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Tundra lists 19 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT04450043
The Transitions Project: Supporting Adults During the Shift From Cancer Treatment to Surveillance
This research study is designed to develop and test a new supportive care program to help individuals with lung cancer improve their quality of life after cancer treatment is over.
Gender: All
Ages: 21 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-03-27
1 state
NCT07395817
Video Conference-Based Brief Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Suicidal High-Risk Outpatients With Mood Disorders
This pilot randomized controlled trial aims to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of videoconference-based brief cognitive behavioral therapy (V-BCBT) for adult outpatients with mood disorders who are at high risk for suicide. Eligible participants will be randomized (1:1) to either V-BCBT + treatment as usual (TAU) or TAU alone. V-BCBT consists of eight structured videoconference sessions (approximately 50-60 minutes each, twice weekly for 4 weeks) focusing on crisis management (for example, understanding the "suicide mode," developing a crisis response plan, strengthening reasons for living), cognitive and behavioral coping skills (for example, relaxation, behavioral activation, cognitive restructuring, mindfulness), and relapse prevention (for example, coping rehearsal and a relapse prevention plan).
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-02-11
NCT07356479
Enhancing Mental and Physical Health of Women Veterans 3.0
Women Veterans are the fastest growing segment of VA users, with most users in midlife. This dramatic growth has created challenges for VA to ensure that appropriate services are available to meet women Veterans' needs, and that they will want and be able to use those services. Furthermore, few VA improvement efforts have focused on women Veterans' health and health care in midlife. The EMPOWER QUERI 3.0 Program is a cluster randomized type 3 hybrid implementation-effectiveness trial testing two strategies designed to support implementation and sustainment of evidence-based practices for women Veterans in at least 18 VA facilities from 4 regions.
Gender: All
Updated: 2026-01-21
1 state
NCT05663034
CBT-I vs. MBTI for Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)-Related Insomnia and Post-Traumatic Stress Symptoms
This study is a prospective two-arm, single blind randomized controlled trial design to compare the clinical effectiveness of telemedicine-delivered, 6-session, standardized cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) and mindfulness-based treatment for insomnia (MBTI) in treating insomnia symptoms and ameliorating depressive symptoms in persons with mild to moderate TBI and comorbid Post-Traumatic Stress Symptoms (PTSS) and insomnia symptoms in a 360 patients. Participants will undergo assessment (psychosocial questionnaires, neurocognitive testing, sleep monitoring) at baseline, at the end of treatment, and at 2-, 6- and 12-weeks post-treatment. The primary outcome is sleep as measured by the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI).
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-12-18
4 states
NCT04761328
Fear of Recurrence and Stopping Immunotherapy
The study includes participants experiencing distress with regard to stopping immunotherapy and will utilize cognitive-behavioral therapy to reduce fear of recurrence, depression, and anxiety and improve quality of life.
Gender: All
Ages: 21 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-12-05
1 state
NCT05304104
Building an Equitable and Accessible System of Eating Disorder Care for VA, DoD, and Underrepresented Americans
When untreated, eating disorders present with tremendous burdens to affected active duty Service members and Veterans and their families, and are very costly to the DoD and VA healthcare system. A comparative effectiveness study with state-of-the-art virtual treatment for BN and BED specifically adapted for testing with the Veteran population and other underrepresented eating disorder populations will lead to major improvements in clinical outcomes. The treatment will be integrated with VA's newest telehealth technology to profoundly enhance access to care anywhere, at any time. This trial of therapist-led and self-help CBT treatments, combined with our expert panel methods to inform VA Clinical Practice Guidelines for Eating Disorders and plans for dissemination, will accelerate the pace for the transition of results both for large-scale deployment in the VA system and for real-world impact among diverse and underrepresented eating disorder populations.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-11-25
1 state
NCT07232823
Brief Culturally Adapted CBT for OCD
The purpose aims to assess the efficacy of Brief Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (Ca-CBT) for the treatment of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD).
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 65 Years
Updated: 2025-11-18
1 state
NCT07072845
Enhanced Brief CBT for Suicidal Inpatients With Mood Disorders
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether enhanced brief cognitive behavioral therapy (E-BCBT) can help reduce suicidal thoughts and behaviors among psychiatric inpatients. This therapy is designed to be feasible during hospitalization and includes self-directed worksheets that may later be used independently after discharge, offering potential benefits for suicide prevention outside the hospital setting as well. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: * E-BCBT group: Participants will receive five sessions of cognitive behavioral therapy (approximately 50-60 minutes each) during their inpatient stay. * TAU (treatment as usual) group: Participants will receive standard care provided on the psychiatric ward. All participants will take part in five assessments: one before treatment, one after treatment, and three monthly follow-up assessments over the three months after discharge. Assessments include interviews, conducted in person or by phone, and questionnaires, completed online via a survey link. The entire study period will take approximately four months.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-10-03
NCT05587127
Exposure-Based CBT for Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake in Functional Dyspepsia
Randomized controlled trial of an exposure-based behavioral treatment (CBT) in adults with functional dyspepsia who meet criteria for avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) with weight loss.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-09-25
1 state
NCT06873009
Can Cognitive Behavioural Therapy Help Incarcerated Men Quit Smoking? Efficacy and Predictors of Treatment Outcomes
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether a brief group-based psychological intervention using cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) helps people in prison quit smoking. Researchers will compare this intervention to a health education program and a control group (waitlist) to see which approach is most effective. The main questions this study aims to answer are: * Does the CBT-based group intervention help more participants quit smoking compared to the health education group and the control group? * Do participants in the CBT-based group intervention smoke fewer cigarettes per day one month after the intervention compared to the other groups? * Do participants in the CBT-based group intervention have lower nicotine dependence ? * What individual factors (e.g., motivation to quit, nicotine dependence, craving intensity, self-efficacy, withdrawal symptoms, anxiety, depression, ADHD, and PTSD) predict success in the CBT and Health education groups? Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: * CBT group: Three group sessions (1.5 hours each) using CBT and motivational approaches to quitting smoking. * Health education group: One group session (1 hour) providing information on smoking and its health risks. * Control group: No intervention for three months (waitlist). All participants will complete an initial assessment, attend their assigned group sessions, and return for follow-up visits at 1 month and 3 months. Their smoking status will be measured through self-reports and carbon monoxide (CO) expired levels.
Gender: MALE
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-09-03
1 state
NCT05609916
CBT Augmentation to Promote Medication Discontinuation in Pediatric OCD
The purpose of this study is to examine whether youth with OCD who benefit from CBT augmentation to SRI can discontinue their medication without relapse over 24 weeks.
Gender: All
Ages: 7 Years - 17 Years
Updated: 2025-07-20
1 state
NCT05887713
Novel Mental Health Therapies to Improve Military Readiness
To evaluate the efficacy of CES as a therapy to treat and mitigate symptoms of generalized anxiety in DoD beneficiaries in a prospective clinical trial and compare this to sham (placebo) CES.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-07-08
1 state
NCT04700878
A Randomized Controlled Evaluation of a Compassion-course for Healthcare Professionals
The aim is to investigate whether an internet-based compassion course of five modules contributes to reducing stress of conscience and work-related stress, increase the experience of professional quality of life and self-compassion in healthcare professionals.
Gender: All
Ages: 20 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-03-19
1 state
NCT05667857
Longitudinal Neurocognitive, Psychosocial and Health-related Quality of Life Assessment in Advanced Cancer Survivors Treated With Immunotherapy and the Efficacy of Integrative Neurocognitive Remediation Therapy
Since 2010, the field of immunotherapy has grown substantially, leading to a growing population of long-term cancer survivors treated with immunotherapy. Since cancer survivorship in immunotherapy is an emerging field, to date not much is known about psychosocial and neurocognitive survivorship-related issues in advanced cancer survivors treated with immunotherapy. Preliminary findings indicated significant psychosocial and cognitive problems in survivors of advanced melanoma persist after treatment with immunotherapy. The objective for this project is twofold. First, the investigators want to longitudinally identify survival-related problems in survivors of advanced cancer treated with immunotherapy. The second goal is to identify the efficacy of an Integrative Neuro-Cognitive Remediation Therapy (INCRT) program. The investigators will focus on the following outcomes: (1) Psychosocial consequences, such as emotional complaints, fatigue, fear of recurrence, (2) neurocognitive functioning, and (3) health-related quality of life. The INCRT combines personalized computerized cognitive training and neurocognitive strategy training, with group sessions of exercise, mindfulness, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and cognitive behavioral therapy. We will have three cohorts: * Cohort 1: advanced cancer survivors treated with immunotherapy * Cohort 2: cancer survivors treated with cancer therapy of any kind (excluded immunotherapy), and who have subjective complaints and/or objective cognitive impairment * Cohort 3: cancer survivors of a central nervous system (CNS) tumor, who do not have active disease in the CNS, and who have subjective complaints and/or objective cognitive impairment In the first part of the study, survival-related problems will be evaluated in cohort 1, in a longitudinal manner by means of a semi-structured interview at baseline, various questionnaires and a computerized neuropsychological test battery. In the second part of the study, patients of cohort 1, 2 and 3 with subjective or objective cognitive dysfunction can follow the INCRT program. The efficacy of the INCRT is evaluated through a pre-INCRT and post-INCRT evaluation. This evaluation consist of several questionnaires and neuropsychological tests. Long-term efficacy will be evaluated by a follow-up evaluation six months after completion of the INCRT program.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-01-20
1 state
NCT06684444
Evaluating Worksite Sleep Health Coaching in Firefighters: The Sleep Assistance for Firefighters Study
Insufficient sleep is a significant public health issue, particularly affecting shift workers like firefighters, nearly half of whom report short or poor-quality sleep, with 35-40% screening positive for sleep disorders. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBTi) is a recommended and effective treatment, but access to such interventions remains low. This study will recruit 20 fire agencies in Arizona (400 firefighters) to test if a CBTi-informed intervention, including sleep health coaching and agency-wide promotion, improves sleep more effectively than usual care. The trial will also explore factors that influence successful implementation across agencies.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-11-12
1 state
NCT05616559
Precision Medicine in the Depression Treatment
The BrainDrugs-D study uses multimodal neuroimaging combined with self-report measures, clinical and molecular markers to identify clinically relevant predictors that can identify subtypes of major depressive disorder (MDD) and, in a naturalistic setting, predict treatment response to standard antidepressive treatment. The cohorts are followed in nationwide health registries.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 65 Years
Updated: 2024-10-08
NCT06454695
Improving Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder by Reducing Negative Future-Oriented Mental Imagery
Patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) often do not sufficiently benefit from treatment. That is, around 50% of patients with MDD do not respond to treatment and 20-30% only achieve partial remission. Future-oriented negative mental imagery (e.g., mental images of suicide or own funeral) is likely an important maintaining factor of depression and initial studies in depression indicate that targeting mental imagery with 'imagery rescripting' could be a promising therapeutic technique to reduces depressive symptomatology by targeting these images directly that elicits strong affects/emotions and depressive symptomatology. Before testing the (cost)effectiveness of future-oriented imagery rescripting to treatment as usual (TAU), a pilot study is needed to examine 1) the acceptability of the intervention, 2) the feasibility of the study, and 3) the variance of effect on reducing depressive symptomatology that can serve as estimate of the sample size for a follow-up randomized controlled trial (RCT). A multicenter pilot RCT with a mixed factorial design with three time points (i.e., baseline, post-treatment, and follow-up of 3 months) will test 50 patients with MDD who will be randomly allocated to future-oriented imagery rescripting plus TAU or TAU only. The sample consists of adult patients of 18 years or older with an MDD diagnosis. All patients in this pilot study receive TAU, which involves a combination of pharmacological and psychological interventions. Half of the patients will also receive 3-5 sessions of future-oriented imagery rescripting (ImRes). In each ImRes session, patients identify an image of a autobiographic catastrophic future event (e.g., catastrophic images of future suicide or the loss of work or a loved one). They are subsequently asked to "rescript" this image into a more benign one. The primary aim of this pilot study is to determine the acceptability of the intervention. The secondary aims are to elucidate factors that may facilitate or hinder the feasibility of the follow-up RCT (e.g., recruitment process) and to estimate the variance of the effect on reduction of depressive symptomatology, which informs the sample size calculation of the follow-up RCT. To study acceptability, the investigators assess depressive symptoms (BDI-II and BADS) and treatment satisfaction (SRS and CSQ-8). To measure feasibility, the investigators will assess recruitment/admission ratio, dropout and (serious) adverse events. Finally, to estimate the variance of effects, group effects on the BDI-II will be tested at post-treatment and follow-up (corrected for baseline). Imagery rescripting on negative memories has already proven effective and safe in MDD patients. There is no known major risk associated with study participation. Patient burden comprises an online or phone-based screening interview of maximum 60 minutes and several questionnaires. Participants receive a reimbursement of €25,- after study completion (i.e., after follow-up assessment). The project will contribute to improving the care for patients with MDD. If the results show that the intervention is feasible and acceptable, this pilot study will inform the setup of the main RCT on the (cost)effectiveness of the intervention (ZonMW).
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-08-23
1 state
NCT06521957
Effectiveness of CBT in Improving Psycho-Neuro-Endocrine Factors in Women Following In Vitro Fertilization Program
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) can improve psychological, neurological, and hormonal aspects in women undergoing In Vitro Fertilization (IVF). The main questions it aims to answer are: * Is CBT effective in improving psychological aspects (anxiety, depression, and coping mechanism) in women undergoing IVF? * Is CBT effective in improving neuroendocrine aspects (cortisol levels, neuroepinephrine levels, free trioodothyronine levels) in women underoing IVF? Researchers will compare CBT to no intervention to see if CBT is effective in improving psychoneuroendocrine aspects.
Gender: FEMALE
Ages: 25 Years - 42 Years
Updated: 2024-07-26
1 state
NCT06013085
Effects of Cognitive-behavioral Therapy for Insomnia in Nurses With Post Covid-19 Condition
Background: Neuropsychiatric conditions, such as insomnia, anxiety, depression, and pain are the most common symptoms experienced by nurses after acute infection of COVID-19. Although medication can assist nurses to improve these symptoms simultaneously in a short period of time, they are at risk of overuse of benzodiazepine hypnotics. Previous research supports the usefulness of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) as self-management strategies in adults with insomnia, anxiety, depression, and pain. However, their effects on post COVID-19 condition have not been researched, and no previous head-to-head study compared the effects on these two approaches on insomnia and neuropsychiatric symptoms. Aim: To investigate the effects of CBT-I on insomnia, anxiety, depression, and pain in nurses with post COVID-19 condition. Methods: In this two-arm, parallel randomized controlled trial, 100 participants will be 1:1 randomly assigned to one of two groups (CBT-I and control). The intervention phase will last 6 weeks, followed by a three-month follow-up. Primary outcomes are insomnia severity and sleep quality, whereas anxiety, depression, pain, and health-related quality of life are secondary outcomes. These variables will be assessed before and after the intervention, and at 1, 2, and 3 months after the end of the intervention. Additionally, discontinuing benzodiazepine hypnotics will be measured at 3 months after the end of the intervention. Discussion: This study will provide evidence of the effects of CBT-I on improving insomnia, anxiety, depression, and pain among nurses with post COVID-19 condition. Results could also enhance means by which to discontinue benzodiazepine hypnotics.
Gender: All
Ages: 20 Years - 65 Years
Updated: 2023-08-28