Cognitive-behavioral therapy vs. light therapy for preventing winter depression recurrence: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

被引:21
|
作者
Rohan, Kelly J. [1 ]
Evans, Maggie [1 ]
Mahon, Jennifer N. [1 ]
Sitnikov, Lilya [1 ]
Ho, Sheau-Yan [1 ]
Nillni, Yael I. [1 ]
Postolache, Teodor T. [2 ]
Vacek, Pamela M. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vermont, Dept Psychol, John Dewey Hall, Burlington, VT 05405 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, Mood & Anxiety Program, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA
[3] Univ Vermont, Coll Med, Dept Med Biostat, Burlington, VT 05405 USA
来源
TRIALS | 2013年 / 14卷
关键词
Seasonal affective disorder; Clinical trial; Cognitive-behavioral therapy; Light therapy; Depression recurrence; Prevention; SEASONAL AFFECTIVE-DISORDER; TO-TREAT ANALYSIS; BRIGHT LIGHT; FOLLOW-UP; PHARMACOTHERAPY; COMBINATION; METAANALYSIS; MEDICATIONS; PREVALENCE; EFFICACY;
D O I
10.1186/1745-6215-14-82
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Background: Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is a subtype of recurrent depression involving major depressive episodes during the fall and/or winter months that remit in the spring. The central public health challenge in the management of SAD is prevention of winter depression recurrence. Light therapy (LT) is the established and best available acute SAD treatment. However, long-term compliance with daily LT from first symptom through spontaneous springtime remission every fall/winter season is poor. Time-limited alternative treatments with effects that endure beyond the cessation of acute treatment are needed to prevent the annual recurrence of SAD. Methods/design: This is an NIMH-funded R01-level randomized clinical trial to test the efficacy of a novel, SAD-tailored cognitive-behavioral group therapy (CBT) against LT in a head-to-head comparison on next winter outcomes. This project is designed to test for a clinically meaningful difference between CBT and LT on depression recurrence in the next winter (the primary outcome). This is a concurrent two-arm study that will randomize 160 currently symptomatic community adults with major depression, recurrent with seasonal pattern, to CBT or LT. After 6 weeks of treatment in the initial winter, participants are followed in the subsequent summer, the next winter, and two winters later. Key methodological issues surround timing study procedures for a predictably recurrent and time-limited disorder with a focus on long-term outcomes. Discussion: The chosen design answers the primary question of whether prior exposure to CBT is associated with a substantially lower likelihood of depression recurrence the next winter than LT. This design does not test the relative contributions of the cognitive-behavioral treatment components vs. nonspecific factors to CBT's outcomes and is not adequately powered to test for differences or equivalence between cells at treatment endpoint. Alternative designs addressing these limitations would have required more patients, increased costs, and reduced power to detect a difference in the primary outcome.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cognitive-behavioral therapy vs. light therapy for preventing winter depression recurrence: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
    Kelly J Rohan
    Maggie Evans
    Jennifer N Mahon
    Lilya Sitnikov
    Sheau-Yan Ho
    Yael I Nillni
    Teodor T Postolache
    Pamela M Vacek
    Trials, 14
  • [2] Elucidating treatment targets and mediators within a confirmatory efficacy trial: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial of cognitive-behavioral therapy vs. light therapy for winter depression
    Rohan, Kelly J.
    Franzen, Peter L.
    Roeckelin, Kathryn A.
    Siegle, Greg J.
    Kolko, David J.
    Postolache, Teodor T.
    Vacek, Pamela M.
    TRIALS, 2022, 23 (01)
  • [3] Elucidating treatment targets and mediators within a confirmatory efficacy trial: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial of cognitive-behavioral therapy vs. light therapy for winter depression
    Kelly J. Rohan
    Peter L. Franzen
    Kathryn A. Roeckelin
    Greg J. Siegle
    David J. Kolko
    Teodor T. Postolache
    Pamela M. Vacek
    Trials, 23
  • [4] Cognitive predictors and moderators of winter depression treatment outcomes in cognitive-behavioral therapy vs. light therapy
    Sitnikov, Lilya
    Rohan, Kelly J.
    Evans, Maggie
    Mahon, Jennifer N.
    Nillni, Yael I.
    BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY, 2013, 51 (12) : 872 - 881
  • [5] A randomized controlled trial of group cognitive-behavioral therapy vs. enhanced supportive therapy for auditory hallucinations
    Penn, David L.
    Meyer, Piper S.
    Evans, Elizabeth
    Wirth, R. J.
    Cai, Karen
    Burchinal, Margaret
    SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH, 2009, 109 (1-3) : 52 - 59
  • [6] Narrative Therapy vs. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for moderate depression: Empirical evidence from a controlled clinical trial
    Lopes, Rodrigo T.
    Goncalves, Miguel M.
    Machado, Paulo P. P.
    Sinai, Dana
    Bento, Tiago
    Salgado, Joao
    PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH, 2014, 24 (06) : 662 - 674
  • [7] Winter Depression Recurrence One Year After Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, Light Therapy, or Combination Treatment
    Rohan, Kelly J.
    Roecklein, Kathryn A.
    Lacy, Timothy J.
    Vacek, Pamela M.
    BEHAVIOR THERAPY, 2009, 40 (03) : 225 - 238
  • [8] Preventing relapse/recurrence in recurrent depression with cognitive therapy: A randomized controlled trial
    Bockting, CLH
    Schene, AH
    Spinhoven, P
    Koeter, MWJ
    Wouters, LF
    Huyser, J
    Kamphuis, JH
    JOURNAL OF CONSULTING AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2005, 73 (04) : 647 - 657
  • [9] Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Depression in Parkinson's Disease: A Randomized, Controlled Trial
    Dobkin, Roseanne D.
    Menza, Matthew
    Allen, Lesley A.
    Gara, Michael A.
    Mark, Margery H.
    Tiu, Jade
    Bienfait, Karina L.
    Friedman, Jill
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2011, 168 (10): : 1066 - 1074
  • [10] DIGITAL COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL THERAPY IN THE TREATMENT OF ADOLESCENT DEPRESSION: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
    Topooco, Naira W.
    Andersson, Gerhard
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2017, 56 (10): : S299 - S300