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Skills Based Counseling for Adherence and Depression in HIV+ Methadone Patients - 1

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Mass General Brigham

Status

Completed

Conditions

Heroin Dependence
Substance-Related Disorders
Adherence
Motivational Interviewing
Depression
Methadone

Treatments

Behavioral: ETAU
Behavioral: CBT-AD

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT00218634
R01DA018603 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
NIDA-18603-1

Details and patient eligibility

About

Patients with HIV, depression, and opioid-dependence are at high risk for poor health outcomes. This is a two-arm randomized controlled trial of cognitive-behavioral therapy for depression and HIV medication adherence in patients with opioid dependence who are receiving methadone maintenance treatment. The project is based on our pilot work with close attention to NIDA guidelines for a staged approach to treatment development and testing (Rounsaville et al., 2001).

Depression is highly comorbid with both HIV infection and with opioid dependence. Depression and substance abuse are both associated with poor adherence to antiretroviral medications. Patients with HIV, depression, and opioid dependence are at high risk for poor health outcomes. Cognitive-behavioral therapy is the most widely studied and efficacious psychosocial intervention for depression; and research by the PI and others has shown that cognitive-behavioral interventions have been successful in promoting adherence to HIV medications.

Full description

Symptoms of depression (i.e. low motivation, poor concentration, loss of interest, sad mood, suicidal ideation) that occur in the context of substance abuse or dependence can interfere with self-care behaviors necessary for maintaining HIV care, as well as interfere with potential benefit from an intervention that focuses on adherence alone. We hypothesize that teaching skills to cope with depression will improve the outcome from an adherence intervention to promote healthier living with HIV, in HIV+ opioid dependent individuals in methadone maintenance treatment.

Overview of Research Plan. Patients who are HIV positive and who are receiving methadone maintenance for opioid dependence will be randomized to treatment with either: (1) CBT, a combination of CBT for depression and HIV medication adherence, including a single session intervention for HIV medication adherence (Life-Steps, Safren et al., 2001) in conjunction with physician feedback regarding baseline study assessments or (2) the single session intervention for HIV medication adherence (Life-Steps, Safren et al., 2001) in conjunction with physician feedback regarding baseline study assessments. Participants will be followed for one-year post-randomization.

Enrollment

89 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • HIV seropositive
  • Currently enrolled in methadone maintenance treatment for at least one month
  • Current major or subsyndromal depression (subsyndromal depression is defined by major depression that does not meet full diagnostic criteria but with a clinical global impression of severity (CGI-S) of 2 (mildly ill))
  • Is prescribed antiretroviral therapy for HIV and therefore under the care of a primary care provider.
  • Between the ages of 18 and 65.

Exclusion criteria

  • Active untreated, unstable, major mental illness (i.e., untreated psychosis or mania), or other Axis I psychiatric disorders (other than depression) that would interfere with the ability to participate (i.e. CGI-S >6)
  • Unable or unwilling to provide informed consent.
  • Currently in cognitive behavioral therapy for depression.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

89 participants in 2 patient groups

CBT-AD
Experimental group
Description:
Cognitive behavioral therapy for adherence and depression
Treatment:
Behavioral: CBT-AD
ETAU
Active Comparator group
Description:
Enhanced treatment as usual
Treatment:
Behavioral: ETAU

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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