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Testing an Evidence-Based Self-Help Program for Infertility-Related Distress in Women

U

University of Regina

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Infertility
Mental Health Issue
Distress, Emotional

Treatments

Behavioral: Coping with Infertility Self-Help Program

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06006936
REB #2023-210
DCO150GP
6447

Details and patient eligibility

About

Now affecting one in six couples in Canada, infertility is defined as a lack of conception after 12 or more months of regular, unprotected sexual intercourse. Infertility can result from a number of causes; however, women are responsible for accommodating rigid treatment regimens and carry a disproportionate share of the psychological burden associated with infertility. Thirty to forty percent of women presenting for the evaluation of infertility experiencing clinically significant depression or anxiety. Yet access to infertility-specific mental health resources is extremely limited in Canada; current psychological interventions are not specialized to this population and are largely ineffective at reducing distress. Therefore, there is an enormous need to increase the efficacy and accessibility of mental health resources for this population.

To address this need, the 7-week Coping with Infertility (CWI) program was developed in collaboration with women with lived experience with infertility. The CWI program aims to reduce distress related to infertility and was recently tested in a small pilot study, where it was found to be very effective in reducing depression and anxiety and improving quality of life among individuals struggling to get pregnant. The goal of this clinical study is to test the CWI program in adult women experiencing infertility. The main questions it aims to answer are if the CWI program is effective at improving mental health and well-being in women experiencing infertility, and if demographic or lifestyle factors moderate the effect of the treatment. For seven weeks, participants will receive the CWI program and complete online questionnaires and interviews to assess the program's effects on infertility-related distress, quality of life, depressive symptoms, anxiety, and relationship quality. They will then complete these questionnaires biweekly for 16 weeks following the program. Researchers will compare the CWI program to a waitlist/treatment as usual control condition to see if the program reduces psychological distress above and beyond women's ordinary coping strategies. If the program is effective in improving psychological well-being in this clinical study, the researchers will make the program widely and freely available to women throughout Canada and the world.

Full description

Infertility is associated with severe psychological consequences; psychiatric disorders are common, particularly in women, yet current psychological interventions are not specialized to this population and are largely ineffective. The 7-week Coping with Infertility (CWI) program is a self-help program based on cognitive behaviour therapy that aims to improve mental health in women and individuals assigned female at birth who are experiencing infertility. This study aims to test the efficacy of the CWI program.

In the proposed study, a single-blind randomized controlled trial, participants will be randomly assigned to either the specialized CWI program or a waitlist/treatment as usual control condition using stratified block randomization. Infertility-related distress, quality of life, depression, anxiety, and relationship quality will be assessed at baseline, midway through the program, post-treatment, and biweekly for 16 weeks after treatment. It is expected that participants assigned to the CWI program will show significantly reduced infertility-related distress, depression, and anxiety, and improved quality of life and relationship quality relative to baseline and the waitlist control condition. Moderation analyses will examine potential treatment moderators including sexual orientation and gender identity, as well as cultural background, disability status, and whether participants are pursuing fertility treatments. Participants who complete the CWI program will also provide qualitative feedback on how the program can be improved. The results of this trial could establish the CWI program as an effective short-term therapy option for women experiencing infertility, addressing a significant gap in infertility treatment.

Enrollment

170 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Assigned female at birth
  • Experiencing infertility (defined as [a] lack of conception after 12 or more months of regular, unprotected, heterosexual intercourse, or [b] currently undergoing fertility treatments)
  • Fluent in English

Exclusion criteria

  • Under the age of 18

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

170 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Condition
Experimental group
Description:
This arm will receive the Coping with Infertility intervention.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Coping with Infertility Self-Help Program
Waitlist/Treatment as Usual Control Condition
No Intervention group
Description:
This arm will continue with everyday life-including their attempts to conceive.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jennifer L. Gordon, Ph.D.; Megan Poulter, B.A. (Hons.)

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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