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Online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Depressive Symptoms in Rural Patients with Cardiac Disease (COMBAT-DS)

D

Debra Moser

Status

Completed

Conditions

Depressive Symptoms
Heart Diseases

Treatments

Behavioral: Online cognitive behavioral therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04986969
AD-2019C3-17982

Details and patient eligibility

About

Individuals with heart disease and depressive symptoms suffer from higher death rates, higher rates of acute cardiac events (such as heart attacks), and faster progression of heart disease compared to those with heart disease who do not have depressive symptoms, and these problems are much worse in rural people. Unfortunately, rural people with heart disease and depressive symptoms do not receive needed therapy for depressive symptoms because of lack of mental health providers in rural areas, worries about stigma, and difficulty accessing mental health care because of multiple barriers to traveling to get care. To overcome these barriers, the investigators will compare the impact of two types of online cognitive behavioral therapy (video-conferenced face-to-face versus self-administered internet-based) and usual care on depressive symptoms to provide patients and healthcare providers with needed information about which is more effective and to increase the number of patients adequately treated.

Full description

Rural areas are noted for marked disparities in mortality, cardiovascular health, and access to health care. Prevalence rates for both coronary heart disease (CHD) and depressive symptoms in rural areas are higher than in urban areas. These facts are important because CHD patients experience high rates of depressive symptoms, which are associated with increased risk of getting and dying from CHD. Unfortunately, rural people with CHD and depressive symptoms do not receive needed therapy for depressive symptoms because of lack of mental health providers in rural areas, worries about stigma leading to treatment avoidance, and difficulty accessing mental health care because of barriers to travel to get care. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), reduces depressive symptoms in CHD patients, but in its traditional form (in-person meetings of patient and therapist), CBT is resource-intensive and inaccessible to most rural patients. Wireless internet technology has the potential to make CBT more user-friendly, and accessible to rural patients. There has been a proliferation of alternative, internet-based, remote-delivery CBT interventions recently. The permutations of remote-delivery CBT fall under two categories - real-time, face-to-face, video-conferenced CBT (vcCBT) and self-administered internet-based CBT (iCBT). It is unclear which category of these delivery modalities is more effective. Determining which treatment option is more effective for treating depressive symptoms in rural patients with CHD and depressive symptoms will identify an easily accessible treatment option for rural patients. Using a randomized, controlled, stratified (by sex) design, the investigators will compare vcCBT, iCBT and usual care in rural CHD patients on the primary outcome of depressive symptoms over time. In addition, the investigators will determine whether intervention adherence, satisfaction or acceptability moderate treatment effects. The investigators will also assess whether sex or stigma moderate intervention effects to determine whether effectiveness of treatment option varies by sex or stigma level. Data about outcomes will be collected at baseline, 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months and provide important information about the trajectory of outcomes. Results from this study will provide new knowledge about which approach to treating depressive symptoms in rural CHD patients is more effective to improve decision-making in patients and healthcare providers, and increase the number of patients properly treated.

Enrollment

444 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21 to 110 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • at least moderate depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 ≥ 10)
  • rural dwelling
  • has had physician-documented acute coronary syndrome (ACS) event

Exclusion criteria

  • cognitive impairment
  • major psychiatric comorbidities, which might require additional treatment
  • presence of non-CHD conditions likely to be fatal within next year.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

444 participants in 2 patient groups

real-time, face-to-face, video-conferenced CBT (vcCBT)
Active Comparator group
Description:
vcCBT is cognitive behavioral therapy that consists of eight face-to-face video-conferencing sessions via tablet computers lasting approximately 45 minutes each.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Online cognitive behavioral therapy
self-administered internet-based CBT (iCBT)
Active Comparator group
Description:
iCBT is self-directed cognitive behavioral therapy using an interactive internet program, MoodGYM, which does not include direct interactions with a therapist.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Online cognitive behavioral therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Misook Chung; Debra K Moser

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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