Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03447548

Neurofeedback Training for High Risk Psychosis

Neurofeedback Processing Speed Training to Improve Social Functioning in Teenagers and Young Adults at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
81 (actual)
Sponsor
Hartford Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
12 Years – 25 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Young people who are at great risk for developing psychosis have cognitive deficits which are strongly related to functioning in the community. This study looks to target a specific cognitive skill called processing speed to see if improving the ability to process information in a timely manner will improve social function in adolescents and young adults at risk for developing schizophrenia. Half will receive neurofeedback cognitive training targeting processing speed while the other half will receive an active control.

Detailed description

Processing speed deficits are characteristic of schizophrenia and related to its functional impairment, including in its nascent stages, during a putatively prodromal or clinical high risk period. These cognitive deficits have proven relatively refractory to pharmacologic strategies, though the deficits can be improved with cognitive remediation programs in schizophrenia. The cognitive gains can then generalize to functional improvement, particularly early in the course of illness (i.e. first episode psychosis). Although processing speed deficits are also prevalent in young people identified as at clinical high risk for psychosis (i.e. "psychosis risk syndrome"), and related to their concurrent impaired function and predictive of later psychosis (onset of which occurs in 20-25% of clinical high risk cohorts), little research has focused on how to remediate these deficits in clinical high risk patients. Remediating core cognitive deficits in clinical high risk patients could plausibly address present functional impairment in these young people and moderate illness progression. The investigators propose to conduct a double-blind randomized trial in 105 clinical high risk patients to examine a focal processing speed training program versus an active control in terms of improvement in processing speed and social function, and reduction in prodromal symptom severity.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALNeurofeedback processing speed trainingProcessing speed training on tablets that incorporates changes in pupil size to titrate the learning algorithm
BEHAVIORALActive controlCommercially available games on tablet

Timeline

Start date
2018-03-01
Primary completion
2021-12-01
Completion
2021-12-01
First posted
2018-02-27
Last updated
2024-02-28

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03447548. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.