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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07226128
NA

The Effects of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy on Insulin Resistance in People With HIV

Sponsor: Indiana University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if depression treatment improves insulin resistance, or how the body uses insulin to lower blood sugar, in people with HIV on HIV treatment. Researchers will compare an internet-based (online) depression treatment program called cognitive behavioral therapy with depression education. In the online group, participants will undergo 9 weekly treatment sessions. The education group will receive learning materials about depression and will be monitored every month. All participants will have 4 study visits over 12 months.

Official title: A Randomized, Controlled Trial Assessing the Effects of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy to Prevent Worsening Insulin Resistance in Depressed, Virologically-Suppressed, Antiretroviral-Treated Adults With HIV

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

150

Start Date

2026-02-15

Completion Date

2030-12-31

Last Updated

2026-02-09

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Internet cognitive behavioral therapy (iCBT-D)

Intervention participants will receive the empirically supported, HIPAA-compliant, therapist-assisted iCBT-D called Good Days Ahead (GDA; MindStreet, Inc.). GDA uses an interactive, multimedia format (including video, exercises, calls to action, newsfeeds, and customized feedback) to deliver nine 45-minute sessions, the structure and content of which mirror traditional face-to-face CBT. Topics include identifying and modifying automatic thoughts, using behavioral activation and other behavioral methods, identifying and modifying schemas, using effective coping strategies, and employing other core CBT methods.

BEHAVIORAL

Active Control (AC)

Our AC comparator will include depression education and depressive symptom monitoring along with usual depression care as provided by the participants HIV clinicians. Trial staff will fist have a 30-minute call with AC participants to review depression materials, including their HIV provider's role in its management and treatment options and also provide a list of local mental health services. There are no care restrictions by the primary HIV clinicians. Trial staff will call AC participants every 4 weeks to assess depressive symptoms (PHQ-9) and will notify clinic staff to encourage additional care when indicated.