| Literature DB >> 35732378 |
Polly-Anna Ashford1, Clare Knight2, Margaret Heslin3, Allan B Clark4, Mona Kanaan5, Ushma Patel6, Freya Stuart2, Thomas Kabir7, Nick Grey8,9, Hannah Murray10, J Hodgekins4, Nesta Reeve11, Nicola Marshall6, Michelle Painter11, James Clarke6, Debra Russo2, Jan Stochl2,12, Maria Leathersich4, Martin Pond4, David Fowler13, Paul French14, Ann Marie Swart4, Mary Dixon-Woods15, Sarah Byford16, Peter B Jones2, Jesus Perez17,18.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: At least one in four people treated by the primary care improving access to psychological therapies (IAPT) programme in England experiences distressing psychotic experiences (PE) in addition to common mental disorder (CMD). These individuals are less likely to achieve recovery. IAPT services do not routinely screen for nor offer specific treatments for CMD including PE. The Tailoring evidence-based psychological therapY for People with common mental disorder including Psychotic EXperiences study will evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of an enhanced training for cognitive behavioural therapists that aims to address this clinical gap. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This is a multisite, stepped-wedge cluster randomised controlled trial. The setting will be IAPT services within three mental health trusts. The participants will be (1) 56-80 qualified IAPT cognitive behavioural therapists and (2) 600 service users who are triaged as appropriate for cognitive behavioural therapy in an IAPT service and have PE according to the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences-Positive 15-items Scale. IAPT therapists will be grouped into eight study clusters subsequently randomised to the control-intervention sequence. We will obtain pseudonymous clinical outcome data from IAPT clinical records for eligible service users. We will invite service users to complete health economic measures at baseline, 3, 6, 9 and 12-month follow-up. The primary outcome will be the proportion of patients with common mental disorder psychotic experiences who have recovered by the end of treatment as measured by the official IAPT measure for recovery. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study received the following approvals: South Central-Berkshire Research Ethics Committee on 28 April 2020 (REC reference 20/SC/0135) and Health Research Authority (HRA) on 23 June 2020. An amendment was approved by the Ethics Committee on 01 October 2020 and HRA on 27 October 2020. Results will be made available to patients and the public, the funders, stakeholders in the IAPT services and other researchers. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN93895792. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety disorders; depression & mood disorders; primary care; schizophrenia & psychotic disorders
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35732378 PMCID: PMC9226877 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 3.006
Summary of ethical amendments
| Protocol | Primary reasons for amendment |
| 2.0, 04/08/2020 |
Addition of secondary clinical outcomes (Reliable Recovery and Reliable Improvement). Addition of retrospective pseudonymous clinical data collection from the beginning of UK lockdown due to COVID-19, until randomisation. Intervention adaptation: training to be delivered either online or face-to-face. Changes to the service user consent process: moving from full consent on tablet devices to consent to contact followed by full consent online at home. |
| 3.0, 12/05/2021 |
Video conferencing, eg, Zoom included as an option for process evaluation interviews. Removal of restriction of only teams from the same NHS Trust merging to form a cluster. |
Schedule of IAPT user enrolment, interventions and assessments
| | Study period (control and randomised conditions) | ||||||
| Screening | Baseline | Treatment | Follow-up | ||||
| -t1** | -t2 | Up to 20 sessions | 3 | 6 | 9 | 12 | |
| Enrolment | |||||||
| Eligibility screen | x | ||||||
| Consent to contact (for health economics measures only) | |||||||
| Informed consent (for health economics measures only) | x | ||||||
| IAPT CBT standard care |
| ||||||
| Assessments | |||||||
| PHQ-9† | x | x | X | x | |||
| GAD-7/ADSM† | x | x | X | x | |||
| EQ-5D-3L | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| EQ-5D-5L | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| EI-ADSUS | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| CAPE P-15 | x | x | |||||
*The duration between the screening visit and baseline is anticipated to be 1–3 weeks, depending on typical frequency of therapy sessions in IAPT service. During this time the CAPE-P15 is scored and eligibility is confirmed. CAPE+IAPT users are approached to participate in the health economics data collection during the baseline visit. Clinical data are obtained for all CAPE+IAPT users unless they opt out.
†PHQ-9 and GAD-7 are routine IAPT clinical measures and are collected during every clinical contact. At 12-month follow-up, these measures will be collected via an opt-in process to provide additional data.
ADSM, anxiety disorder specific measure; ADSUS, adult service use schedule; CAPE-P15, Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences—Positive 15-items Scale; CBT, cognitive behavioural therapy; GAD-7, General Anxiety Disorder Assessment-7; IAPT, improving access to psychological therapies; PHQ-9, Patient Health Questionnaire-9.
Figure 1Stepped wedge trial diagram.
Summary of study outcomes
| Category | Measure | Primary/secondary | Details |
| Service user recovery | IAPT-defined ‘Recovery’ | Primary | The primary outcome is the proportion of IAPT service users with CAPE-P15 score of 1.47 or above who have recovered by the end of treatment. Recovery is a national IAPT programme performance metric, with an individual deemed recovered if they scored above the clinical cut-off on the PHQ-9 |
| IAPT-defined ‘Recovery’ | Secondary | As for the primary outcome, but for IAPT service-users reaching the lower threshold score for CMD-PE (CAPE-P15 score of 1.30 and above). | |
| IAPT-defined ‘Reliable Improvement’ | Secondary | Service users are considered reliably improved if they show any improvement in scores on the appropriate outcome measures between pre and post treatment, that exceeds the measurement error of the scales. | |
| IAPT-defined ‘Reliable Recovery’ | Secondary | Service users are considered reliably recovered if they meet both criteria for Reliable Improvement and for Recovery. | |
| Health economic measures | Modified adult service use schedule for early intervention (EI-ADSUS) | Secondary | Individual-level resource use will be measured using a modified version of EI-ADSUS. This was developed in previous research with similar populations |
| EuroQol measure of health-related quality of life three level | Secondary | Health-related quality of life will be measured using the EQ-5D-3L, a generic, preference-based measure based on five dimensions (mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression). Each dimension is rated on three levels (no problems, some problems and severe problems). | |
| EuroQol measure of health-related quality of life five level | Secondary | The EQ-5D-5L is also a health-related quality of life measure based on five dimensions (mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression), but each dimension is rated on five levels (no problems, slight problems, moderate problems, severe problems and extreme problems. | |
| Therapist adherence | Supervision checklist | Secondary | Therapist adherence measured using a supervision checklist and adherence score completed during the 6 monthly supervision sessions held after CBT training. Trial supervisors will review and collate therapy session notes and rate adherence to the CBT-ts approach. |
CAPE-P15, Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences—Positive 15-items Scale; CBT, cognitive behavioural therapy; CBT-ts, CBT tailoring for severity; CMD-PE, common mental disorder psychotic experiences; GAD-7, General Anxiety Disorder Assessment-7; IAPT, improving access to psychological therapies; PHQ-9, Patient Health Questionnaire-9.
Key themes explored in the process evaluation for each stakeholder group
| Stakeholder group | Key themes |
| Service users |
Experiences of treatment and therapist. Views on improving IAPT services. Views on CBT-ts. |
| Therapist |
Design and goals of CBT-ts. Experience of the CBT-ts training. Experience of delivery and fidelity. |
| Line managers |
Design and goals of CBT-ts. Experience of the CBT-ts training. Experience of delivery and fidelity at the therapist-service user level. Experience of delivery and fidelity at the IAPT service level. |
| Study team and collaborators |
Rationale for CBT-ts. Implementation and components. Outcomes and measurement. Modifications and changes to CBT-ts. |
| Senior National Health Service managers/commissioners |
Relevance of CBT-ts in IAPT. Implementation of CBT-ts model. Negotiating change. Measuring success. |
CBT-ts, cognitive behavioural therapy-tailoring for severity; IAPT, improving access to psychological therapies.
Schedule of IAPT therapist enrolment, interventions and assessments
| Trial set-up | Randomisation | Control condition | Intervention condition | |
| Identification | ||||
| IAPT teams and potential therapists identified and grouped to form clusters | x | |||
| Enrolment and randomisation | ||||
| Informed consent | x | |||
| Clusters randomised | x | |||
| Intervention | ||||
| CBT-ts training | x | |||
| CBT-ts supervision | x | |||
| Assessments | ||||
| Adherence and engagement record | x | |||
CBT-ts, cognitive behavioural therapy-tailoring for severity; IAPT, improving access to psychological therapies.