Clinical Characteristics and Temporal Properties of Individual Tics in Persistent Tic Disorder
NCT ID: NCT06385535
Last Updated: 2024-04-26
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
12 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-04-04
2024-12-31
Brief Summary
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1. See whether a tic's timing is related to other characteristics of the tic, like how long it has been happening and how well the person can control/stop that tic
2. See whether the timing of a tic can tell us how well the person can control/stop that tic
3. See whether tic treatment changes the timing of tics, and if the timing of a tic has anything to do with how well treatment will work to stop it
Participants will meet with a study researcher to learn more about the study, ask questions, and decide whether or not they would like to be involved. If they decide to do the study, they will meet with the researcher 6 times:
1. During the first visit, the study researcher will ask questions about the participant's life, tics, and other psychological symptoms. The researcher will watch the participant's tics for 10 minutes. The participant will do a computer task where they follow instructions to tic or not tic.
2. During the second visit, the study researcher will treat one of the participant's tics.
3. During the third visit, the study researcher will treat another one of the participant's tics.
4. During the fourth visit, the study researcher will treat another one of the participant's tics.
5. During the fifth visit, the study researcher will treat another one of the participant's tics.
6. During the sixth visit, the study researcher will ask questions about the participant's tics and other psychological symptoms. The participant will do a computer task where they follow instructions to tic or not tic.
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Detailed Description
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The consent and assent process will take place online via secure videoconference. Parents will be instructed ahead of time to be in a secure location with their child. Study personnel will explain the study, review the parental permission/consent and assent forms, and answer study-related questions. Participants will be asked to consider and discuss study participation with the study personnel out of the virtual room to encourage the participants to discuss his/her/their willingness to participate and any concerns that they may have. Children will also be asked to provide verbal assent/willingness to participate during this process. If the child is unsure at that time, he/she/they will be encouraged to ask questions and for the parents to reach out again in the future if the child would like to provide verbal assent or decline to participate.
All study visits will take place online via secure videoconference and be video recorded and later coded for reliability and procedural fidelity. Participation will involve six visits that comprise three phases: 1) a pre-treatment (baseline) assessment; 2) four sessions of standard Habit Reversal Training (HRT) for tics, and 3) a post-treatment assessment. At the beginning of the HRT visits, participants will also undergo a direct observation of their tics. At the beginning of the baseline and post-assessment visits, participants will also undergo a standard reinforced tic suppression task (RTST) consisting of three repeated alterations (ABABAB) of a free-to-tic (FTT; A condition) and a differential reinforcement for tic suppression condition (DRO; B condition). Participants who withdraw from the study before their post-treatment assessment will be asked to attend a final study visit to document their reason for withdrawal and complete the debriefing process, however, this visit will be voluntary. All measures aside from the demographics form and between-session activities form are standardized.
Study Visit #1 (Phase 1: Pre-Treatment \[Baseline\] Assessment)
Following the informed consent/assent process, families will complete a clinical interview with trained study personnel. The clinical interview will confirm that the participant meets the criteria for the study and collect information for subsequent study procedures. Then, the child participant will engage in the RTST. Overall, the first study visit will take approximately 2 hours to complete.
Clinical Interview and Assessment: The clinical interview will include general questions regarding the child's tic symptoms and other psychological/behavioral symptoms/disorders, overall functioning, and family medical history. The diagnostic assessment will consist of the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS) to determine overall tic severity and obtain a list of operationally-defined tics; the Parent Tic Questionnaire (PTQ) to determine individual tic severity; and the Individualized Premonitory Urge for Tics Scale (I-PUTS) to characterize general and individual premonitory urge severity of tics, respectively. The clinical interview will also include a 10-minute tic observation period.
History and Demographics Form: Parents will complete a demographic form collecting data about age, gender, race/ethnicity, occupational/educational history, psychiatric and medical status/history, treatment history and medication status, and other relevant psychosocial factors.
Tic Observation: The child will be directly observed for 10 minutes with the study personnel off-camera to ensure that they meet the criteria for enrollment (i.e., display at least four different tics per minute, on average).
Reinforced Tic Suppression Task (RTST)
The RTST will be comprised of repeated sessions of two experimental conditions: FTT (Condition A) and DRO (Condition B). Each condition will be repeated three times for a total of six sessions (ABABAB). Each session will last 5 minutes, and the order of sessions will be identical across all participants and administrations. During each session, participants will be seated facing their computer's video camera. The child will be provided with specific instructions for the condition and an investigator will monitor the child's performance covertly (via video) to ensure procedural adherence during the session. A manipulation check will be conducted immediately after each session, during which the participant will be asked to repeat the instructions that they were given for the recently completed session and rate how hard they tried to suppress their tics and how well they thought they suppressed their tics. For the DRO conditions, participants will also be asked how they earned tokens.
FTT condition 1A. The purpose of this condition is to establish tic rate in the absence of reinforcement and will serve as a comparison for the DRO condition described below. In the FTT condition, participants will be told that they should feel free to tic as little or as much as they need to, but to avoid suppressing their tics. No reinforcement will be delivered during this condition.
DRO condition 1B. The purpose of this condition is to examine the effects of differential reinforcement on tic frequency. Prior to the start of the condition, participants will be instructed to suppress their tics and will be informed that they will earn a token for every 10-second interval (i.e., trial) in which they do not display any tics. The experimenter will monitor tics and deliver reinforcers by displaying a digital image of a token on the child's screen according to a resetting DRO 10-s schedule, wherein a token will be delivered immediately after each trial during which no tics are observed. If one or more tics are observed during a trial, reinforcement will be withheld, and the count-down timer will be reset.
FTT conditions 2A and 3A. The third and fifth sessions will involve repetitions of the FTT 1A condition described above.
DRO conditions 2B and 3B. The fourth and sixth sessions will involve repetitions of the DRO 1B condition described above.
Study Visits #2-5 (Phase 2: Habit Reversal Training \[HRT\])
Participants will engage in four HRT sessions delivered across five weeks via secure videoconference. Each session of HRT will be focused on a single, target tic. The target tic for each HRT session will be predetermined following the baseline assessment and before the first session of HRT. The target tics will be randomly chosen from a subset of a list of operationally defined tics that are hierarchically arranged by frequency based on the results obtained from the YGTSS and PTQ administered at the baseline assessment. If, during the study, participants report newly onset tics, they will be documented but will not be targeted in treatment.
To assess between-session differences across participants, HRT sessions 2-4 will begin with participants answering questions about between-session HRT practice. Next, a 10-minute direct observation of tics will be conducted to determine the resting tic rate. The child will be instructed to feel free to tic as little or as much as they need but to avoid suppressing their tics. Participants will then engage in brief HRT for a single, target tic consistent with manualized procedures. HRT will begin with awareness training, including developing a detailed description of the target tic and practicing "catching" the target tic before it occurs. Participants will engage in this exercise for 10 minutes or until they can successfully catch their target tic at least 80% of the time that it occurs within a five-minute period, whichever occurs first. The participant will then engage in competing response (CR) training, including identifying a behavior that can be observed and is incompatible with the target tic. Participants will be instructed to engage in that behavior when they feel the urge associated with their target tic for one minute, or until the urge subsides, whichever is longer. Participants will be verbally prompted by the therapist to engage in the CR whenever the target tic is observed. Participants will practice using the selected CR to suppress their target tic for 10 minutes or until they can use it effectively at least 80% of the time over a five-minute period, whichever occurs first. The participant will be instructed to engage in 15 minutes of CR practice for their target tic(s) each day before the next treatment session. Parents of participants will be instructed to partake in the daily CR practice session with their child by prompting and verbally reinforcing the use of the CR. Overall, the approximate duration of treatment sessions will be 45 to 60 minutes.
Study Visit #6 (Phase 3: Post-Treatment Assessment)
The post-treatment assessment will occur within one week of the last HRT session. To assess between-session differences across participants, the post-treatment assessment will begin with participants answering a series of questions regarding between-session practice and adverse events. Next, participants will engage in the RTST. Participants will then complete a diagnostic assessment with trained study personnel consisting of the YGTSS, PTQ, and I-PUTS. Participation will be considered complete at this point.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
BASIC_SCIENCE
NONE
Study Groups
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Habit Reversal Training (HRT)
All participants receive 4 sessions of HRT (Habit Reversal Training) to treat their tics.
Habit Reversal Training (HRT)
Habit Reversal Training (HRT) is a multicomponent treatment package developed to treat a repetitive behaviors. HRT includes (1) increasing awareness of discrete occurrences of tics and associated premonitory urges (PMUs; i.e., awareness training), (2) teaching the patient to suppress tics by engaging in behaviors that are physically incompatible with target tics (i.e., competing response \[CR\] training), and (3) prompting and reinforcing between-session patient engagement with therapeutic techniques and homework (i.e., providing social support).
Interventions
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Habit Reversal Training (HRT)
Habit Reversal Training (HRT) is a multicomponent treatment package developed to treat a repetitive behaviors. HRT includes (1) increasing awareness of discrete occurrences of tics and associated premonitory urges (PMUs; i.e., awareness training), (2) teaching the patient to suppress tics by engaging in behaviors that are physically incompatible with target tics (i.e., competing response \[CR\] training), and (3) prompting and reinforcing between-session patient engagement with therapeutic techniques and homework (i.e., providing social support).
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* The child's tics initially onset before age 10.
* The child currently engages in at least four different motor and/or vocal tics per minute, on average, during a 10-minute observation period.
* The child has a minimum Total Tic Severity Score of 20 on the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (10 for motor or vocal tics only)
* If the child is on tic-suppressing or psychotropic medication, the dose has been stable for at least 6 weeks with no changes or planned changes in medication status during the study period.
* Parent and child read and speak fluent English.
* The parent is 18+ years of age.
* Access to a private computer with high-speed internet access and private setting.
Exclusion Criteria
* The child has a self- or parent-reported history of, or is reasonably suspected to have or meet criteria for, functional neurological symptom disorder.
* The child has received more than two sessions of behavioral treatment for tics for which tic suppression was a primary component.
* The child has a Total Tic Severity Score of 40+ on the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (20+ for motor/vocal tics only).
8 Years
12 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Utah
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Kirsten Bootes
Clinical Psychology Doctoral Candidate
Principal Investigators
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Michael Himle, PhD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
University of Utah
Locations
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University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Woods DW, Himle MB. Creating tic suppression: comparing the effects of verbal instruction to differential reinforcement. J Appl Behav Anal. 2004 Fall;37(3):417-20. doi: 10.1901/jaba.2004.37-417.
Leckman JF, Riddle MA, Hardin MT, Ort SI, Swartz KL, Stevenson J, Cohen DJ. The Yale Global Tic Severity Scale: initial testing of a clinician-rated scale of tic severity. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 1989 Jul;28(4):566-73. doi: 10.1097/00004583-198907000-00015.
McGuire JF, McBride N, Piacentini J, Johnco C, Lewin AB, Murphy TK, Storch EA. The premonitory urge revisited: An individualized premonitory urge for tics scale. J Psychiatr Res. 2016 Dec;83:176-183. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2016.09.007. Epub 2016 Sep 9.
Storch EA, Murphy TK, Geffken GR, Sajid M, Allen P, Roberti JW, Goodman WK. Reliability and validity of the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale. Psychol Assess. 2005 Dec;17(4):486-91. doi: 10.1037/1040-3590.17.4.486.
Azrin NH, Nunn RG. Habit-reversal: a method of eliminating nervous habits and tics. Behav Res Ther. 1973 Nov;11(4):619-28. doi: 10.1016/0005-7967(73)90119-8. No abstract available.
Miltenberger RG, Fuqua RW. A comparison of contingent vs non-contingent competing response practice in the treatment of nervous habits. J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry. 1985 Sep;16(3):195-200. doi: 10.1016/0005-7916(85)90063-1.
Chang S, Himle MB, Tucker BTP, Woods DW, Piacentini J. Initial psychometric properties of a brief parent-reported instrument for assessing tic severity in children with chronic tic disorders. Child & Family Behavior Therapy. 2009;31:181-191.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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IRB_00171031
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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