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Modeling Tic Change During Behavior Therapy for Tics
Sponsor: University of Minnesota
Summary
Chronic tics are a disabling neuropsychiatric symptom associated with multiple child-onset mental disorders. Chronic tics affect 1-3% of youth and can be associated with impaired functioning, emotional and behavioral problems, physical pain, diminished quality of life, and peer victimization. Chronic tics are the primary symptom of Tourette Syndrome (TS) and Persistent Motor/Vocal Tic Disorders. CBIT is a manualized treatment focused on increasing tic controllability. Its core procedure is competing response training (CRT), in which patients learn to inhibit tics by learning and applying a competing motor action to one tic at a time. CBIT is recommended as a first-line treatment relative to medications and other therapies. However, only 52% of children and 38% of adults show clinically meaningful tic improvement. Large randomized trials have demonstrated the superiority of CBIT over supportive therapy in child and adult patients, and meta-analysis shows comparable effect sizes for CBIT and medication. Although increasing tic controllability is the primary goal of CBIT, tic controllability nor its correlates have been examined longitudinally during the intervention. The overall objective of this study is to use fine-grained data collection strategies to identify patterns in tic controllability and other relevant related variables that are associated with treatment response to CBIT. Participants with chronic tics will complete a manualized course of 8-session CBIT. Behavioral, psychosocial, and global functioning will be assessed longitudinally to examine predictors and correlates of response. CBIT sessions will be video recorded.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
12 Years - 21 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
30
Start Date
2024-03-01
Completion Date
2028-09-01
Last Updated
2026-03-19
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
CBIT
8sessions of CBIT following a published treatment manual delivered over 10 weeks (the last two sessions are biweekly) CBIT is a well-established behavioral treatment that is considered by the American Academy of Neurology to be the first-line intervention for tics.
Locations (1)
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States