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Quality of Life Therapy for Adults With Hepatitis C Virus and Cirrhosis Awaiting Liver Transplantation

Beth Israel Lahey Health logo

Beth Israel Lahey Health

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic HCV

Treatments

Behavioral: Supportive Therapy
Behavioral: Quality of Life Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00794911
2007P000171

Details and patient eligibility

About

The main purpose of this study is to determine whether psychological intervention is effective in improving quality of life, mood, and relationships among adults with hepatitis C virus and cirrhosis awaiting liver transplantation.

Full description

Quality of life (QOL) outcomes are important to all stakeholders in liver transplantation. For patients with end-stage liver disease, QOL is significantly compromised and more data about QOL allows them to make an informed risk-benefit analysis in deciding whether to pursue transplantation. The long-term goal of this research program is to better understand how QOL can be enhanced, to identify the mechanisms underlying QOL changes, to identify which patients benefit most from QOL intervention, and to determine whether QOL benefits can extend beyond transplantation. The objective of this research is to determine the effectiveness, feasibility and applicability of Quality of Life Therapy (QOLT) in treating adults with hepatitis C virus and cirrhosis awaiting liver transplantation. In a recent small, single-center clinical trial, we demonstrated that QOLT can improve QOL, psychological functioning, and social intimacy in patients awaiting lung transplantation. We now seek to examine whether this intervention can be effectively adapted and implemented with adults with hepatitis C virus and cirrhosis awaiting liver transplantation. The central hypothesis is that by targeting improvements in specific life domains, QOLT yields significant clinical benefits in QOL, psychological functioning, and the patient-caregiver relationship. This hypothesis is being tested by pursuing three specific aims: 1) Determine the effectiveness of QOLT; 2) Examine the differential effectiveness of QOLT by race (White, African American); and 3) Assess the feasibility of a multisite R01 application. Under the first aim, adults with hepatitis C virus and cirrhosis awaiting liver transplantation are being randomized to receive QOLT, Supportive Therapy (ST), or Standard Care (SC). Primary outcomes are changes in QOL, psychological functioning, and social intimacy at 1 and 12 weeks post-treatment. Under the second aim, the relationship between race and intervention outcomes will be closely examined. Under the third aim, attrition rates, reasons for attrition, therapist adherence to treatment protocols, and participant satisfaction ratings are being gathered to assess the need for protocol changes prior to developing a larger, multisite clinical trial R01 application. This study is innovative because it is among the first to evaluate a theoretically-driven psychological intervention to specifically improve QOL in the context of hepatitis C virus and cirrhosis and liver transplantation. The research is significant because it is expected to advance and expand understanding of how QOL can be improved in patients with hepatitis C virus and cirrhosis.

Enrollment

75 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

21 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male or female patients between 21 and 70 years of age
  • Diagnosis of chronic HCV
  • Wait-listed for liver transplantation
  • Signed informed consent
  • Primary caregiver identified as spouse or domestic partner
  • Resides within 60 minutes of transplant center
  • MELD score < 20

Exclusion criteria

  • Prior recipient of liver transplantation
  • Prior recipient of other solid organ transplantation
  • Wait-listed for combined liver-kidney transplantation
  • Current substance abuse or dependency
  • Currently hospitalized
  • Sustained (2 or more consecutive months) MELD score less than or equal to 20
  • Current recipient of psychological intervention services
  • Substantial cognitive impairment (score of 23 or less on the Mini-Mental State Examination)
  • Communication difficulties (speech, hearing) so substantial that they would prevent patient from participating actively in one of the interventions (determined by interviewer rating)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

75 participants in 3 patient groups

QOLT
Experimental group
Description:
Quality of Life Therapy (QOLT) 8 weekly individual counseling sessions.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Quality of Life Therapy
ST
Active Comparator group
Description:
Supportive Therapy (ST) 8 weekly individual counseling sessions
Treatment:
Behavioral: Supportive Therapy
Standard Care
No Intervention group

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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