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
  • [21] Peer-Delivered Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Postpartum Depression: A Randomized Controlled Trial
    Amani, Bahar
    Merza, Donya
    Savoy, Calan
    Streiner, David
    Bieling, Peter
    Ferro, Mark A.
    Van Lieshout, Ryan J.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2022, 83 (01)
  • [22] Culturally Adapted Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Chinese Americans With Depression: A Randomized Controlled Trial
    Hwang, Wei-Chin
    Myers, Hector F.
    Chiu, Eddie
    Mak, Elsie
    Butner, Jonathan E.
    Fujimoto, Ken
    Wood, Jeffrey J.
    Miranda, Jeanne
    PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES, 2015, 66 (10) : 1035 - 1042
  • [23] A Randomized Clinical Trial for Women With Vulvodynia: Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy vs. Supportive Psychotherapy
    Masheb, Robin M.
    Kerns, Robert D.
    Lozano, Christine
    Minkin, Mary Jane
    Richman, Susan
    OBSTETRICAL & GYNECOLOGICAL SURVEY, 2009, 64 (05) : 305 - 306
  • [24] A randomized clinical trial for women with vulvodynia: Cognitive-behavioral therapy vs. supportive psychotherapy
    Masheb, Robin M.
    Kerns, Robert D.
    Lozano, Christine
    Minkin, Mary Jane
    Richman, Susan
    PAIN, 2009, 141 (1-2) : 31 - 40
  • [25] A Randomized Controlled Trial of Medication and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Hypochondriasis
    Fallon, Brian A.
    Ahern, David K.
    Pavlicova, Martina
    Slavov, Iordan
    Skritskya, Natalia
    Barsky, Arthur J.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2017, 174 (08): : 756 - 764
  • [26] Cognitive-behavioral therapy for somatization disorder - A randomized controlled trial
    Allen, Lesley A.
    Woolfolk, Robert L.
    Escobar, Javier I.
    Gara, Michael A.
    Hamer, Robert M.
    ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2006, 166 (14) : 1512 - 1518
  • [27] Fluoxetine, cognitive-behavioral therapy, and their combination for adolescents with depression - Treatment for adolescents with depression study (TADS) randomized controlled trial
    March, J
    Silva, S
    Petrycki, S
    Curry, J
    Wells, K
    Fairbank, J
    Burns, B
    Domino, M
    Vitiello, B
    Severe, J
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2004, 292 (07): : 807 - 820
  • [28] Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy as Continuation Treatment to Sustain Response After Electroconvulsive Therapy in Depression: A Randomized Controlled Trial
    Brakemeier, Eva-Lotta
    Merkl, Angela
    Wilbertz, Gregor
    Quante, Arnim
    Regen, Francesca
    Buehrsch, Nicole
    van Hall, Franziska
    Kischkel, Eva
    Danker-Hopfe, Heidi
    Anghelescu, Ion
    Heuser, Isabella
    Kathmann, Norbert
    Bajbouj, Malek
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2014, 76 (03) : 194 - 202
  • [29] Inadequate Reporting of a Randomized Trial Comparing Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Psychodynamic Therapy for Depression
    Leichsenring, Falk
    Liliengren, Peter
    Lindqvist, Karin
    Mechler, Jakob
    Falkenstom, Fredrik
    Philips, Bjorn
    Steinert, Christiane
    Abbass, Allan
    JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE, 2019, 207 (06) : 421 - 422
  • [30] A Blended Cognitive-Behavioral Intervention for the Treatment of Postpartum Depression: Study Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial
    Branquinho, Mariana
    Canavarro, Maria Cristina
    Fonseca, Ana
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 17 (22) : 1 - 14