A Novel Cognitive Remediation Intervention Targeting Poor Decision-making and Depression in Veterans at High Risk for Suicide: A Safe, Telehealth Approach During the COVID-19 Pandemic

NCT ID: NCT04952532

Last Updated: 2026-01-26

Study Results

Results available

Outcome measurements, participant flow, baseline characteristics, and adverse events have been published for this study.

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

9 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2022-01-01

Study Completion Date

2024-12-31

Brief Summary

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Despite large-scale, nationwide efforts to better address suicidal behavior in Veterans at high risk, the development of interventions that target some of the key risk factors associated with suicide remains limited. This study aims to collect pilot data to test feasibility/acceptability of a novel adjunctive evidence-based cognitive remediation (CR) therapy with manualized "Bridging" sessions for transfer and practice of problem-solving strategies for real-world stressors, including those that trigger suicidal thoughts. This 10-week (20 session) Neuropsychological Educational Approach to Cognitive Remediation CR+Bridging telehealth intervention will be administered virtually via HIPPA-compliant services to 36 Veterans with major depressive disorder and a history of suicide attempt(s). Pre-, post-treatment, and follow-up assessments of neurocognitive, clinical, social, and real-world functioning also will be conducted. This study has potential for high public health impact and promise to help improve quality of life for Veterans at high risk for suicide.

Detailed Description

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Despite large-scale, nationwide efforts to better address suicidal behavior (defined as thoughts and behavior) in high-risk Veterans with major depressive disorder (MDD), the development of interventions that target some of the key risk factors associated with suicide in Veterans with MDD remains limited. That is, while much intervention research continues to investigate treatments like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) that target behavioral patterns, emotion processing problems, and cognitive styles associated with suicide risk in MDD, deficits in the neurocognitive substrates that underlie these CBT targets remain under-addressed. Cognitive remediation (CR) and rehabilitation have long been a primary treatment for patients with other psychiatric illnesses, like schizophrenia, for improving cognitive functioning and facilitating transfer of cognitive skills to every-day functioning. However, scant work has examined CR that addresses the neurocognitive deficits underlying suicidal behavior in individuals with MDD. Empirical work has identified key executive functioning (EF) deficits that may be specific to MDD patients with suicidal behavior, and meta-analytic work indicates that CR has moderate effect sizes on cognitive functioning, depression, and daily functioning in MDD. Thus, the field is in dire need of work that examines CR as a recovery-oriented treatment approach for MDD patients at risk for suicide.

The proposed study aims to collect pilot data to test the feasibility and acceptability of adjunctive neuroplasticity-based CR on key treatment targets delivered via telehealth during this time of COVID-19 in a sample of 36 Veterans with MDD and a history of suicide attempt(s). Specifically, it will test the effects of an adjunctive evidence-based cognitive remediation (CR) therapy (adjunctive to treatment as usual) augmented with manualized "Bridging" sessions on transfer and practice of cognitive control and decision-making/problem-solving strategies for real-world situations and problems, including those that trigger suicidal thoughts. The investigators propose to administer the Neuropsychological Educational Approach to Cognitive Remediation (NEAR, termed CR plus "Bridging" session, CR+Bridging) to a total of 36 Veterans with MDD and a history of suicide attempt(s). The intervention will be delivered in 20 90-minute sessions (2x/week for 10 weeks). Pre-treatment assessments of neurocognitive, clinical, social, and real-world functioning will be conducted, including measures that examine the impact of COVID-19 and its accompanying "social-distancing" restrictions. Posttreatment assessments of the same targets will be conducted to determine clinical response to and feasibility of this therapeutic intervention immediately following conclusion of the intervention (Week 10) and at a follow-up assessment (Week 20). This application is novel in that it constitutes the first implementation of this intervention in Veterans with MDD and suicidal behavior. Consistent with RR\&D's SPiRE mechanism, this study is high risk, but it has high potential impact and promise to help improve quality of life for Veterans at high risk for suicide.

Conditions

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Major Depressive Disorder

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

This is a feasibility and acceptability pilot study which aims to collect preliminary data for a future grant application proposing a randomized clinical trial. This pilot study aims to collect feasibility data of this therapeutic intervention in Veterans. The Neuropsychological Educational Approach to Cognitive Remediation (NEAR, termed CR pus bridging session) intervention involves 20 90-minute sessions (2x/week for 10 weeks). Pre- and post-treatment assessments of neurocognitive, clinical, social, and real-world functioning will be conducted.
Primary Study Purpose

OTHER

Blinding Strategy

NONE

This is an open-label pilot study. The clinician conducting the clinical assessments will be blind to how the participants are doing in the treatment intervention. i.e. one clinician will administer the treatment and another will do the outcome assessment.

Study Groups

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Cognitive Remediation+Bridging Intervention

This is a pilot study to collect feasibility data on this novel cognitive remediation intervention for Veterans at high risk for suicide. All patients will receive the active intervention.

Group Type OTHER

Neuropsychological Educational Approach to Cognitive Remediation (NEAR, termed Cognitive Remediation plus Bridging)

Intervention Type OTHER

The proposed study aims to collect pilot data to test the feasibility and acceptability of adjunctive neuroplasticity-based cognitive remediation on key treatment targets. The intervention will be delivered via telehealth to a sample of 36 Veterans with MDD and a history of a suicide attempt. The intervention will be delivered in 20 90-min sessions (2x/week for 10 weeks). Pre-, post, and follow-up assessments will be conducted to assess changes in neurocognitive, clinical, social, and real-world functioning.

Interventions

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Neuropsychological Educational Approach to Cognitive Remediation (NEAR, termed Cognitive Remediation plus Bridging)

The proposed study aims to collect pilot data to test the feasibility and acceptability of adjunctive neuroplasticity-based cognitive remediation on key treatment targets. The intervention will be delivered via telehealth to a sample of 36 Veterans with MDD and a history of a suicide attempt. The intervention will be delivered in 20 90-min sessions (2x/week for 10 weeks). Pre-, post, and follow-up assessments will be conducted to assess changes in neurocognitive, clinical, social, and real-world functioning.

Intervention Type OTHER

Other Intervention Names

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Adjunctive Cognitive Remediation

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* U.S. Veteran;
* Primary diagnosis of major depressive disorder (MDD) and a history of suicide attempt in the past year;
* Elevated score (\>1SD above the normal mean) on rumination measure (Ruminative Response Scale);
* Based on the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) current suicidal ideation (either passive, i.e. "wish to be dead") or active ideation but with no intent to act on it immediately and no specific plan;
* Currently in psychotherapy treatment as usual (TAU) at the James J. Peters VA Medical Center.
* The investigators will include women and aim for the sample to be 30% women.

Exclusion Criteria

* Current substance use disorder;
* History of traumatic brain injury; neurological disorder, or other medical confound; compromised intellectual abilities (WASI45 FSIQ\<70)
* The investigators will enroll six Veterans in each group and conduct six 10-week intervention cycles for a total sample of 36 Veterans.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

65 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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VA Office of Research and Development

FED

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Erin A Hazlett-Oakes, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

James J. Peters Veterans Affairs Medical Center

Locations

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James J. Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, NY

The Bronx, New York, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Document Type: Informed Consent Form

View Document

Other Identifiers

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1I21RX003738-01A1

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: secondary_id

View Link

D3738-P

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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