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RECRUITING
NCT05153382
NA

Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Youth With and/or at Familial Risk for Bipolar Disorder

Sponsor: Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) will be conducted over 1 year in youth with and/or at familial risk for bipolar disorder (BD). DBT will be divided into two modalities: 1) DBT skills training; and 2) DBT individual therapy sessions. Skills training sessions will incorporate the 5 standard adolescent DBT modules: mindfulness skills, emotion regulation skills, distress tolerance skills, interpersonal skills, and walking the middle path skills and an additional module on psychoeducation about DBT and BD. This study seeks to build upon the knowledge base in this area by offering DBT to youth with and/or at familial risk for BD with an emphasis on predictors and mediators of treatment outcomes.

Official title: Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Youth With and/or at Familial Risk for Bipolar Disorder: Focus on Predictors and Mediators of Treatment Outcomes

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

13 Years - 23 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

60

Start Date

2021-11-01

Completion Date

2026-11

Last Updated

2025-11-19

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Dialectical behavioral therapy

DBT will be conducted over 1 year, and divided into two modalities: skills training, conducted in 60 minute biweekly meetings and individual therapy conducted in 60 minute biweekly sessions. Family participation in skills training is highly encouraged. Skills training proceeds as follows: psychoeducation, mindfulness skills, emotion regulation skills, distress tolerance skills, interpersonal skills, and walking the middle path skills. Individual therapy sessions aim to aid the youth in applying skills in their daily lives. We adopt the standard DBT hierarchy of treatment targets, whereby the individual therapist selects behaviors to focus on based on the following priorities: 1) decreasing life-threatening behaviors, 2) decreasing therapy-interfering behaviors, 3) decreasing quality-of-life interfering behaviors, and 4) increasing behavioral skills. Therapists will be available to participants by cell phone for in-vivo skills coaching between sessions.

Locations (1)

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

Toronto, Ontario, Canada