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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT05779137
NA

The Effects of Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy in People With Parkinson's Disease

Sponsor: Radboud University Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a debilitating neurodegenerative disorder occurring in 7 million patients worldwide. PD is caused by progressive loss of nigro-striatal dopamine cells, which causes motor symptoms such as slowness of movement and tremor, and non-motor symptoms such as cognitive dysfunction. Converging clinical evidence indicates that PD patients are very sensitive to the effects of psychological stress. There is a high prevalence of stressrelated neuropsychiatric symptoms in PD: 30-40% of patients experience depression and 25-30% have anxiety. Furthermore, stress worsens many motor symptoms, e.g. tremor, freezing of gait, and dyskinesia. In addition to these immediate negative effects, chronic stress may also have detrimental long-term consequences, and specifically by accelerating disease progression, as suggested by animal models. However, this hypothesis remains to be confirmed in humans. Better evidence about the impact of stress on PD would have major treatment consequences: novel stress-reducing interventions may have symptomatic effects, and perhaps also disease-modifying effects. The aim of this study is to test whether a stress-reducing intervention improves clinical symptoms, slows neurodegeneration, and/or enhances neuroplasticity in PD. In a randomized controlled trial, the investigators will compare a stress-reducing mindfulness-based intervention group (MBI; one year) to a treatment as usual (TAU) group on clinical symptoms, cerebral markers of nigro-striatal dysfunction and stressor-reactivity (MRI), and inflammatory markers (serum).

Official title: The Effect of Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy on Psychological Distress in People With Parkinson's Disease

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

Any - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

174

Start Date

2023-04-17

Completion Date

2026-12

Last Updated

2026-03-27

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

MBCT

Patients will join a mindfulness-based cognitive therapy course at the Radboudumc Center for Mindfulness. The course consists of eight weekly sessions of 2.5-hour and one 6-hour silence day between the 6th and 7th session. The sessions include meditation exercises (body-scan, sitting meditation, gentle movement exercises, three-minute breathing space, daily activities with attention), psychoeducation and group discussion. Psychoeducation includes information on cognitive techniques, like monitoring and scheduling of events and identification of negative automatic thoughts. In addition, all participants will be encouraged to perform daily practice assignments at home for about 30-45 minutes per day, mainly consisting of meditation exercises.

Locations (1)

Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging

Nijmegen, Netherlands