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Internet-based Behavior Therapy for Adults With Tourette Syndrome
Sponsor: Karolinska Institutet
Summary
This study protocol outlines a parallel-group, randomized controlled trial (RCT) designed to evaluate the effectiveness of Internet-delivered behavior therapy (BT) based on exposure with response prevention (ERP) for adults with Tourette syndrome (TS) or chronic tic disorder (CTD). The primary aim is to evaluate the effects of Internet-delivered ERP-based BT on tic severity compared to a control condition offering general psychological support at week 11 counting from the treatment start. The primary outcome measure is the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale - Total Tic Severity subscale (YGTSS-TTS). Secondary outcomes include measures of tics-related impairment, work and social adjustment, rates of responders, self-rated tic severity, symptoms of depression, and quality of life. Long-term maintenance of results will be assessed at week 23 and 14 months after the treatment start. Participants will be recruited nationwide. The intervention group will receive 10 weeks of ERP-based therapy delivered through an online platform, with therapist support. The control group will receive psychoeducational content and general psychological support. Adherence to treatment, adverse events, and patient safety will be closely monitored throughout the trial. The study population will be intent-to-treat and the between-group differences at the primary endpoint will be assessed using an analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) with pre-score of the measure as covariate. A health-economic evaluation will assess the cost-effectiveness of the intervention.
Official title: A Parallel-group, Randomized Controlled Trial of Internet-based Behavior Therapy for Adults With Tourette Syndrome
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
110
Start Date
2024-02-02
Completion Date
2028-05
Last Updated
2024-02-21
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Exposure with response prevention
The central component of the intervention will be ERP. During the treatment, participants will receive information about tics and how to work with ERP. Continuously throughout the treatment patients will work with exposing themselves to situations that trigger their premonitory urges and practice suppressing their tics. They will learn different strategies to provoke their premonitory urges to make suppression of their tics more challenging and gradually increase the time they can suppress the tics. A central tool in the treatment will be the Ticstimer, a worksheet where patients will continuously record their ERP practice, and the time they manage to suppress tics. The patients will be encouraged to work with the Ticstimer daily.
Brief psychoeducation with general psychological support
Participants who are randomized to the control group will receive access to brief psychoeducational content in the platform in combination with general psychological support from a therapist. No active BT components (BT, Habit Reversal Training, applied relaxation) are provided to the participants in the control group. The therapists will welcome the patients to the treatment, encourage them to engage in the treatment content and reach out to the therapist if they have any questions. Thereafter, the therapists will only reply to the patients' messages without taking any contact initiative themselves (unless there is an indication of severe deterioration or severe depressive symptoms or suicidal ideation requiring medical attention)
Locations (1)
Karolinska Institutet
Stockholm, Sweden