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RecruitingNCT05602805

BariaPSY: the Data Bank

Mental Health, Eating Disorders and Obesity Databank

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
10,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
Laval University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Multimorbidity, the co-occurrence of several chronic conditions, is a growing phenomenon that poses new challenges for clinicians and researchers. The association between a mental health disorder and a physical health disorder represents a particularly frequent subtype of multimorbidity and is associated with greater severity and higher consumption of care. It is essential and urgent to explore the specific pathophysiology of this subtype of multimorbidity in order to develop adapted therapeutic strategies. Psychiatric disorders, such as mood disorders, anxiety disorders, attention deficit disorder and binge eating disorder, are common in people with obesity. For example, although most of these disorders may improve after bariatric surgery, some components of these disorders, such as emotional dysregulation and impulsivity, need to be addressed as they appear to be involved in the development of addiction and suicidality after bariatric surgery. Therefore, screening and vigilance of these risks appear increasingly necessary. To address this challenge, the BariaPsy databank aims to explore the screening of certain mental health disorders frequently observed in adults with obesity through an innovative approach that explores behaviors in the form of dimensions. It will help clinicians to quickly identify markers of certain disorders, thus helping them to further investigate the problem and provide personalized resources to their patient.

Detailed description

The specific research objectives pursued by BariaPsy are as follows: 1. To develop a comprehensive screening tool to support the health professionals (surgeon, physician, specialized practice nurse) in their consultation regarding the mental health of the candidate for overweight or obesity management, helping them to delve deeper into the problem and to give personalized resources to their patient so that they can be well supported. 2. To evaluate the interest of such an evaluation device on the effectiveness and tolerance of the management proposed to the participants. 3. To better characterize patients with physical-mental multimorbidity and the impact of this phenotype on management, in order to issue appropriate recommendations. 4. To identify the prevalence of psychiatric disorders, including mood disorders, anxiety disorders, attention deficit disorder, and binge eating disorder, in the hospital setting, in the overweight/obese population. 5. To identify potential pathophysiological mechanisms to explain the links between mental health and obesity by relating the affected psychological dimensions to the anthropometric, metabolic and sociodemographic parameters of the participants (through information contained in the medical records). 6. Identify potential pathophysiological mechanisms to explain the links between mental health and obesity by relating the affected psychological dimensions to the parameters of current biology available in the medical record (liver, inflammatory, carbohydrate and lipid balance, etc.), but also biological and histological parameters (e.g., adipose tissue samples) in relation to the biobank or management frameworks that are already in place (e.g., in the bariatric surgery service). Also, the participant's authorization will be requested in the Information and Consent Form to have access to their IUCPQ medical record, which contains a collection of sociodemographic, anthropometric and biological information as well as information related to their obesity management (data collection by the bariatric surgery program nurse and/or data collection carried out when the questionnaire is sent to the bariatric medicine or psychiatry programs). The BariaPsy databank will improve the screening of certain mental health disorders frequently observed in the context of overweight or obesity in adults. The data collected will be used for several research studies with the objective of better characterizing patients with physical-mental multimorbidity and the impact of this phenotype on management, in order to issue appropriate recommendations.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2022-11-15
Primary completion
2067-11-01
Completion
2072-11-01
First posted
2022-11-02
Last updated
2024-10-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05602805. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.