Family Support Protocol for Adolescent Internalizing Disorders

NCT ID: NCT06413979

Last Updated: 2025-02-18

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

60 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-05-01

Study Completion Date

2027-03-31

Brief Summary

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This R34 will develop and test an adjunctive treatment protocol for addressing co-occurring internalizing disorders among adolescents enrolled in usual care for substance use problems. Internalizing disorders (ID), primarily depression and anxiety, are highly prevalent among youth receiving community-based treatment for substance use disorder (SUD). Comorbidity rates range from 30-70% due to the multiple developmental pathways by which adolescent SUD and ID cause and exacerbate one another. Moreover, unresolved ID issues significantly interfere with youth SUD treatment and recovery processes. Yet, the youth SUD clinical workforce is not systematically educated or trained in evidence-based practices for ID; thus, line services for youth SUD do not systematically target ID. The research literature offers a few integrated behavioral models for simultaneously treating both SUD and ID in youth; however, such models feature intensive manualized procedures that have proven cumbersome to scale and deliver in frontline settings. As a result, the clinical workforce, though desiring ID-focused training, currently has inadequate resources for treating ID effectively.

A promising solution to diminish this quality gap is developing an adjunctive, modular protocol to augment routine care for comorbid SUD/ID by directly targeting ID as a key treatment goal: Family Support Protocol for Adolescent Internalizing Disorders (Fam-AID). As an adjunctive protocol, Fam-AID will not require clinicians to markedly alter existing base practices for SUD. It will be anchored by three evidence-based foundations for treating co-occurring adolescent ID. First, it prioritizes family engagement in services and family-oriented treatment goals, which have been shown to enhance outcomes for youth SUD and ID alike. Second, it is a modular protocol that features core elements of manualized treatment for ID; core element interventions enhance treatment effectiveness by fostering implementation feasibility and sustainability in usual care. Third, it seeks to reinforce the family safety net to prevent teen self-harm. In accord with these foundations, and pending pilot development, we anticipate that Fam-AID will contain five treatment modules that can be delivered in any sequence to meet client needs: (1) Family Engagement of caregivers and primary supports in treatment planning and services; (2) Relational Reframing of family constraints, resiliencies, and social capital connected to the youth's ID symptoms; (3) Functional Analysis of the youth's ID symptoms and related behaviors; (4) Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) core techniques to address the youth's ID symptoms and functional needs, featuring three transdiagnostic interventions (emotion acceptance, emotional exposure, behavioral activation) to address negative affect and emotional dysregulation underlying both depression and anxiety; and (5) Family Psychoeducation and Safety Planning focused on education about comorbid SUD/ID and prevention of youth self-harm. All interventions featured in each module have strong empirical support.

The Fam-AID protocol will contain several innovations intended to boost treatment feasibility and impact for this vulnerable group. Aligned with the core elements strategy, it will be designed for uptake by all motivated clinicians regardless of their clinical orientation and training. It will use evidence-based family engagement techniques to systematically integrate caregivers in the treatment process; typically, families are not centralized in SUD services for youth despite compelling empirical and clinical rationale to do so. It will feature a treatment customization exercise in which clients and therapists collaboratively select CBT techniques to integrate in ongoing treatment based on functional ID assessment.

To achieve study aims we will first develop a Fam-AID implementation toolkit during a three-part Pilot Phase at one pilot site: (a) Solicit provider input on Fam-AID components; (b) Create video-based training and fidelity procedures, leveraging the PI's existing online therapist training and consultation resources in core CBT techniques for adolescent SUD, as well as the Co-I's equivalent training resources for adolescent ID; (c) Pilot the toolkit with 4-6 clients. In Years 2-3 we will conduct an Interrupted Time Series Study for N = 60 SUD/ID cases across two sites serving diverse youth: 30 will receive TAU, and then following line staff training, 30 new cases will receive TAU enhanced by adjunctive Fam-AID. Aim 1: Feasibility will examine Fam-AID cases for acceptability via client and therapist interviews and fidelity benchmarks via therapist- and observer-report of module coverage and protocol dose. Aim 2: Outcomes will test TAU vs. TAU + Fam-AID for immediate impact on family member attendance and ultimate impacts on adolescent ID symptoms at 3- and 6-month follow-up.

Detailed Description

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Conditions

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Internalizing Disorders Substance Use Disorders

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Interrupted Time Series Study
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Fam-Aid

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Family Support Protocol for Adolescent Internalizing Disorders (Fam-AID)

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

(1) Family Engagement of caregivers and primary supports in treatment planning and services; (2) Relational Reframing of family constraints, resiliencies, and social capital connected to the youth's ID symptoms; (3) Functional Analysis of the youth's ID symptoms and related behaviors; (4) Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) core techniques to address the youth's ID symptoms and functional needs, featuring three transdiagnostic interventions (emotion acceptance, emotional exposure, behavioral activation) to address negative affect and emotional dysregulation underlying both depression and anxiety; and (5) Family Psychoeducation and Safety Planning focused on education about comorbid SUD/ID and prevention of youth self-harm. All interventions featured in each module have strong empirical support.

Interventions

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Family Support Protocol for Adolescent Internalizing Disorders (Fam-AID)

(1) Family Engagement of caregivers and primary supports in treatment planning and services; (2) Relational Reframing of family constraints, resiliencies, and social capital connected to the youth's ID symptoms; (3) Functional Analysis of the youth's ID symptoms and related behaviors; (4) Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) core techniques to address the youth's ID symptoms and functional needs, featuring three transdiagnostic interventions (emotion acceptance, emotional exposure, behavioral activation) to address negative affect and emotional dysregulation underlying both depression and anxiety; and (5) Family Psychoeducation and Safety Planning focused on education about comorbid SUD/ID and prevention of youth self-harm. All interventions featured in each module have strong empirical support.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Youth is age 13-21.
* Youth lives with a primary caregiver who can attend treatment sessions.
* Youth endorses one or more DSM-5-TR symptoms for SUD and meets American Society of Addiction Medicine criteria for outpatient SU treatment.
* Youth meets DSM-5-TR criteria, or has elevated symptoms and impairment, for any of the following IDs: Current or Recurrent Major Depressive Episode, Pervasive Depressive Disorder, Social Anxiety Disorder, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Panic Disorder, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.
* Youth completes intake and is enrolled as an active case at study site

Exclusion Criteria

* Illness requiring hospitalization
* Current psychotic symptoms
* Severe SU problems that require immediate relief (detox or residential placement)
* Pervasive developmental disorder.
Minimum Eligible Age

13 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

21 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Central Contacts

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Nicole P Porter, PhD

Role: CONTACT

(212) 841-5211 ext. 9566

Aaron Hogue, PhD

Role: CONTACT

212 841-5200

References

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Hogue A, Bobek M, Porter NP, MacLean A, Henderson CE, Jensen-Doss A, Diamond GM, Southam-Gerow MA, Ehrenreich-May J. Family Support Protocol for Adolescent Internalizing Disorders: Protocol for a Pre-Post Quantitative Treatment Development Study. JMIR Res Protoc. 2024 Sep 16;13:e64332. doi: 10.2196/64332.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 39284179 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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1R34DA056026

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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