Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Enrolling by invitation
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Schizoaffective Disorder
  • Schizophrenia
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 30 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

At the time of first-episode, most people with schizophrenia have cognitive impairments that significantly contribute to poor functioning. Early intervention with cognitive remediation (CR), an evidence-based skills intervention that targets cognitive processes, is designed to enhance cognition and ...

At the time of first-episode, most people with schizophrenia have cognitive impairments that significantly contribute to poor functioning. Early intervention with cognitive remediation (CR), an evidence-based skills intervention that targets cognitive processes, is designed to enhance cognition and functional recovery in people identified as having cognitive health needs. Evidence suggests that provision of CR to those in the early stage of schizophrenia, and in the context of rehabilitation services, results in greater cognitive and functional gains. OnTrackNY (OTNY) is a New York-based Coordinated Specialty Care (CSC) program that provides early psychosis treatment to young people, between 16 and 30 years of age, who have experienced the onset of non-affective psychosis within two years of beginning treatment. CSC programs provide a significant benefit over usual care, but on average 50% of patients remain disabled after two years. OTNY, like many other CSC programs, provides cognitive health evaluation and supportive treatment but does not routinely offer CR. However, evidence suggests that when cognitive disability is promptly addressed, people show increased self-esteem, engagement in the community and sense of well-being. Therefore, the addition of CR to OTNY may allow treatment to proceed at a faster rate, promote more rapid engagement and mitigate challenges experienced by clients in school or work. This study aims to: Adapt a 12-week long CR intervention to 2 delivery methods using the input of experts, OnTrackNY mental health clinicians, and clients to improve the acceptability of the intervention content. Examine whether CR can enhance the cognitive and functional outcomes for people with first episode psychosis (FEP) receiving treatment in a CSC program and identified as having cognitive health needs. Compare the effectiveness of "in clinic/clinician-led" and "partial-remote/independent" CR delivery approaches. This study will occur in phases. In Phase 1, CR content and delivery will be adapted using the input of experts, and training manuals will be created for two intervention approaches. Phase 2 will involve training of mental health clinicians at two OnTrackNY programs to add a formal battery of cognitive assessments and adapted CR. One program will be assigned to deliver CR exclusively "in-clinic" with the aid of a clinician and the other "partial-remote/independent" (one in-clinic session per week with independent cognitive practice). Following quality improvement/program evaluation procedures, the investigators will refine CR based on feedback from providers and clients. Phase 3 will involve nine OnTrackNY programs where clinicians will be trained by researchers to conduct the formal cognitive assessment battery and CR, if applicable. Three programs will be randomly assigned to provide treatment as usual (TAU) and six will be assigned to TAU and CR (either "in-clinic/clinician-led" or "partial-remote/independent"). Referral for cognitive health services will follow routine clinical practice through which clients and their clinicians document cognitive health needs and decide what intervention suits their needs. Clients will be given the option of enrolling in the program's CR intervention. Client characteristics, CR enrollment and outcomes will be made available for quality improvement monitoring and program evaluation in de-identified form. The investigators will examine outcomes for clients identified as having cognitive health needs. To address whether adding CR improves functional outcomes in CSC programs, the investigators will compare measures of community functioning and psychiatric symptom severity across groups. Functional outcome measures will be examined for the time most proximal to CR enrollment and every three months thereafter until study end (range 3-12 months of follow-up depending upon rolling enrollment). Cognition will be measured before and after completion of CR (an average of 3 months) to compare the effectiveness of the two CR delivery approaches and examine whether cognitive improvement is associated with improvement in functioning.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03930251
Collaborators
  • Columbia University
  • National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Alice Medalia, PhD New York State Psychiatric Institute