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Reducing Suicide Risk Among Aging Caregivers of Persons With AD/ADRD

T

Texas Tech University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Inflammation
Caregiver Burden
Physical Health
Depression
Suicide

Treatments

Behavioral: Adapted Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06055322
TexasTechU4

Details and patient eligibility

About

This project aims to adapt, implement, and evaluate a Dialectical Behavior Therapy skills training group intervention for aging adult family caregivers of person with Alzheimer's Disease and Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) to reduce suicidality. By adapting this modality, the investigators will provide a scalable intervention tailored for this high-risk population, maximizing the public health impact and improving suicide prevention.

Full description

Family caregivers of persons with Alzheimer's Disease and Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) experience caregiving-related distress and have about 650% higher rates of suicide ideation (SI; 32.32%) compared to the general population (4.3%). Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), an evidence-based intervention for suicide, addresses multiple areas of psychosocial functioning. Standard DBT is often too re-source-intensive (6 months to 1 year of weekly individual sessions and 1.5-2.5-hour weekly skills training group sessions) and is not tailored to family caregivers of persons with AD/ADRD with SI, creating a significant barrier to SI treatment. The investigators will develop, implement, and evaluate an adapted DBT skills training groups tailored to the unique experiences and needs of family caregivers of persons with AD/ADRD to reduce suicide-related out-comes most effectively. Our specific aims are: (1) Adapt DBT skills groups for family caregivers (of persons with AD/ADRD) endorsing direct or indirect SI (directly stated SI vs. indirect indicators of SI) to ensure it applies to direct and indirect SI and considers SI underreporting; (2) Evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and fidelity of the adapted DBT skills groups in this sample; (3) Assess preliminary effectiveness indicators of the adapted DBT skills groups. For Aim 1, a panel of experts and two stakeholders (Garrison Institute on Aging (GIA) staff; family caregivers of a person with AD/ADRD), will inform the adaptation of DBT skills training to family caregiv-ers of persons with AD/ADRD and shorten to 16 weekly, 1-hour skills groups sessions, over 4 months. For Aims 2 and 3, the investigators will implement the adapted DBT skills training groups among family caregivers of persons with AD/ADRD with direct/indirect SI at screening while providing respite, all at GIA. The investigators will collect relevant demo-graphic data from family caregivers and family caregiver-reported data about the person with AD/ADRD. Over 18 time points (baseline, following weekly DBT sessions, follow-up), participants will complete self-report assessments targeting DBT fidelity/acceptably, SI (direct and indirect), and suicide risk correlates. The investigators will also record DBT session to monitor fidelity. The investigators will track participant recruitment, group attendance, retention as feasibility metrics. The investigators will also use innovative methodology by collecting inflammation biomarkers and heart rate variability data as an indirect SI assessment. Lastly, the investigators will conduct focus groups after the intervention for addi-tional qualitative acceptability and feasibility data. The investigators will also survey GIA site staff to evaluate their perceived acceptability and feasibility of the intervention at GIA. Our hypotheses are that 1) our adapted DBT skills group will be feasible, acceptable, and maintain DBT fidelity, and 2) SI (direct and indirect), suicide risk factors, and inflammation will decrease, and heart rate variability will increase post intervention. Our expected outcomes are to have a scalable DBT group intervention for family caregivers of persons with ADRD, indications of feasibility and acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness indicators. This work will provide a life-saving suicide prevention approach for family caregivers of persons with AD/ADRD, provide students with multidisciplinary research experiences, and significantly strengthen our university research environment.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

50 to 120 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • being age 50 and over (as most informal caregivers of persons with AD/ADRD are 50 or older; AARP, 2020; Chi et al., 2019)
  • being the primary informal caregiver
  • living with an AD/ADRD-diagnosed patient
  • being willing to be prodded for bloodspots
  • demonstrating English-fluency
  • endorsing a direct or indirect SI/suicide risk
  • Eligible individuals will score above clinical cutoffs for SI/suicide risk on at least 1 of 3 measures: the Suicide Behavior Questionnaire-R (SBQ-R; score > 6; Osman et al., 2002), Interpersonal Needs Question-naire (INQ; thwarted belonging score > 35; and perceived burden > 17; Mitchell et al., 2020) or the Geriatric De-pression Scale (GDS; score > 5 Heisel et al., 2005).

Exclusion criteria

• Participants with neurocognitive impairment will be excluded (a Mini-Mental State Exam score ≤ 23; Folstein et al., 1975; Kochhann et al., 2010)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 1 patient group

Adapted Dialectical Behavior Therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Adapting Dialectical Behavior Therapy to focus on reducing suicide ideation for family caregivers of persons with AD/ADRD
Treatment:
Behavioral: Adapted Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Sean Mitchell, PhD; Jonathan D Singer, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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