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RECRUITING
NCT06253390
NA

New Cognitive Treatment for Peripartum Depression

Sponsor: CHU de Reims

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The peripartum period is the period between the last month of pregnancy and up to a year after childbirth. It can be considered a difficult time for women, as it is a period of transition during which vulnerability to psychiatric disorders and in particular to major depressive disorder (MDD) (Vesga-Lopez, Blanco, Olfson, Grant \& Hasin, 2008). Depression with peripartum onset (PPD) is characterised by the fact that the onset of symptoms may occur during pregnancy or within four weeks of delivery, but may also persist for up to 12 months after delivery (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). PPD affects 10 to 20% of women who have given birth (Tebeka et al. 2021). In addition, the psychological distress experienced by the mother during the peripartum period can disrupt interactions with her newborn (Lefkovics et al. 2014). Depression during this period can therefore have long-term consequences, not only for the women who suffer it, but also for their children (Gavin et al. 2005). The investigators now know that women with PPD have deficits in metacognition. Metacognition is the body of knowledge, processes and practices that enable individuals to control and evaluate their own cognitive activities, thereby enabling them to regulate them (Flavell, 1976). Patients with PPD therefore have difficulty identifying, controlling and evaluating their own cognitive activities. These deficits may also represent a risk factor for the development of PPD if they are present at an early stage (Diop et al. 2022). In patients with PPD, metacognitive therapies appear to be effective in reducing symptoms. In 2013, Bevan, Wittkowski and Wells conducted a pilot study to test the effects associated with metacognitive therapy in depression. This was the first published study to evaluate the effects of metacognitive therapy on patients with depression in the peripartum period. It shows promising results which it would be interesting to replicate, as this is a pilot study. A metacognitive training program for depression (D-MCT) was developed by Jelinek, Hauschildt, Moritz and Dubreucq in 2016, it is a brief group intervention that is easy to manage to participants. To date, no study has yet tested this specific program in patients with PPD, but it has been able to show its effectiveness in reducing the metacognitive deficits. In the light of the scientific literature, the aims of this study are, firstly, to demonstrate the efficacy of D-MCT therapy in subjects with post-partum depression. Secondly, to examine the effects of this therapy on mother-child interactions. The investigators make the following assumptions: * Women in the experimental group showed a greater reduction in depressive symptoms and an improvement in metacognitive functioning than those in the control group. * Women in the experimental group showed a reduction in depressive symptoms after therapy (v2) and maintenance of this improvement (v3). * Improvement in the quality of mother-child bonding for women who took part in the program compared with those in the control group. * Improvement in the quality of mother-child bonding after the program (v2 and v3) for women in the experimental group compared with when they entered the program.

Official title: Effect of the Metacognitive Training Programme (D-MCT) in Patients With Peripartum Depression

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

18 Years - 45 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

96

Start Date

2024-01-10

Completion Date

2028-12

Last Updated

2026-02-20

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Metacognitive training

Metacognitive training therapy

BEHAVIORAL

control

management technique as usual

Locations (1)

Chu Reims

Reims, France