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Effectiveness and Cost-Effectiveness of Depression Treatment for Individuals With TB in South Africa

N

New York State Psychiatric Institute

Status

Suspended

Conditions

Tuberculosis
Depression

Treatments

Behavioral: Interpersonal Counseling
Behavioral: Enhanced treatment as usual

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05091580
8217
R01AI148461 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation trial will increase understanding of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of integrating a brief evidence-based treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD) within the tuberculosis (TB) care platform to improve TB and MDD. Findings from this R01 are likely to inform policy and treatment guidelines for the integrated management of TB and MDD in low- and middle-income countries globally.

Full description

TB and depression are the leading infectious cause of death and the leading cause of disability, respectively. Furthermore, they are commonly co-occurring and negatively synergistic. TB and depression comorbidity is associated with a 2.85 greater chance of death and 8.70 higher risk for loss to follow up (LTFU) from treatment, which has a cascade of negative individual-, community-, societal-, and health system-level implications. As a treatable condition, depression is a remediable driver of the TB epidemic. The WHO has called for a global policy framework for TB and mental health integration, recommending brief psychological interventions to address mental disorders in primary care settings. Interpersonal counseling (IPC) is a brief version of one such evidence-based intervention that has demonstrated efficacy and effectiveness in treating depression when delivered by non-mental health specialists, including in South Africa. The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of integrating IPC (for depression) into the TB care platform to improve TB and depression outcomes, as well as mitigate TB-related catastrophic costs. As the country with the highest TB burden in the world, nearly 60% of whom are co-infected with HIV, South Africa is the ideal setting for this study. This 3-year hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation trial will be implemented in eight clinics (n~1410 individuals with TB/depression) in the Eastern and Western Capes of South Africa to integrate IPC to treat depression comorbidity within the TB care platform with the following aims: Aim 1) To evaluate the effectiveness and implementation outcomes of integrating IPC treatment for depression into the existing TB care platform to improve TB and depression outcomes; Aim 2) To determine the influence of theoretically based intervention mediators and moderators on TB treatment outcomes; Aim 3) To assess the cost-effectiveness of integrating depression treatment into the TB care platform from the patient and health system perspectives. This research will provide critical clinical, programmatic, and economic data to inform the WHO global policy framework for TB and mental health integration, and cost-effective clinical practice to improve TB outcomes, especially in low-resource settings.

Recruitment was temporarily paused on September 1, 2024 due to an interruption in funding.

Enrollment

1,410 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 years or over
  • initiating treatment for TB
  • ability to provide informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • unable or unwilling to provide informed consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Sequential Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

1,410 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention: Interpersonal Counseling for Depression
Experimental group
Description:
New adult TB patients with depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 \> 10) will be offered 4-8 sessions of Interpersonal Counseling delivered by a trained lay counsellor.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Interpersonal Counseling
Control: Enhanced Treatment as Usual
Other group
Description:
New adult TB patients will be screened for depression and those with significant symptoms (PHQ-9 \> 15 and/or suicidal ideation) will be referred to the clinic nurse for evaluation and referral to specialized mental health care as needed. Routine screening for depression is not a standard practice for TB patients; therefore assessment and referral is considered "enhanced" treatment as usual. Individuals will be interviewed at baseline and treatment completion.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Enhanced treatment as usual

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Annika C Sweetland, DrPH, MSW

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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