IBDminds - Mapping the Influence of aNxiety and DepreSsion on IBD
NCT ID: NCT07175454
Last Updated: 2026-01-15
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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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
450 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2026-01-31
2028-01-31
Brief Summary
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When IBD is hard to treat, we use advanced treatments, but these don't always work. When they do work the effect can wear off. This happens in 2 of 5 people within a year in research studies. There are some things that we know make them wear off. There are lots more reasons that we don't understand yet. We think anxiety, depression and stress make these treatments more likely to wear off. Previous research has suggested that people with IBD do worse if they have anxiety, depression or stress.
The investigators want people with IBD to complete questionnaires to see if they are affected by anxiety, depression or stress when they are taking advanced therapies. The investigators will follow those people to see if the effect of their treatment wears off.
People living with IBD will contribute to the running and fine tuning of this research. Many of those that have engaged with us so far have said that their disease was worse when their mental health was worse. They were generally supportive of this study to see how anxiety, depression and stress effects IBD in people using advanced therapies.
The investigators have talked to a national charity about our work. They will help share the findings so that patients, care givers and other stakeholders will be able to read about them. The results will be published so that doctors and researchers can use them.
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Detailed Description
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There is a recognised association between IBD and common mental health problems, specifically anxiety, depression and perceived stress, but it is not known whether these impact the effectiveness of IBD treatment.
The bidirectional relationship between mental wellbeing and IBD has been described in a recent meta-analysis5. Patients with anxiety and depression are more likely to develop IBD compared to matched controls without IBD6. This relationship predates IBD presentation by up to 5 years. Therefore, it appears that a complex relationship between IBD and anxiety, depression and perceived stress exists. IBD patients with concurrent anxiety, depression and perceived stress are more likely to have more severe IBD, including; exacerbations, hospital admissions, and need for surgery5.
High levels of perceived personal stress are associated with increased risk of disease exacerbations7. A single study from 2005 demonstrated worse IBD outcomes in patients with severe depression compared to mentally well patients when treated with a single dose of Infliximab (albeit in a practice which is now obsolete). This suggests severe depression is associated with worse outcomes from advanced therapies but further research is needed to validate this association8.
Data to describe a relationship between IBD and anxiety, depression and perceived stress, in patients on advanced therapies is limited. Up to 20% of IBD patients are now progressing to advanced therapies compared to 5% in 20109. Such data is important to consider if intervention for anxiety, depression and perceived stress could improve durability of advanced therapies.
Public contributors to research have articulated that mental health is a key concern. It is a common lived experience amongst patients with IBD that anxiety, depression and perceived stress are a factor in their disease activity. The investigators hypothesise that unrecognised or inadequately managed anxiety, depression and perceived stress is a factor that makes advanced therapies less effective in maintaining remission for IBD patients.
There are also important health inequality considerations. IBD Patients are more likely to develop anxiety and depression if they are from a deprived background, but are also more likely to have worse outcomes from IBD because of anxiety and depression. Worse IBD leads to greater challenge in the workplace and therefore risk of unemployment and increasing deprivation. Research that defines and reduces the negative impact of anxiety and depression on IBD outcomes would also reduce inequality of outcomes driven by deprivation.
The burden of anxiety and depression is increasing10. Current incidence rates amongst any IBD patient using primary care coded data suggest that the incidence of anxiety and depression are 5.5 and 11 per 1000 patient years11. The prevalence of depression at diagnosis has been reported to be 7%6. However, a survey of Australian IBD patients using a combined measure of depression and anxiety found that 50% of patients reported symptoms12. Therefore, the investigators expect a high proportion of patients recruited to this study will report at least some elements of anxiety, depression and perceived stress.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Interventions
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Questionnaire
Patients/research nurses will complete questionnaires detailing their medical history including mental health and describing their IBD.
Patients will complete baseline scoring questionnaires for depression and anxiety (HADS) and perceived stress (PSS-10).
Patients will also complete a patient reported outcome tool to assess their current disease activity level (PRO-2)
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patients receiving maintenance infliximab or vedolizumab by regular intravenous infusion
* Patients willing and able to give informed consent
* Patients aged 16 or over
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients should not currently be planned for surgery within the next 12 months
* Patients should not currently be planned to switch to another advanced therapy within the next 12 months
* Patients should not currently be planned for a drug holiday within the next 12 months
* Patients should not have a stoma (This would invalidate the PRO-2 outcome measure)
* Patients should not currently be pregnant
* Patient currently receiving subcutaneous infliximab or vedolizumab
16 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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The Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust
OTHER_GOV
Responsible Party
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Locations
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The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust
Wolverhampton, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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2025GAS146
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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