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Pragmatic Patient-oriented Extension Study of Dialectical Behavior Therapy Booster Sessions for Youth With and/or at Familial Risk for Bipolar Disorder

Pragmatic Patient-oriented Extension Study of Dialectical Behavior Therapy Booster Sessions for Youth With and/or at Familial Risk for Bipolar Disorder

Recruiting
14-25 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The study intervention is DBT adapted for youth with and/or at familial risk for bipolar disorder. Participants will have completed one full year of DBT in a previous study. This study is examining use of booster sessions. It is delivered in the form of individual sessions and skills sessions, based on the preference of the study participant. The study participant may also receive skills coaching via phone. There is no standard reference therapy/comparator against which the study intervention is being compared.

Description

The study intervention is DBT adapted for youth with and/or at familial risk for bipolar disorder. Participants will have completed one full year of DBT in a previous study. This study is examining use of booster sessions. It is delivered in the form of individual sessions and skills sessions, based on the preference of the study participant. The study participant may also receive skills coaching via phone. DBT consists of four components: individual therapy sessions, skills sessions, skills coaching via phone, and consultation team. Given this study is an extension of an existing study of full DBT, the proposed intervention is not prescriptive; that is, we have opted not to dictate how many sessions participants will receive and/or when. Instead, we have opted to leave this decision for participants and their treatment providers to reach collaboratively. Participants, in consultation with their study therapist, will select the frequency of their booster sessions. This may include individual and/or skills sessions in addition to phone coaching for those who attend individual sessions at least once per month. DBT consultation will also remain a component of the treatment. This level of intervention seems appropriate, given that participants have completed a full year of DBT and thus may require a less intensive treatment for continued care. Moreover, it is important to give youth autonomy in treatment options to model health decision making for other life choices.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria

        The participant must meet all of the inclusion criteria to eligible for this clinical
        trial:
          1. Has completed participation in the DB1 study (049-2021) or the DB3 study (009-2021);
          2. English speaking;
          3. Age 14 years, 0 months to 26 years, 11 months;
          4. Meets diagnostic criteria for bipolar disorder by KSADS-PL(< 20 years of age) OR
             SCID-5-RV (≥ 20 years of age) OR have a biological parent/sibling with BD (type I or
             II) confirmed via KSADS-PL or SCID-5-RV;
          5. Followed by a CAMH psychiatrist who provides ongoing care;
          6. If BD-I, taking ≥1 mood stabilizing medication (i.e., antimanic anticonvulsant,
             antipsychotic, and/or lithium);
          7. Able and willing to give informed consent/assent to participate.
        Exclusion Criteria
        An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation
        in this clinical trial:
          1. A life-threatening medical condition requiring immediate treatment;
          2. Current victim of sexual or physical abuse;
          3. Current substance use disorder other than mild cannabis or alcohol use disorder;
          4. Evidence of mental retardation, moderate to severe autism spectrum disorder, or
             organic central nervous system disorder by the K-SADS-PL, parent report, medical
             history, or school records that would interfere with active participation in DBT.

Study details
    Bipolar Disorder

NCT05627492

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

24 June 2024

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