Effectiveness of a Mobile Technology Intervention for the Treatment of Depression
NCT ID: NCT02846662
Last Updated: 2018-10-11
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE3
880 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2016-09-19
2018-08-31
Brief Summary
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Aim: The present study aims to test a 6 week low-intensity psychological intervention (CONEMO) delivered via an applicative for smartphones for people with depressive symptoms and co-morbid diabetes and/or hypertension recruited in primary health care units, in São Paulo (Brazil).
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Detailed Description
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There is substantial co-morbidity between depression and chronic physical conditions, and outcome of both conditions is impaired when there is this co-morbidity. Most of the disease burden in LA is now explained by chronic diseases, including depression, cardio-vascular diseases -mostly hypertension related- and diabetes. Despite the public health impact of depression, it often goes unrecognized and untreated. One factor for this treatment gap is the lack of financial and human resources. The limited mental health resources available in LMIC are often not optimally distributed either. Funds and trained personnel are typically allocated in tertiary health care services, such as psychiatric hospitals.
Therefore, any short- and medium-term efforts to develop, evaluate, and disseminate effective mental health interventions in LMIC must adapt to these severe workforce, resource limitations, and inequities. The mental health field needs to consider developing self-help automated interventions that can reach people where there are no health care providers. This can be partially addressed through two strategies: 1) increasing effective self-management; and 2) through task-shifting roles to less specialized but appropriately trained health workers.
We are conducting a community cluster randomized trial with individuals with chronic diseases (hypertension and/or diabetes) and symptoms of depression, attending primary care clinics in São Paulo, Brazil. Participating clinics (20) will be randomly allocated to have their nurse assistants trainned and supervised to monitor an intervention based on behavior activation (experimental group) delivered by an applicative for smartphones (CONEMO) or to receive routine care (control group). The focus of this project is on patients helping themselves through the use of resources that provide continuous advice, support, and motivation. However, studies suggest that depressed patients left alone with their own devices fail to make good use of self-help interventions. Nurse assistants will assist participants by a web-based automated interface connected to the smartphone application (CONEMO) and will receive supervision in this task once a week.
Method:
CONEMO is a cluster randomized controlled trial conducted with 880 chronic patients who present diabetes and/ or hypertension and with depression, receiving health care in 20 Primary Care Units with Family Health Program in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Of these, half (10) will deliver the intervention CONEMO and half (10) will deliver usual care.
The intervention, based in behavior activation, is delivered by a smartphone and monitored by health professionals (nurse assistants) working at the primary care unit responsible for the care of the patient. The CONEMO intervention is based on behavior activation and is delivered by an applicative for smartphones 3 times a week during 6 weeks, with a total of 18 sessions. A nurse assistant mediates this intervention, motivating the patient and monitoring his/her performance. Intensity of depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation is assessed by research assistants using the PHQ-9 and standardized protocols for suicidal risk at baseline, 3- and 6-month follow-ups.
The primary outcome is remission of depressive symptoms 3 months after inclusion in the study. Secondary outcomes include remission of depressive symptoms at 6 months after inclusion, social support, quality of life, compliance to medication, suicidal ideation and activities performed.
The effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the intervention will be assessed with intention-to-treat analysis, using the clinical outcome and the assessment of quality of life (EQ-5D) 3 and 6 months after inclusion in the trial and the use of health services.
Primary Outcome Measures:
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) score 3 months after inclusion in the study.
A 50% reduction in the PHQ-9 score from baseline will be considered success.
Secondary Outcome Measures:
Depression - Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), Quality of life-EQD5, Adherence to medication-Morisky; Social functioning- WHODAS, Daily activities (BADS).
Time Frame: 6 months after inclusion in the study. A 50% reduction on the PHQ-9 score from baseline will be considered success.
Cost effectiveness measures (3 and 6 months). Use of health services and medication. General Quality of life (EQ-5D).
Process evaluation:
Data collected in the interviews with participants and Nurse Assistants about CONEMO system.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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CONEMO
Participants will be offered a behavioral activation-based intervention delivered by an applicative for smartphones (CONEMO), which encourages them to be more active and to incorporate more activities in their everyday life.
Primary care nurses will train participants to use the CONEMO app, monitor patients' adherence to CONEMO, calling patients when they are non-adherent, and give technical support when necessary. They will be supervised by clinical psychologists.
Primary care teams are informed of participants' depression level and deliver usual care according to clinical protocols, including the assessment for the need of antidepressant medication.
CONEMO
The study intervention has two components: the smartphone application CONEMO and primary care nurses monitoring patients' adherence to the intervention. CONEMO is a 6-week low-intensity behavior activation program delivered in 18 sessions that include messages related to the treatment goals, motivating them to do certain activities, helping to select and plan activities and messages related to psychological skills that facilitate the incorporation of activities in everyday life and to tackle obstacles that hinder patients to be more active. Primary care nurses are responsible for training participants to use the CONEMO app, monitoring patients' adherence to CONEMO, calling patients when they are non-adherent, and giving technical support when necessary.
ENHANCED USUAL CARE
The primary care teams are informed of the participants' depression level and can deliver usual care according to clinical protocols, including the assessment for the need of antidepressant medication. This is considered enhanced usual care because the teams are notified about participants' level of depressive symptomatology, which otherwise might go undetected, and then decide about the best way to handle with patients' needs related to their depressive symptomatology.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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CONEMO
The study intervention has two components: the smartphone application CONEMO and primary care nurses monitoring patients' adherence to the intervention. CONEMO is a 6-week low-intensity behavior activation program delivered in 18 sessions that include messages related to the treatment goals, motivating them to do certain activities, helping to select and plan activities and messages related to psychological skills that facilitate the incorporation of activities in everyday life and to tackle obstacles that hinder patients to be more active. Primary care nurses are responsible for training participants to use the CONEMO app, monitoring patients' adherence to CONEMO, calling patients when they are non-adherent, and giving technical support when necessary.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Clinical diagnosis of diabetes and/or hypertension
* Presenting with depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 ≥10)
Exclusion Criteria
* Not able to read
21 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
NIH
Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia
OTHER
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
OTHER
Northwestern University
OTHER
University of Sao Paulo General Hospital
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Paulo Rossi Menezes
Full Professor
Principal Investigators
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Ricardo Araya, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
London School of Medicine
Lisa Colpe, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Locations
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Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Sao Paulo
São Paulo, , Brazil
Countries
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References
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Claro HG, Menezes PR, Fernandes IF, Seward N, Miranda JJ, Saidel MGB, Baquete AGL, Daley KL, Aschar S, Cruz DV, Castro HCM, Rocha T, Quayle J, Peters TJ, Araya R. Do baseline participant characteristics impact the effectiveness of a mobile health intervention for depressive symptoms? A post-hoc subgroup analysis of the CONEMO trials. Braz J Psychiatry. 2024;46:e20233172. doi: 10.47626/1516-4446-2023-3172. Epub 2024 Jan 30.
Vera Cruz Dos Santos D, Coelho de Soarez P, Cavero V, U Rocha TI, Aschar S, Daley KL, Garcia Claro H, Abud Scotton G, Fernandes I, Diez-Canseco F, Brandt LR, Toyama M, Martins Castro HC, Miranda JJ, Araya R, Quayle J, Rossi Menezes P. A Mobile Health Intervention for Patients With Depressive Symptoms: Protocol for an Economic Evaluation Alongside Two Randomized Trials in Brazil and Peru. JMIR Res Protoc. 2021 Oct 13;10(10):e26164. doi: 10.2196/26164.
Araya R, Menezes PR, Claro HG, Brandt LR, Daley KL, Quayle J, Diez-Canseco F, Peters TJ, Vera Cruz D, Toyama M, Aschar S, Hidalgo-Padilla L, Martins H, Cavero V, Rocha T, Scotton G, de Almeida Lopes IF, Begale M, Mohr DC, Miranda JJ. Effect of a Digital Intervention on Depressive Symptoms in Patients With Comorbid Hypertension or Diabetes in Brazil and Peru: Two Randomized Clinical Trials. JAMA. 2021 May 11;325(18):1852-1862. doi: 10.1001/jama.2021.4348.
Rocha TIU, Aschar SCAL, Hidalgo-Padilla L, Daley K, Claro HG, Martins Castro HC, Dos Santos DVC, Miranda JJ, Araya R, Menezes PR. Recruitment, training and supervision of nurses and nurse assistants for a task-shifting depression intervention in two RCTs in Brazil and Peru. Hum Resour Health. 2021 Feb 5;19(1):16. doi: 10.1186/s12960-021-00556-5.
Other Identifiers
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1U19MH098780-01 SP
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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