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Prevention of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Following Trauma by Attention Control Training

Prevention of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Following Trauma by Attention Control Training

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02591485
Enrollment
119
Registered
2015-10-29
Start date
2016-02-29
Completion date
2019-03-31
Last updated
2019-11-25

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

PTSD

Keywords

PTSD prevention, Acute stress disorder, Attention training, Cognitive bias modification

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to explore the efficacy of Attention Control Training in preventing the development of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), during the period near after a traumatic event and before PTSD is develop. Individuals who underwent a traumatic event in the past two weeks will be randomly assigned to either Attention Control Training (ACT), designed to normalize threat-related attention biases or a control conditions: without intervention at all. Outcome measures will be a diagnosed of PTSD and the level of severity of symptoms derived from the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS-5), after 3 month since the traumatic event had occurred. The investigators expected to find lower ratios of PTSD symptoms in the ACT condition relative to the control condition in which no symptomatic relief is expected.

Detailed description

Background 13-21% out of the people exposed to a potentially traumatic event suffer from Acute Stress Disorder (ASD; American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Findings show that 70% of the people who are diagnosed with ASD during the first month following the traumatic event go on to develop Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD; Harvey & Bryant, 1998). PTSD is characterized by re-experiencing of the traumatic event, avoiding situations that remind the event, hypervigilance, and negative feelings and beliefs about the self. A neurocognitive mechanism that may become disarrayed in PTSD is the threat monitoring system. This system is responsible for monitoring potential threats and for generating adequate behavioral and emotional responses to an ever-changing environment. Recent studies have shown that this system is impaired in PTSD (Iacoviello, et al., 2014; Naim, et al., 2015) and that Attention Control Training (ACT), which balances the system's activity, is related to improvement in PTSD symptoms (Badura-Brack, et al., 2015). Therefore, the aim of the current study is to explore the efficacy of the ACT in preventing the development of PTSD during the period near after the traumatic event and before PTSD is developed. To this end, the investigators will recruit participants that arrived at the emergency department at the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center ('Ichilov') and experienced a potentially traumatic event (according to the criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of mental disorders (the DSM-V). Potential participants will be explained about the study and be asked to provide informed consent to participate. Those who agree to participate will be contacted via a telephone call 10-14 days after the event, and a diagnostic interview will be conducted to determine the presence of ASD, and to determine whether the potential participants meet the inclusion criteria for the study. Those who will exhibit a high level of ASD symptoms will be included in the study. Those included will be randomly assigned to one of two conditions detailed below. the investigators expected to recruit 4000 candidates at the emergency room, with the expectation that 10% of them (\ 600 participants) will have ASD 10-14 days later. Procedure The participants will be individuals who were recently exposed to a potentially traumatic event and arrived at the emergency department in the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center (Ichilov). The study procedure and its aims will be explained to the candidates and they will have to provide written informed consent to be included. The recruitment will be conducted by the research team that will be trained for that purpose and will stay in shifts in the emergency department in coordination with the medical team. Ten to fourteen days after the event, the participants who agreed to participate and signed the informed consent will be contacted by telephone. In this conversation, a diagnostic interview for ASD (Acute Stress Disorder Interview, ASDI; Bryant, Harvey, Dang, & Sackville, 1998) will be conducted in addition to questions about potential exclusion criteria. Those who demonstrate a high level of ASD symptoms (scores 7 and above in the ASDI), will be randomly assigned to one of two conditions: attention control training (ACT) intervention, or a control condition without intervention. In the ACT intervention, participants will perform six computerized attention training sessions, 10 minutes per training session over six weeks (a session once a week). Training will be done through a username and password protected website designated for this purpose, so the participants could complete the training from home. In addition, the participants assigned to the control condition without intervention will be followed-up three months after recruitment. At the end of the intervention period, a clinical interview will be conducted through telephone where a PTSD diagnosis (CAPS-5 interview; Weathers, Blake, Schnurr, Kaloupek, Marx, & Keane ,2013) and other clinical symptoms will be assessed. The interview will be delivered by graduate-level clinical psychology students trained by a senior clinical psychologist. Participants from the control intervention group who will have PTSD in the diagnostic point will be offered to participate in the condition that has shown the most effective improvement. The duration of the study procedure for each participant will be three months.

Interventions

In the ACT, participants perform six computerized attention training sessions, 10 minutes per training session over six weeks. In each session the dot-probe task is administered. This task is consisted of 160 trials. Each trial began with a centrally-presented fixation cross that then replaced by a pair of words presented. Following that, a target probe appeared in the location previously occupied by one of the words, and participants are requested to discriminate the probe type via button press. Targets appear with equal probability at the location of threat and neutral stimuli, in order to modify the fluctuations in attention allocation.

Sponsors

Yair Bar-Haim
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
FACTORIAL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

1. The occurrence of a traumatic event (criteria A of PTSD from the DSM-5) in the period of less than a month from the beginning of the study. 2. An ASD diagnosis (score 7 and above in the ASDI).

Exclusion criteria

1. A previous traumatic event in the period of three month or less before the current event. 2. Chronic PTSD. 3. A diagnosis of psychotic or bipolar disorders. 4. A diagnosis of a neurological disorder (i.e., epilepsy, brain injury). 5. Suicidal ideation. 6. Drugs or alcohol abuse. 7. Another psychotherapeutic treatment. 8. A pharmacological treatment that is not stabilized in the past 6 months (A stable pharmacological treatment will not be a reason for exclusion from the study). 9. Poor judgment capacity (i.e., special populations). 10. Pregnant women. Within Study

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
A diagnosis of PTSD and a total score of severity symptoms, as driven from the CAPS-5 interview.40 minutesThe Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS-5), is a structured interview that will be used to make a diagnosis of PTSD according to the DSM-V criteria. This interview is consists of 30 items regarding the frequency and intensity of PTSD symptoms and a total score of severity is been rated (Weathers, Blake, Schnurr, Kaloupek, Marx, & Keane, 2013).

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Total score of the PTSD Checklist (PCL-5).10 minutesThe PCL-5, is a 20-item National Center for PTSD Checklist of the Department of Veterans Affairs. Scores can range from 0 to 80, with higher scores reflecting more symptoms of PTSD (Weathers, Litz, Keane, Palmieri, Marx, & Schnurr, 2013).
Total score of depression (PHQ-9).10 minutesThe PHQ-9, is a 10-item scale assess the severity level of depression symptoms.
The Sheehan Disabilities Scale(SDS)5 minutesThe SDS is a functioning impairment rating scale in the domains of work, social, and family life. It contains 3 self-reported items, ranging on severity from 0 to 10 on a 10-point Likert scale.

Countries

Israel

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026