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Active Not RecruitingNCT03677947

Inference-Based Cognitive Therapy Versus Exposure and Response Prevention for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Inference-Based Cognitive Therapy Versus Exposure and Response Prevention for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: a 16-Session Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
150 (estimated)
Sponsor
Centre de Recherche de l'Institut Universitaire en santé Mentale de Montréal · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a highly disabling psychiatric illness, characterized by obsessional thoughts that cause patients to perform time-consuming and distressing compulsive rituals. Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) is a first-line psychological treatment of choice, which requires patients to face their fears by being exposed to feared stimuli. ERP has been shown to reduce symptoms among those who comply with treatment. However, there is still a significant portion of patients that do not improve, especially those who firmly believe their obsessions are realistic and reasonable (i.e. OCD with Overvalued Ideation (OVI)). Also, a signficant proportion of patients refuse the treatment or drop out during treatment due to the distress provoked by ERP. Even among those that do improve, residual symptoms often remain, or symptoms may reappear after treatment. One evidence-based approach to the treatment of OCD, termed inference-based cognitive therapy (IBCT) has been shown to be as effective as ERP with the potential to overcome some of the limitations of ERP. Since IBCT is a cognitive approach, the treatment does not require exposure to feared stimuli and likely more tolerable for patients with OCD. Also, there is evidence that IBCT is more effective than ERP for those with overvalued ideation, since it directly targets the distorted reasoning that is responsible for the intensity and persistence of the obsession. The current study aims to directly compare ERP with this promising evidence-based cognitive therapy, which is expected to be significantly more effective for those with overvalued ideation, as well as significantly more tolerable with lower rates of treatment refusal, drop-out and higher treatment satisfaction. The project is designed to maximize potential beneficial health outcomes and offer a new evidence-based treatment option for the large proportion of patients unable to benefit from ERP.

Detailed description

The proposed study is a parallel-group randomized controlled trial developed in accordance with CONSORT quality guidelines.The RCT will compare the outcome of 16 sessions of IBCT compared to 16 sessions of ERP in OCD patients. The principal investigators and independent evaluators will be blind to the random allocation treatment conditions with a randomization ratio of 1:1. Both treatments will be administered by trained therapists on a weekly one-on-one basis over a 16-week period with 6-month follow-up conforming to current thinking on relapse in OCD. Conditions of treatment delivery, duration and monitoring will be equivalent across all groups. Both treatments are manualized and any newly engaged therapists will receive intensive training in one therapy protocol to ensure optimal delivery of each modality. The objective of the present study is to establish IBCT as a psychological treatment that is as effective as ERP, but significantly more tolerable and generalizable for the high proportion of patients who are unable to benefit from ERP. The hypotheses are that 1) IBCT is non-inferior to ERP; 2) IBCT is superior to ERP among OCD patients with higher levels of OVI; 3) IBCT has lower rates of treatment refusal and drop-out than ERP; and, 4) IBCT has higher levels of acceptability, tolerability, credibility and satisfaction than ERP.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALExposure and response preventionERP is a treatment developed to help people confront their fears based on the rationale that exposure to feared objects, activities, or situations in a safe environment helps reduce fear and decrease avoidance. During the treatment, participants will engage in these exposures to feared stimuli within and between sessions according to hierarchies developed during the initial evaluation sessions, and refrain from engaging in compulsive behaviour until their anxiety subsides (i.e. ritual prevention). Exercises will consist of both exposure in vivo (i.e. exposure in real life situations) and/or imaginal exposure according to recommendations.
OTHERInference-based cognitive therapyThe treatment primarily targets the dysfunctional reasoning that gives rise to obsessional doubts and overvalued ideas. IBCT does not include exposure in vivo, but instead, aims to bring resolution to the initial obsessional doubt or overvalued idea by showing the participant that the obsession is the result of incorrect reasoning.

Timeline

Start date
2018-09-01
Primary completion
2025-03-31
Completion
2025-03-31
First posted
2018-09-19
Last updated
2024-10-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03677947. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.