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RecruitingNCT06262412

Internet-delivered Cognitive-behaviour Therapy for Child and Adolescent Body Dysmorphic Disorder

Clinical Efficacy and Cost-effectiveness of Internet-delivered Cognitive-behaviour Therapy for Children and Adolescents With Body Dysmorphic Disorder: a Randomised Controlled Trial

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
154 (estimated)
Sponsor
Karolinska Institutet · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
12 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this trial is to evaluate the clinical efficacy, the cost-effectiveness and the 6-month durability of a therapist-guided, Internet-delivered cognitive-behavior therapy programme for children and adolescents with body dysmorphic disorder.

Detailed description

Primary objective: To determine the clinical efficacy of a therapist-guided, Internet-delivered cognitive-behaviour therapy (ICBT) programme for body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) in reducing BDD symptom severity in children and adolescents with BDD, compared to a control intervention consisting of a therapist-guided, Internet-delivered relaxation treatment (IRT) for BDD. Secondary objective: To establish the 6-month durability of the treatment effects and to assess the cost-effectiveness of ICBT, compared with IRT, from multiple perspectives and to conduct a health-economic evaluation of ICBT for BDD at the primary endpoint from a health organisation payer, healthcare resource use, and societal perspective. Type of trial: A multisite parallel-group randomised controlled superiority trial. Rationale: BDD is a prevalent and impairing disorder that tends to have a chronic course if left untreated. Adolescent-onset BDD is associated with more severe symptoms, greater lifetime comorbidity, and higher rates of attempted suicide compared to adult-onset BDD. Therefore, early intervention is crucial. BDD can be effectively treated with cognitive-behaviour therapy (CBT), although the current evidence is rather weak and more evidence is needed. Furthermore, CBT for BDD is a highly specialised treatment and many young people do not have access to it. ICBT can be a way to increase the availability of an effective, evidence-based treatment for children and adolescents with BDD. Trial design and methods: Participants will be recruited nationally across Sweden and will be offered 12 modules of therapist-guided ICBT or 12 modules of therapist-guided IRT delivered over 12 weeks. Under certain circumstances, such as illness or holidays, the design allows participants to pause their therapist-support for a maximum of two weeks, which may extend the treatment length to a maximum of 14 weeks. All potential participants will be initially screened via the telephone or at one of the three participating sites. This will be followed by an inclusion/baseline assessment conducted either at one of the three clinics (BUP OCD och relaterade tillstånd, BUP Specialmottagning or BUP Skåne) or, if face-to-face assessments are not feasible, via a secure video application. Participants who are eligible and have consented will be randomised to one of two trial arms. Participants in the comparator group (IRT) will be offered to cross-over to the ICBT intervention after the primary endpoint. The primary outcome variable: The primary outcome variable is BDD symptom severity measured by the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale modified for BDD, Adolescent version (BDD-YBOCS-A) at the primary endpoint (1-month follow-up post-treatment). Based on BDD-YBOCS-A scores, responder and remission rates at all follow-up points will be calculated. Response will be defined as ≥30% reduction from baseline; full or partial remission will be defined as a score ≤16. Planned trial sites: The study will be coordinated from the Department of Clinical Neuroscience at Karolinska Institutet (the Sponsor). There will be 3 collaborating study sites: BUP OCD och relaterade tillstånd (Region Stockholm), BUP Specialmottagning (Västra Götalandsregionen), and BUP Skåne (Region Skåne). Each of the three sites will assess and treat participants from their own region, and occasionally from other regions. Sample: A total of 154 children and adolescents diagnosed with BDD and their primary caregivers. Statistical methodology and analysis: Data will be analysed using a pre-specified intention-to-treat statistical analysis plan.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALInternet-delivered cognitive-behaviour therapy (ICBT)The intervention is Internet-delivered and therapist-guided, involving both the adolescent and at least one caregiver. It consists of two separate sets of modules, one for the adolescent and one for the caregiver. The intervention consists of 12 modules, delivered over a maximum of 14 weeks. The first part includes psychoeducation about BDD and strategies to resolve possible ambivalence towards psychological treatment. The main goal of the treatment is to help the young person to stop avoiding anxiety-provoking situations (e.g., going to school or participating in social situations) by undertaking exposure tasks and to stop doing unhelpful repetitive behaviours and rituals (e.g., excessive mirror-checking, camouflaging), known as response prevention. Every module also contains homework tasks that are meant to be completed between modules and mainly consist of exposure and response prevention (ERP) tasks based on the young person's individual goals.
BEHAVIORALInternet-delivered relaxation treatment (IRT)The intervention is Internet-delivered and therapist-guided, involving both the adolescent and at least one caregiver. It consists of two separate sets of modules, one for the adolescent and one for the caregiver. The intervention consists of 12 modules, delivered over a maximum of 14 weeks. The first part includes psychoeducation about BDD, how anxiety and stress are major contributors to BDD symptoms, and that targeting and reducing stress will have a beneficial impact on those symptoms. The main goal of the treatment is to teach the young person to relax in order to cope with anxiety and appearance concerns. The intervention mainly consists of a relaxation treatment and includes different relaxation skills such as deep breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, and imagery (cognitive relaxation). Every module also contains homework tasks that are meant to be completed between modules and mainly consist of relaxation tasks.

Timeline

Start date
2024-02-19
Primary completion
2026-04-30
Completion
2026-10-31
First posted
2024-02-16
Last updated
2025-02-28

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Sweden

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06262412. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.