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Effects of an Acceptance-based Medication Adherence Therapy for Recent-onset Psychosis (AIM_AT)

The Chinese University of Hong Kong logo

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Psychotic Disorders
Early Psychosis

Treatments

Behavioral: TAU
Behavioral: CPG
Behavioral: AIM_AT

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06192602
19202171

Details and patient eligibility

About

This randomized controlled trial aimed to examine the effectiveness of a 10-session acceptance-based, insight-inducing medication adherence therapy (AIM-AT) program for recent-onset psychosis (in addition to usual care) over a 12-month follow-up (i.e., at immediate, 6-month, and 12-month post-intervention).

Full description

Objectives: To evaluate the effectiveness of an Acceptance-based, Insight-inducing Medication Adherence Therapy (AIM_ AT) for recent-onset psychosis on patient outcomes over 12-month follow-up, when compared with a standardized psychoeducation group and routine care only.

Focus-group interviews will be performed on purposively selected participants to examine perceived benefits, satisfaction and limitations of the AIM_ AT.

Hypotheses: Compared with psychoeducation group and routine care only, the AIM_AT participants will indicate significantly greater improvements in patients' adherence to anti-psychotic medication and illness/treatment insight and other secondary outcomes (symptom severity, drug attitude, progress of recovery, psychosocial functioning, satisfaction with service, and re-hospitalization rate) at immediate post-intervention, and/or greater improvements in the above outcomes at 6- and 12-month follow-ups.

Design: A multi-center RCT with repeated-measures, three-arm design. Subjects: 126 Chinese patients with recent-onset psychosis ( </= 5 years) randomly selected from four Integrated Community Centers for Mental Wellness and randomly assigned into three study groups.

Instruments/outcome measures: Frequency, length of re-hospitalizations, and total number of patients being hospitalized from clinic records over 5-6 months; valid questionnaires (ARS, ITAQ, DAI, QPR, PANSS, SLOF, CSQ-8) for medication adherence, illness/treatment insight, drug attitude, recovery, symptom severity, functioning, and service satisfaction accordingly. Focus group interviews will collect views on benefits and weaknesses of the AIM_AT.

Data analysis: Comparing the mean value changes of outcomes between groups across time on intention-to-treat basis, using Mixed Modeling/GEE-test; and content analysis of data from focus-group interviews and intervention sessions will be conducted.

Expected results: The findings can provide evidence of the effectiveness of AIM_ AT for early-stage psychosis in community mental healthcare on improving patients' medication adherence, mental condition and recovery, functioning, and service satisfaction.

Enrollment

126 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 64 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • primarily diagnosed with psychosis (termed recent-onset), including brief, first-episode and other psychotic disorders according to the criteria of the DSM-V (American Psychiatric Association, 2013);
  • had the mental illness ≤5 years (defined as recent-onset psychosis in recent literature)
  • Hong Kong Chinese residents, aged 18-64 years;
  • Global Assessment of Functioning scores ≥51, indicating mild to moderate symptoms and difficulties in psychosocial/occupational functioning (American Psychiatric Association, 2013), thus being mentally stable to comprehend AIM_AT and/or psychoeducation training;
  • Unsatisfactory medication adherence as indicated by the Adherence Rating Scale of <2 (Hayward et al.,1995) during screening; and
  • Able to read/understand Cantonese/Mandarin.

Exclusion criteria

  • Participated in/have recently been receiving other psychotherapies;
  • Having comorbidity of another mental illness (learning disability, cognitive or personality disorder) and/or clinically significant medical disease; and
  • Having communication and/or visual/hearing difficulty.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

126 participants in 3 patient groups

Acceptance-based, insight-inducing medication adherence therapy (AIM-AT)
Experimental group
Description:
Acceptance-based Insight-inducing and Medication Adherence Therapy (AIM_AT) consists of 10 weekly/biweekly, 2-hour sessions (4-months), based on the modified Kemp's model/manual of Adherence therapy and mindfulness-based psychoeducation program developed by the research team. The integrative AIM_AT program based on the principles of motivational-interviewing technique (MI) and mindfulness- and acceptance-based therapy, which have been tested in our previous controlled trials and increasingly been shown to reduce both positive and negative psychotic symptoms and ambivalent attitude towards medication adherence and inducing treatment/illness insight.
Treatment:
Behavioral: AIM_AT
Behavioral: TAU
Conventional Psychoeducation Group program (CPG)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Psychoeducation groups (12-18 members/group) will be led by one trained psychiatric nurse in each center experienced in psychiatric rehabilitation, and are guided by a validated group-intervention protocol based on the research team's and McFarlane et al.'s psychoeducation programs for psychosis. The psychoeducation program consists of 10 two-hour sessions, weekly/biweekly (similarly, 4-month duration) and is comprised of six components: introduction and goal-setting; basic understanding of psychosis and symptom and emotion self-care; education workshop of psychosis care, treatment and community support services; learning about self-care skills; establishing social support and effective coping skills; and skills practices, review and future plan.
Treatment:
Behavioral: CPG
Behavioral: TAU
Treatment-as-usual only (TAU)
Other group
Description:
Routine/Usual care only (control) group participants (and the two treatment groups) will receive usual community mental healthcare services. The main services provided by the four ICCMWs mainly include day-time occupational and living skills training workshops, family mutual support groups, public and mental health education, social and recreational services, supportive groups services on specific mental health problems, referrals to community psychiatric and social care services, and individual and family counseling service as needed. In addition, the center users will also receive community mental health services provided by public hospital and outpatient departments.
Treatment:
Behavioral: TAU

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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