Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Improving the Treatment of Depression Among Youth With HIV
Sponsor: Rhode Island Hospital
Summary
Depression is a common psychiatric condition among Youth with HIV (YWH), with prevalence as high as 25% in the United States. The treatment of depression is essential for improving both psychiatric and medical outcomes for YWH (e.g., adherence to antiretroviral treatment). Practice guidelines for the treatment of depression and substantial research (including for those with and without HIV), indicate that measured-care treatment (care decisions guided by systematic symptom measurement) and using a combination of a medication management algorithm (MMA) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) that is tailored to the population is efficacious. Unfortunately, these methods are seldom fully implemented in practice, leading to markedly reduced intervention effectiveness. This proposed project will compare an enhanced version of combination treatment (COMBEX) to our previously tested combination treatment (COMB) in a Hybrid Type 2 Cluster Randomized Trial. COMBEX will be enhanced by five ERIC implementation strategies as suggested in our post-trial interviews from our efficacy trial and it will also continue to use the ERIC strategies used in COMB. It is hypothesized that these additional ERIC strategies will improve sustainability and depression outcomes at 48 and 72 weeks.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
15 Years - 24 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
130
Start Date
2026-04-01
Completion Date
2029-07-01
Last Updated
2026-02-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
COMBEX
The intervention (COMBEX) is a combined approach to routine psychotherapy (including CBT and medication management) with additional ERIC strategies incorporated.
COMB
COMB is a combined approach to routine psychotherapy (including CBT and medication management).