Enhancing PTSD Treatment Outcomes by Improving Patient-Provider Communication
Part of paid clinical trials in Boston, Massachusetts.
- Sponsor
- Boston University
- Study ID
- NCT06088303
- Status
- Recruiting
Conditions
- Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- ALL
- Age
- 18 Years - N/A
- Healthy Volunteers
- Not accepted
Interventions
- Adjunctive writing to amplify response and engagement (AWARE) — BEHAVIORALAWARE includes two components: 1) patients complete brief writing prompts asking about their experiences in treatment, and 2) therapists review patients' responses and facilitate guided discussion related to patients' experiences during check-ins at the beginning of each session.
- Cognitive processing therapy (CPT) — BEHAVIORALCPT is a manualized, evidence-based therapy for PTSD typically delivered over the course of 8-15 weekly 60-minute sessions. CPT focuses on helping patients identify trauma-related stuck points (inaccurate and/or unhelpful beliefs) and challenge those beliefs to arrive at healthier, more balanced beliefs about their traumatic experiences, themselves, others, and the world.
- Prolonged exposure (PE) — BEHAVIORALPE is a manualized, evidence-based therapy for PTSD typically delivered over the course of 8-15 weekly 90-minute sessions. PE focuses on reducing unhelpful avoidance and helping patients process and make sense of their traumatic experiences through in vivo and imaginal exposure to trauma-related reminders and memories.
Study Details
The purpose of this clinical trial is to learn whether existing treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can be improved. Two treatments for PTSD, cognitive processing therapy (CPT) and prolonged exposure (PE) will be studied. CPT and PE are effective treatments that are widely available, but interventions are needed to improve patient outcomes in these treatments. The investigators have developed an Adjunctive Writing intervention for Amplifying Response and Engagement (AWARE), which was designed using health communication strategies to enhance CPT and PE by improving communication between patients and therapists about patients' experiences in treatment. This research will investigate whether adding AWARE to CPT and PE will lead to better treatment outcomes compared to CPT and PE provided as usual without AWARE. AWARE includes a brief writing task asking patients about their experiences in treatment, as well as guided therapist responses to improve patient-therapist communication about patients' experiences in treatment. In the first phase of the study (case series phase), CPT or PE with AWARE will be provided to four adults with PTSD to pilot test adding AWARE to CPT and PE, seek patient and provider feedback, and refine AWARE. The first four participants who enroll will be part of the case series and will receive CPT or PE with AWARE. Then, in the second phase of the study, the randomized controlled trial (RCT) phase, the investigators will enroll 50 more adults with PTSD who will be randomly assigned (like flipping a coin) to receive CPT/PE as usual or CPT/PE with AWARE. It is expected that 25 participants will be randomized to CPT/PE with AWARE and 25 participants will be randomized to receive CPT/PE provided as usual. The goals of the RCT phase are to study whether AWARE is acceptable to patients, whether it is feasible to add AWARE to CPT and PE, and whether adding AWARE to CPT and PE improves patient-therapist communication and treatment outcomes compared to CPT/PE as usual.
Key Dates
- Start date
- Jan 15, 2025
- Status verified
- Mar 2026
- Primary completion
- Oct 31, 2028
- Completion
- Dec 31, 2028
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 54 participants (estimated)
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Intervention model
- PARALLEL
- Primary purpose
- TREATMENT
Arms
- Experimental: CPT/PE with AWAREParticipants randomized into this arm will receive either cognitive processing therapy (CPT) or prolonged exposure (PE) with the adjunctive writing intervention to amplify response and engagement (AWARE). CPT and PE are both recommended as gold standard treatments by published PTSD clinical practice guidelines. Participants will choose whether to receive CPT or PE. The standard treatment length will be 8-15 weekly sessions; however, participants and providers may collaboratively agree to early completion or additional sessions as warranted. AWARE will be integrated into the CPT/PE sessions.
- Active Comparator: CPT/PE TAUParticipants randomized into this arm will receive either cognitive processing therapy (CPT) or prolonged exposure (PE) treatment as usual (TAU). CPT and PE are both recommended as gold standard treatments by published PTSD clinical practice guidelines. Participants will choose whether to receive CPT or PE. The standard treatment length will be 8-15 weekly sessions; however, participants and providers may collaboratively agree to early completion or additional sessions as warranted.
Primary Outcome Measure
Patient-provider communication: VR-CoDES (Posttreatment) [ Time Frame: Immediately after ending treatment ]
Central Contacts
- Elizabeth Alpert, PhD857-364-6190
Locations (1)
| Facility | City | State | ZIP | Site coordinators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Center for PTSD at VA Boston Healthcare System | Boston | Massachusetts | 02130 | Elizabeth Alpert, PhD |
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