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ID
Source
Brief title
Health condition
1. Depression;
2. relapse;
3. positive emotions;
4. reward experience;
5. rumination;
6. mindfulness;
7. gene-environment interaction;
8. resilience.
Sponsors and support
Intervention
Outcome measures
Primary outcome
The increase in reward experience in daily life, whereby reward experience is conceptualised as the effect of small daily life positive events on positive mood state. The Experience Sampling Method (ESM) will be used to assess reward experience before and after the intervention. ESM is a structured diary, momentary assessment technique to study subjects in their daily life. Since ESM measurements are performed 10 times a day for 6 days, there will be a maximum of 60 measurements within each subject concerning effects of positive events on positive mood state in the flow of daily life.
Secondary outcome
1. Association between increase in reward experience and decrease in (i) depressive symptoms and (ii) risk of relapse;
2. Association between individual variation in reward experience (and increase in reward experience) and genetic variation in polymorphisms related to the brain reward system.
Background summary
Rationale: The experience of positive emotions reduces daily life stress-sensitivity, an endophenotype for depression, but also attenuates the expression of genetic risk for depression. This research proposal, therefore, will focus on the changeability (plasticity) of the ability to experience positive emotions in response to daily life events (natural rewards), as a first step towards novel (preventive) interventions in depression
Objective:
1. Can the ability to experience reward in daily life be experimentally modified?;
2. How does experimental modification of reward impact on depressive symptomatology and can individual variation be traced to genetic variation.
Study design: An intervention study is used in which subjects are randomized to treatment as usual (TAU) or TAU + mindfulness-based cognitive therapy. Experience Sampling Method (ESM) is a structured diary, momentary assessment technique to study subjects in their daily life. Before and after the intervention subjects undergo a six-day period of ESM assessment. Subjects will be globally informed, but remain blind as to how ESM measures relate to testing the hypothesis.
Study population: A sample of 120 depression-remitted adult subjects with residual symptomatology (Ham-17>7) recruited from the community mental health centre in Maastricht (CMHC).
Intervention: The experimental group receives 8 weeks of mindfulness training by an experienced trainer in addition to their normal treatment, if any. Sessions are weekly (2,5 hours a session) and subjects receive daily homework exercises. The control group continues their normal treatment, if any.
Main study parameters/endpoints: The increase in reward experience in daily life, whereby reward experience is conceptualised as the effect of small daily life positive events on positive mood state. Since ESM measurements are performed 10 times a day for 6 days, there will be a maximum of 60 measurements within each subject concerning effects of positive events on positive mood state in the flow of daily life.
Study objective
1. Mindfulness training can be used to modify the ability to experience positive emotions from everyday life situations assessed with ESM (reward experience);
2. Experimentally induced increases in reward experience in daily life will reduce depressive symptoms in patients with residual symptomatology and will lead to reduced risk for future relapse;
3. Polymorphisms of genes related to the brain reward system are associated with reward experience in daily life and its modifiability.
Study design
1. Premeasure: 6 days ESM;
2. postmeasure: after 8 weeks of mindfulness training/time control: 6 days ESM;
3. follow-ups are planned, but were not yet submitted to ethical committee:
4. Follow-up at 6 months;
5. Follow-up at 12 months.
Intervention
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy vs. non-active control group. The experimental group receives 8 weeks of mindfulness training by an experienced trainer in addition to their normal treatment, if any. Sessions are weekly (2,5 hours a session) and subjects receive daily homework exercises. The control group continues their normal treatment, if any.
Nicole Geschwind
Maastricht 6200 MD
The Netherlands
+31-43 - 3881487
nicole.geschwind@maastrichtuniversity.nl
Nicole Geschwind
Maastricht 6200 MD
The Netherlands
+31-43 - 3881487
nicole.geschwind@maastrichtuniversity.nl
Inclusion criteria
1. At least one depressive episode in past;
2. Hamilton Depression Scale >7.
Exclusion criteria
1. Current depressive episode;
2. Conditions that make working in a group impossible. (MBCT is given in a group of approximately 15 people).
Design
Recruitment
Followed up by the following (possibly more current) registration
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Other (possibly less up-to-date) registrations in this register
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In other registers
Register | ID |
---|---|
NTR-new | NL1051 |
NTR-old | NTR1084 |
Other | NWO : 916 76 147 |
ISRCTN | ISRCTN wordt niet meer aangevraagd |