Attention Training for Underserved Youth With Anxiety

Sponsor
University of California, Los Angeles (Other)
Overall Status
Completed
CT.gov ID
NCT03028792
Collaborator
(none)
69
1
2
33.4
2.1

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

This study aims to test the efficacy and feasibility of administering a computerized attention training program targeting clinical levels of anxiety in Latino youth between the ages of 8-17. 52 youth from Imperial County, a rural and predominantly Latino region, will be randomized to receive either 1) a 12-session attention modification program (AMP) or 2) an attention condition program (non-active treatment). Clinical assessment of symptom severity will be conducted before, during, and after treatment. We hypothesize that at the end of treatment, children who receive the active intervention (AMP) will show (1) decreased attention bias to anxiety-related triggers using an independent measure of attention bias to assess change and (b) reduced anxiety severity. We also hypothesize that this study will be feasible, tolerable, acceptable, and safe in this underserved sample of Latino youth. This study is an initial step towards demonstrating the feasibility of implementing a novel computerized attention training program in anxiety in underserved community samples.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Attention Modification Program
  • Behavioral: Attention Control Condition
N/A

Detailed Description

The main aim of this pilot study is to examine the feasibility, tolerability, and acceptability of a computerized attention training program for children who have clinically elevated anxiety. Youth from a rural Latino community, with significant anxiety symptoms (N = 52) will be randomized to an active attention bias modification program (AMP) for four weeks or to an attention control condition (nonactive) for four weeks. Families will be assessed at baseline, mistreatment, post-treatment and 3 month followup. AMP responders will be determined by reduction on a self-report measure of anxiety and a clinician administered assessment. Community health workers (promotoras) will be trained to administer the program to youth. Data will be gathered to examine the feasibility, tolerability, and acceptability of this type of treatment and this mode of service delivery. It is hypothesized that the AMP will be feasible, tolerable, and acceptable to this underserved community sample of ethnic minority youth.

Study Design: Following ascertainment of study eligibility and completion of baseline assessment, youth will be assigned to four weeks of AMP or ACC (attention control condition). All youngsters and their families will undergo a comprehensive baseline assessment and be reassessed at mistreatment, treatment endpoint (week 4) and 3 month followup.

Screening: Youth will be recruited through various mechanisms.

  1. Flyers will be posted in primary care clinics in Imperial Valley and Los Angeles County. Clinicas de Salud del Pueblo is a private, non-profit corporation providing primary care services throughout Imperial County. Flyers will be posted in the 10 primary care clinics, located in Imperial County.

  2. The second method for recruiting subjects will be through physician referral from providers within the primary care systems. Prior to the study start, all pediatricians/providers will receive information about the study, symptoms of child anxiety, and the use of a short screening measure to assist in detecting child anxiety. If a provider at one of the clinics identifies a child with anxiety or a parent reports that child has symptoms consistent with anxiety (fears, worries, nervousness, unexplained somatic complaints, etc.), the provider will have the option to explain the study to the parent and give them the study brochures. Alternatively, providers, if able, can also ask parents to sign a consent to contact form, giving the research team permission to contact them directly to discuss the study.

  3. Providers may also chose to refer the patient to the study promotora who will assist will explaining the study to the participant, screening, and consenting the participants.

  4. Flyers will also be posted at Sun Valley Behavioral Medical Center, a private medical clinic that serves the medical and mental health needs of children, adolescents and adults in Imperial County. In this case, parents will be expected to call our research team for more information.

  5. The co-PI on this study, Dr. Denise Chavira has an ongoing school based study being conducted with high school students in Imperial Valley. Given that this study covers a range of ages (8-17), we will also recruit from high schools. As part of the existing consent form (for protocol 14-000663), students are asked to check the box if they are interested in participating in future research studies. We will contact those students who have indicated interest in future studies to discuss the current project.

In all of these methods, the community health worker/promotora/e will contact the parent to conduct an initial screen. Thereafter the promotora and/or research coordinator will arrange an in person meeting with the parent and youth to review the consent with the parent and assent form with the youth and administer the eligibility measures. The initial eligibility assessments will not be conducted until all consent/assent forms have been signed and returned to the research team.

At the end of the eligibility visits, the PIs (Chavira and Chang) will review the questionnaires to determine final eligibility. Those who are eligible will process to the baseline visit where they will receive the AMP or ACC program as well as other measures. We have included a table of these measures as well as the assessment schedule in 10.1 section 1.0.

Attention Modification Program: AMP is a modified version of the dot-probe paradigm similar to the original task used by MacLeod, Mathews, and Tata. Each trial begins with a fixation cross presented in the center of the computer screen for 500 ms. The cross is then replaced by a pair of faces presented in the center of the screen for 500 ms. The face pair disappears and a probe (i.e., the letter "E" or "F") appears immediately in the location of one of the two faces. Participants will be instructed to decide whether the letter is an E or an F and press the corresponding mouse button. The letter probe will remain on the screen until the participant responds. Response latencies to identify the probe will be recorded from the onset of the presentation of the letter probe to the button press. A total of 288 training trials will be delivered each session. This paradigm has been modified to facilitate an attention bias away from threatening material. In this case, the probe always replaces the neutral face. Thus, although there will be no specific instruction to direct attention away from the threatening face, on all trials, the position of the neutral face will indicate the position of the probe.

Attention Control Condition: Like AMP, the attention control condition is a dot-probe task that begins with a fixation cross presented in the computer screen for 500ms, is followed by a pair of faces (one neutral, one threatening) for 500ms, and then a trial is completed when the face pair disappears and a probe (letter "E" or "F") appears in the location of one of the two faces. Participants will be instructed to decide whether the letter is an E or an F and press the corresponding mouse button. The letter probe will remain on the screen until the participant responds. Response latencies to identify the probe will be recorded from the onset of the presentation of the letter probe to the button press. A total of 288 training trials will be delivered each session. However, in this case, the probe replaces both the neutral and threat face 50% of the time.

Assessment. All parents and children enrolled in the study will complete assessments at baseline, mid-treatment, post-treatment and 3 month followup. Assessments will focus on feasibility outcomes and clinical outcome measures. Further, measures of moderating factors will be included in order to better understand variables (e.g., poverty, attention control, acculturation) that may suggest trends in differential treatment response within the two conditions.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Actual Enrollment :
69 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Masking:
Quadruple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
Attention Training for Underserved Youth With Anxiety
Actual Study Start Date :
Sep 1, 2017
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Apr 12, 2020
Actual Study Completion Date :
Jun 15, 2020

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Attention Modification Training

Attention Modification Program Active computer-based attention training treatment designed to directly but implicitly modify biased attention patterns in anxious patients in service of symptom relief. AMP is a modified version of the dot-probe paradigm similar to the original task used by MacLeod, Mathews, and Tata. This paradigm has been modified to facilitate an attention bias away from threatening material. In this case, the probe always replaces the neutral stimuli.

Behavioral: Attention Modification Program
Each trial begins with a fixation cross at the center of the computer screen for 500 ms. The cross is then replaced by a face pair presented in the center of the screen. The face pair disappears and a probe (letter "E" or "F") appears immediately in the location of one of the two previous stimuli. Youth will be instructed to decide whether the letter is an E or an F and press the corresponding mouse button. This paradigm has been modified to facilitate an attention bias away from threat material. In this case, the probe always replaces the neutral stimuli. Thus, although there will be no specific instruction to direct attention away from the threat stimuli, on all trials, the position of the neutral stimulus will indicate the position of the probe.
Other Names:
  • ABM, attention bias modification, attention training
  • Sham Comparator: Attention Control Training

    Placebo Comparator: Attention Control Condition Control computer-based attention training task, which is not designed to modify biased attention patterns in anxious patients. ACC is a modified version of the dot-probe paradigm similar to the original task used by MacLeod, Mathews, and Tata. In this case, the probe randomly replaces the neutral stimuli or the threat stimuli.

    Behavioral: Attention Control Condition
    Each trial begins with a fixation cross presented in the center of the computer screen. The cross is then replaced by a face pair presented in the center of the screen. The face pair disappears and a probe (letter "E" or "F") appears immediately in the location of one of the two previous stimuli. Youth will be instructed to decide whether the letter is an E or an F and press the corresponding mouse button. This paradigm is not intended to facilitate an attention bias away from threat material. In this case, the probe randomly replaces the threat or neutral stimulus.
    Other Names:
  • ACC
  • Outcome Measures

    Primary Outcome Measures

    1. Change in Clinical Global Impression-Severity (CGI-S) and Improvement, (CGI-I) Scales, Pre- to Post-Treatment [through study completion, average of 4 weeks]

      Participants receiving a post-treatment CGI-I score of 1 (very much improved) or 2 (much improved) on this one-item, 7-point rating will be considered treatment responders.

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    1. Change in Attention Network Task Pre- to Post-Treatment [through study completion, average of 4 weeks]

      In this version of the cognitive flanker, participants must indicate whether the central target arrow in a set of 5 arrows is pointing to the left or the right. In congruent trials, all 5 arrows point in the same direction (e.g., →→→→→) while in the incongruent trials, the middle arrow points in the opposite direction as the flanking arrows (e.g., →→←→→). Participants are asked to press the left mouse button if the arrow points to the left and right button if it points to the right.

    2. Change in Visual search task Pre to Post-Treatment [through study completion, average of 4 weeks]

      we will include a visual search task as an independent task of attention bias designed to measure spatial attention allocation (Rink, Becker, Kellerman & Roth, 2003). Participants are asked to detect a target stimulus that is embedded in a matrix of distracting stimuli (e.g., a target stimulus, an angry face, might be embedded in a matrix of neutral distractor faces). Attention biases are inferred from faster response times to detect a threatening stimulus in a matrix of neutral stimuli relative to response time to detect neutral stimuli in neutral matrices.

    3. Change in Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale Pre to Post-treatment [through study completion, average of 4 weeks]

      The 50-item PARS is a clinician measure that integrates youth and parent report of the severity of anxiety symptoms, as well as related functional impairment. PARS yields a continuous total score of 0-35.

    4. Change in Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders (SCARED) Pre- to Post-Treatment [through study completion, average of 4 weeks]

      The SCARED is a 41-item measure of anxiety symptoms with youth and parent-reported versions, with scores of > 25 indicating significant anxiety (total range 0-82).

    Eligibility Criteria

    Criteria

    Ages Eligible for Study:
    8 Years to 17 Years
    Sexes Eligible for Study:
    All
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
    No
    Inclusion Criteria:
      1. Children and parents of children ages 8 through 17 inclusive at the time of initial evaluation 2. Clinically significant levels of anxiety as measured by self-report 3. Unmedicated or on stable medication treatment for at least 6 weeks prior to study entry, with no planned changes for duration of study participation.
    1. Child is fluent English or Spanish speaker, given that all of our assessments as well as the language-based treatment protocol have thus far only been validated in English and Spanish.

    2. Parental Informed Consent and Child Informed Assent. Parents must agree to their child's participation in this protocol. Parents will be asked to fill out self-report questionnaires and participate in assessments that will provide us with more information about their child, however parents are not considered "participants" within this protocol, as all treatment is targeted toward their child.

    3. Child self-identifies as Latino/Hispanic

    Exclusion Criteria:
    1. Excessive or Problematic Substance Use as reported per initial telephone screening, or significant disruptive behavior problems within the past 3 months.

    2. Indication of clinically significant suicidality, mania, or psychotic disorder.

    3. Any serious psychiatric, psychosocial, or neurological condition (i.e., ADHD, tourettes, anxiety, severe aggression) requiring immediate treatment.

    Contacts and Locations

    Locations

    Site City State Country Postal Code
    1 Clinicas de Salud del Pueblo healthcare system El Centro California United States 92243

    Sponsors and Collaborators

    • University of California, Los Angeles

    Investigators

    • Principal Investigator: Susanna Chang, PhD, UCLA Department of Psychiatry
    • Principal Investigator: Denise Chavira, PhD, UCLA Department of Psychology

    Study Documents (Full-Text)

    None provided.

    More Information

    Publications

    None provided.
    Responsible Party:
    Susanna Chang, PhD, Principal Investigator, University of California, Los Angeles
    ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
    NCT03028792
    Other Study ID Numbers:
    • IRB#15-000334
    First Posted:
    Jan 23, 2017
    Last Update Posted:
    Jul 26, 2022
    Last Verified:
    Jul 1, 2022
    Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
    Yes
    Plan to Share IPD:
    Yes
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
    No
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
    No
    Keywords provided by Susanna Chang, PhD, Principal Investigator, University of California, Los Angeles
    Additional relevant MeSH terms:

    Study Results

    No Results Posted as of Jul 26, 2022