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Development of a Novel Transdiagnostic Intervention for Anhedonia - R61 Phase

University of North Carolina (UNC) logo

University of North Carolina (UNC)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Anhedonia

Treatments

Behavioral: Mindfulness Treatment
Behavioral: Behavioral Activation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT02874534
R61MH110027-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
16-2268a

Details and patient eligibility

About

The overall goal of this project is to develop a novel transdiagnostic treatment for anhedonia, called Behavioral Activation Treatment for Anhedonia (BATA), using ultra-high field functional neuroimaging. There is a critical need for a validated treatment that specifically targets anhedonia, and this project will evaluate the effects of this new treatment on anhedonia and will establish how this treatment impacts brain systems that mediate reward processing, clinical symptoms of anhedonia, functional outcomes, and behavioral indices of reward processing. This work will also identify brain targets by which future novel anhedonia treatment may be evaluated.

Full description

Deficits in motivation and pleasure, together referred to as anhedonia, are implicated in a number of psychiatric illnesses, including mood and anxiety disorders, substance-use disorders, schizophrenia, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. As a result, constructs related to anhedonia are central to the NIMH Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) project. Anhedonia is often one of the most difficult psychiatric symptoms to treat and thus represents a critical endophenotype and vulnerability factor for a range of psychiatric disorders. Given the centrality of anhedonia to a large number of psychiatric disorders, improved interventions to treat motivation and pleasure are critical for these disorders. The overall goal of this R61/R33 project is to develop a novel transdiagnostic treatment for anhedonia, called Behavioral Activation Treatment for Anhedonia (BATA). This new intervention is designed to treat anhedonia by emphasizing supported engagement with personally relevant goals and reducing avoidance behaviors. Consistent with the objectives and milestones outlined in RFA-MH-16-406 ("Exploratory Clinical Trials of Novel Interventions for Mental Disorders"), in the R61 phase of this trial that lasted from June 22, 2017-July 31, 2019, the investigators propose to use an experimental therapeutics approach to first evaluate mesocorticolimbic target engagement by this treatment in a transdiagnostic sample characterized by clinically impairing anhedonia (Aim 1). Specifically, the investigators will examine the effects of this treatment, relative to an active comparison treatment, on caudate nucleus activation during reward anticipation and rostral anterior cingulate cortex activation during reward outcomes using ultra-high field (7T) functional magnetic resonance imaging. In this phase of the project, the investigators will also use fMRI to determine the optimal dose of the intervention (Aim 2).

Enrollment

57 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 50 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. 18-50 years old and treatment seeking;
  2. SHAPS scores ≥ 20, corresponding to clinically significant anhedonia;
  3. Clinician's Global Impression Scale-Severity score (CGI-S) > 3 to assure a clinically impaired sample;
  4. Seeking treatment for anhedonia (i.e., referred from an outpatient clinic or responded to an advertisement for anhedonia treatment; endorses desire for treatment during screening).

Exclusion criteria

  1. Those for whom medication management is the primary gold-standard treatment, including those with bipolar disorder/mania, schizophrenia spectrum, and other psychotic disorders;
  2. Prior treatment with behavioral activation therapy for depression or mindfulness-based treatments (those with exposure to other forms of psychotherapy, e.g., supportive therapy, will be eligible);
  3. Those who may have difficulty understanding the cognitive components of BATA, including those with intellectual disability, neurocognitive disorders, and dissociative disorders;
  4. Feeding and eating disorders which may have confounding effects on the fMRI signal;
  5. Substance Use Disorders given confounding effects of substances of abuse on the fMRI signal;
  6. Suicidal intent and plan;
  7. Psychotropic medication use in the past 4 weeks (8 weeks for fluoxetine) and/or current psychotherapy. Participants must be medication-free at study entry; study personnel will not supervise medication taper for the purpose of the study, but those who taper under the supervision of their regular provider will be eligible;
  8. Currently pregnant, as measured by urine pregnancy screen immediately before MRI scans;
  9. Positive urinalysis screen for cocaine, marijuana, opiates, methadone, amphetamines, and benzodiazepines (conducted on-site via Biosite Triage Meter Plus) at study entry.
  10. No neurological conditions (e.g., history of stroke, seizure, or TBI);
  11. Contraindications for fMRI imaging: Metal in the body, dental work that is not fillings or gold, any tattoos, any metal in the body, any metal injury - especially those to the eyes, any other type of implant unless they are 100% plastic.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

57 participants in 2 patient groups

Behavioral Activation
Experimental group
Description:
Treatment will consist of 15 weekly 45-minute sessions. Session 1 provides orientation and psychoeducation on anhedonia, and activity monitoring is introduced. Sessions 2-3 include structured values assessments of 10 life areas to enhance motivation for sustained behavior change and to clarify goals. Following goals clarification, an activity hierarchy is developed, establishing a set of idiographic behavioral targets across life areas prioritized by ease of implementation to scaffold task engagement during the course of treatment.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Behavioral Activation
Mindfulness Treatment
Active Comparator group
Description:
BATA will be compared to mindfulness based cognitive therapy (MBCT), chosen because its mechanisms of action are hypothesized to impact different brain mechanisms than BATA. Mindfulness is nonjudgmentally bringing awareness and acceptance to one's present-moment experience. MBCT will be administered in an individual format. The MBCT protocol will be modeled on the session outlines presented in Wahbeh et al., 2014. Treatment will be compromised of 15 weekly 45-minute sessions.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindfulness Treatment

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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