Cognitive Intervention: Memory Training
Experimental group
Description:
Memory training before and after ECT
Treatment:
Behavioral: Cognitive Intervention: Memory Training
Comparable general mental stimulation
Active Comparator group
Description:
Puzzle games before and after ECT
Treatment:
Behavioral: Comparable general mental stimulation
Treatment as Usual
No Intervention group
Description:
No memory training or puzzle games, just the study evaluations

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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