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CompletedNCT04958655

Mental Imagery Intervention for Alcohol Craving

Estimating the Acute Impact of Competing Mental Imagery on Craving in Alcohol Use Disorder

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
46 (actual)
Sponsor
King's College London · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

A within-subjects crossover, randomised controlled trial conducted at a specialist NHS outpatient addictions clinics to determine if mental imagery (of future positive \[recovery oriented\] events) and a visuospatial task (playing Tetris) can help reduce cue-induced alcohol craving. Effects of both interventions will be compared.

Detailed description

Alcohol misuse has a devastating economic impact, with alcohol misuse reportedly costing the UK £20 billion a year. The burden on the health system is also well recognized, with for example, 70% of all admissions to A\&E could be linked to alcohol misuse. Meanwhile, the links between alcohol misuse and mental health conditions is well recognized, where the prevalence of patients who have a dual diagnosis of Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) and another psychiatric condition, is well-established in the literature. Some cognitive models of substance misuse have also hypothesized about the central role that imagery can have in the initiation and maintenance of addiction. The Elaborated Intrusion (EI) Theory hypothesises that elaborating on alcohol related imagery is integral to the craving experience which ultimately leads to drinking. The EI theory describes craving beginning with an intrusive thought, triggered automatically by external or physiological cues, and associated cognitions. Where these thoughts are pleasurable, the individual will likely elaborate. Elaboration is an effortful cognitive event, where sensory information about the substance is searched for and held in working memory as an image. The theory suggests that during the elaboration process, increasingly rich cues serve to heighten the vividness of consumption imagery, giving acquisition even greater urgency and attentional priority. These images are initially rewarding but as elaboration continues, awareness of somatic deficit and negative affect will occur where the target is not acquired and consumed. As the elaboration is effortful, the theory proposes that the construction and maintenance of these desire images takes up limited working memory capacity. Therefore, the EI theory suggests that were elaboration is disrupted, through a competing task, craving will reduce. Tetris has now been tested across craving populations to test the EI theory. Research groups have found that playing Tetris was significantly better than a control condition (watching a loading screen) at reduced self-reported craving for a range of targets. Tetris, therefore appears to be an easily accessible tool to operationalise as a means to interfere with visuo-spatial elaboration during craving for patients. The researchers who developed the EI theory, hypothesise that familiar, habitual sensory imagery around a desired substance will hold vividness and emotive power that is easily maintained where competing imagery is weak and less meaningful or vivid to the individual. In the researcher's view, this is what explains relapse to alcohol, as competing tasks do not hold sufficient pleasure or reward during craving to engage individuals attention. Therefore, while they may agree with evidence that 'blocking' the elaboration of imagery processes is a useful (and more effective start than other non-imagery based distraction tasks), they hypothesise that a personalised and meaningful image with significant reward feature should outperform a visuo-spatial task, such as Tetris, in blocking the craving processes. Findings support this, suggesting that personally meaningful aspirational or 'positive' images around abstaining can be effective in reducing urges to use. For example, in piloting 'Functional Imagery Training' (FIT), researchers found that patients who rehearsed multisensory positive goal imagery lost more weight and reduced snacking more than a wait list control group. However, no study has compared this 'positive/motivational image' approach to an alternative visuo-spatial working memory task. This study has the following aims: * To determine if visualising a meaningful/positive image reduces craving more than engaging in a non-meaningful visuo-spatial task in alcohol use disorder. * To determine if the vividness of the positive image generated impacts the efficacy of the imagery intervention. * To determine the pre-morbid ability of the sample in generating prospective/future imagery. * To determine if the pre-morbid ability for generating prospective/future images impact the efficacy of the imagery intervention. Participants will be recruited from specialist NHS outpatient addictions clinics (Wandsworth, Bexley and Lambeth community substance misuse services). Informed consenting adult participants will be randomised to one of two conditions during a single session research appointment: 1. Tetris then Positive Image 2. Positive Image then Tetris Participants will undergo a craving induction procedure designed to elicit cue-induced craving. In response to elevated craving, participants will be asked to reduce craving levels using a positive future mental imagery intervention and playing Tetris. Participants will be fully debriefed and provided time to ask any questions they may have. A craving reduction task will also be offered. Participants will also be asked to identify a named person they can contact if they later feel concerned or distressed. Where required, signposting to support will be offered.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALTetris Taska visual task where participants are asked to play 'tetris' i.e. attend to and manipulate shapes and positions on screen
BEHAVIORALMental Imagery for Craving Reductiona behavioural mental imagery intervention where participants are asked to generate a specific future mental image to reduce cue-induced craving for alcohol

Timeline

Start date
2021-09-20
Primary completion
2022-05-21
Completion
2022-05-21
First posted
2021-07-12
Last updated
2022-05-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04958655. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.