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Efficacy of Edupression.Com® in Depressive Patients

Efficacy of the Digital Self-help Programme Edupression.Com® Evaluated Within a Randomized Controlled Trial in Mild to Moderate Unipolar Depressive Patients

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04839822
Acronym
eFICASY
Enrollment
250
Registered
2021-04-09
Start date
2021-04-28
Completion date
2023-07-04
Last updated
2023-08-03

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

Conditions

Depressive; Episode, Major, Recurrent Depressive Disorder, Current Episode Moderate, Recurrent Depressive Disorder, Current Episode Mild

Keywords

Depression, Internet-Based Intervention, Mobile Applications

Brief summary

The aim of the study is to investigate the efficacy and adherence of the digital self-help programme edupression.com®.

Detailed description

The edupression.com® self-help app is an evidence-based low-level psychosocial intervention, which a can be used as as monotherapy as first-line treatment in mild to moderate depressive patients or as complimentary treatment independent of previous therapy response or depression severity. The two foundations of edupression.com® are evidence-based psychoeducation with CBT elements, as well as self-monitoring in the mood chart. Evidence for the efficacy of this approach stems from a large body of literature regarding eHealth (healthcare services provided electronically via the internet) applications in depression. This study's aim is to investigate edupression.com®'s capability to improve the illness course directly by reducing depressive symptoms (primary objective) and indirectly by fostering positive health care effects (secondary objective). The reduction of relapse risk and other preventive effects expected from other studies are beyond the time frame of this study. Beyond the evaluation of edupression.com®, this study could elucidate the general role of psychoeducation and mood tracking in online mental health to improve depression symptoms and adherence. Objectives: The primary objective is to test the clinical efficacy (at least 50% symptom reduction over a 3-month period) of edupression.com® in mild to moderate unipolar depressed patients. The secondary objective is to demonstrate positive health care effects within this 3-month trial period such as psychoeducation, quality of life, patient empowerment and other factors. Study Design: The study design of this clinical trial is consistent with a monocentric, prospective, longitudinal, randomized controlled clinical trial. Patients, currently diagnosed with a mild to moderate major depressive episode (MDE) will be invited to use the digital self-help programme. Following the inclusion procedure, patients will be randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to two different treatment arms (A vs. B). Participants of the intervention arm will get full access to the edupression.com® website, while participants of the control arm will get access to a control version of edupression.com® limited to medically useful tips, that have not been shown to be effective in improving depressive symptoms in randomized controlled trials (RCTs).

Interventions

Edupression.com® is an evidence-based self-help program that was developed for the treatment of mild to moderate unipolar depression. It is based on two core foundations, psychoeducation with elements of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) and a mood chart. Both foundations are registered as a medical product. As such, detailed risk management documentation includes probability and severity of adverse events. Moreover, detailed strategies such as warnings were implemented in the software and documented accordingly. It can be used on a PC as well as on mobile devices (browser, App) at any time.

OTHERHealth tips

Interventions that do not directly target depression: general health tips (diet, lifestyle, smoking, etc.), occupational health interventions (back pain prevention, breaks,...), etc.

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTSurveys

Quizzes and surveys for course monitoring (including suicidality), but without extensive reports.

OTHERPopular psychological interventions

Popular psychological interventions, which have not been shown to be effective in studies: Affirmation phrases, motivational sayings and quotes (known also from calendars), tests (e.g., Rorschach interpretation), exercises (emotion recognition of faces), multimedia content (pleasant music, landscape images, interviews of famous people with depression), etc.

Sponsors

Medical University of Vienna
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Masking description

Participants are blinded with respect to the study arm and will unlikely determine if they are part of the intervention or active control.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Male/female * Age 18-65 years * ICD-10 diagnosis F32.0 & F32.1, depressive episode mild & moderate & F33.0 & F33.1, Recurrent depressive disorder mild & moderate (M.I.N.I.) * PHQ-9 (Patient Health Questionnaire-9) score ≥5 * ability to be managed as outpatients * adherence to the study protocol incl. willingness and minimal experience to understand instructions for edupression.com®

Exclusion criteria

* previous or concurrent major medical or neurological illness * any history of non-response to either psychotherapy/eHealth interventions (min. 3 month) or medication (min. 6 weeks, adequate antidepressive drug dosing) or any kind of therapy resistance * participants in the active phase of other interventional studies * ICD-10 diagnosis of substance dependence within the past year, except for caffeine or nicotine or current substance abuse * ICD-10 diagnosis of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar affective disorder, persistent mood disorders, or an anxiety disorder * being acutely suicidal either indicated by a score ≥3 on item 9 (suicidal thoughts) on the PHQ-9 or according to the investigator´s opinion * failures to comply with the study protocol or to follow the instructions of the investigating team

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Therapy response3 monthsDepression severity change from baseline to end of study (EOS) \[Time Frame: 3 months\], compared between treatment vs. control arm measured with the Patient Health Questionnaire. Patient Health Questionnaire scores range from 0 to 27, with a higher score being associated with a higher level of depression.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change of Depression Literacy3 monthsDepression Literacy change from baseline to end of study (EOS) \[Time Frame: 3 months\], compared between treatment vs. control arm measured with the Depression Literacy scale (D-Lit).
Change of Quality of Life3 monthsChange of quality of life in four domains from baseline to End of Study (EOS) \[Time Frame: 3 months\] measured with the World Health Organization quality of life scale (WHOQOL-BREF).
Change of Disease Model3 monthsChange of disease model from baseline to End of Study (EOS) \[Time Frame: 3 months\] measured with the brief version of the illness perception questionnaire (B-IPQ).

Countries

Austria

Outcome results

None listed

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