| Literature DB >> 27488181 |
Annet Kleiboer1, Jan Smit2, Judith Bosmans3, Jeroen Ruwaard4, Gerhard Andersson5,6, Naira Topooco5, Thomas Berger7, Tobias Krieger7, Cristina Botella8,9, Rosa Baños9, Karine Chevreul10, Ricardo Araya11, Arlinda Cerga-Pashoja11, Roman Cieślak12, Anna Rogala12, Christiaan Vis4, Stasja Draisma2, Anneke van Schaik2, Lise Kemmeren2, David Ebert13, Matthias Berking13, Burkhardt Funk14, Pim Cuijpers4, Heleen Riper4,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective, accessible, and affordable depression treatment is of high importance considering the large personal and economic burden of depression. Internet-based treatment is considered a promising clinical and cost-effective alternative to current routine depression treatment strategies such as face-to-face psychotherapy. However, it is not clear whether research findings translate to routine clinical practice such as primary or specialized mental health care. The E-COMPARED project aims to gain knowledge on the clinical and cost-effectiveness of blended depression treatment compared to treatment-as-usual in routine care. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Adults; Blended treatment; Cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT); Comparative effectiveness research (CER); Cost-effectiveness; Depression; Internet-based treatment; Randomized controlled trial (RCT); eHealth; iCBT
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27488181 PMCID: PMC4972947 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-016-1511-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Recruitment procedure and treatment setting per country
| Country | Treatment setting | Recruitment procedure |
|---|---|---|
| FR | Specialized mental health care | New or regular patients recruited through cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) therapists from 11 expert centers throughout France |
| DE | Primary care | Recruitment in the waiting room of general practices |
| NL | Specialized mental health care | New patients recruited through mood disorder departments of three outpatient clinics in Amsterdam and Leiden |
| PL | Primary care | Recruitment through primary mental health care centers and therapists trained at postgraduate CBT programs conducted in five major cities (Warsaw, Sopot, Poznan, Katowice, and Wroclaw) |
| ESP | Primary care | Recruitment through several primary care centers of patients who report to the GP with depression |
| SE | Primary care | Recruitment through routine primary care clinics in Stockholm and Linköping |
| CH | Specialized mental health care | Recruitment through two outpatient clinics (Bern and Zurich) and individual therapists |
| UK | Primary care | Recruitment through the NHS program “Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT)” in the London region. IAPT is a service to increase primary mental health care offering low-intensity treatment to GP-registered adults |
Fig. 1Flow of participants through the trial
Overview of measures
| Variable | Instrument | Screening Baseline | 3 months | 6 months | 12 months |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Questions taken from patients | |||||
| Demographics | X | ||||
| Current treatment | X | ||||
| Diagnostic interview | M.I.N.I. | X | X | ||
| Depressive symptoms | PHQ-9 and QIDS-SR16 | X | X | X | X |
| Quality of life | EQ-5D-5L | X | X | X | X |
| Societal costs | TIC-P | X | X | X | X |
| Treatment preference | X | ||||
| Patient expectancy | CEQ | X | |||
| Working alliance | WAI-SF | Xc | |||
| Technology alliance | TAI-OTa | Xc | |||
| Client satisfaction | CSQ | Xc | |||
| Satisfaction with the online program | SUSa | Xc | |||
| Questions taken from therapists | |||||
| Working alliance | WAI-SF | Xc | |||
| Satisfaction with the online program | SUSa,b | Xc | |||
aOffered to condition receiving blended treatment only
bHas to be completed once per therapist after completion of the first treatment
cQuestionnaires may be taken at 6 months when the duration of treatment is longer than 3 months
CEQ Credibility and Expectancy Questionnaire, CSQ Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-8, EQ-5D-5L EuroQol 5 dimensions 5 levels, M.I.N.I. MINI International Neuropsychiatric Interview, PHQ-9 Patient Health Questionnaire-9, QIDS-SR16 Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology, SUS System Usability Scale, TAI-OT Technology Alliance Inventory-Online Therapy, TIC-P Trimbos and iMTA Questionnaires on Costs Associated with Psychiatric Illness, WAI-SF Work Alliance Inventory short form
Overview of blended treatment applied in each country
| Country | Platform | Duration | Online/face-to-face | Sequencing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FRa | Moodbuster | 16 wks | 8/8 | Alternate |
| DEa | Moodbuster | 10–13 wks | 10/5 | Alternate |
| NLa | Moodbuster | 20 wks | 10/10 | Alternate |
| PLa | Moodbuster | 6–10 wks | 6/7 | Alternate |
| ESPb | Smiling is fun | 10 wks | 8/3 | 1-4-1-4-1 |
| SE | Iterapi | 12 wks | 8/4 | Alternate |
| CHc | Deprexis | 18 wks | 9/9 | Alternate |
| UKa | Moodbuster | 11 wks | 5/6 | Alternate |
aAdditional module on physical exercise, and problem solving
bAdditional module on coping skills
cAdditional modules on mindfulness, interpersonal skills, positive psychology, emotion-focused therapy, and childhood experiences