DisCS: Dissociation CBT Studies

Sponsor
University of Birmingham (Other)
Overall Status
Not yet recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT06054009
Collaborator
(none)
12
1
12

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

Dissociation involves distressing feelings of unreality and disconnection. Evidence suggests it is particularly common amongst people with existing mental health difficulties, where it has been linked with greater clinical severity, poorer treatment response, and increased self-harm and suicidality. However, there are currently no psychological treatments for dissociation that have been developed from a scientific understanding of its underpinning psychological factors.

In this project, three studies, each with four participants, will test a different psychological factor. Participants will be: adults (16+ years); on a waiting list for NHS psychological therapy; high scorers on a dissociation questionnaire. Participants will complete assessments before and after treatment, and at a one-month follow-up. The studies follow a 'multiple baseline design', meaning that all four participants for that study will complete their baseline assessment in the same week, and then be randomly allocated to wait either one, two, three, or four weeks before starting the intervention. The intervention will consist of four therapy sessions taking place within a five-week 'window'. Taking part in the research is voluntary. Before deciding whether to participate, we will explain the study and answer any questions.

Daily, participants will record a score for their dissociation and the psychological factor being targeted. At baseline, post-therapy, and follow-up, the researchers will also measure their levels of other factors related to dissociation (i.e. those not targeted by the therapy). Additionally, feedback will be requested from participants about the therapy at the end of their involvement, in order to improve it in future.

Ultimately, if successful, these interventions could form a pilot therapy for further testing and development. This could mean fewer people struggle with the challenges of dissociation.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Brief CBT
N/A

Detailed Description

  1. What is dissociation?

"I was in a totally different world; it was going on all around me. I thought that I might have died and was in hell, and I was thinking maybe that's what it was." -- "Maria"

Dissociation involves confusing and upsetting feelings of unreality, unfamiliarity, or disconnection in relation to your mind, body, or surroundings. For example, some people describe being detached from their own emotions, including affection for loved ones, or feeling profoundly 'strange', as though they are living life from behind a thick pane of glass. These experiences can cause significant distress, and have been linked with risk of self-harm or suicide, and with increased severity and incomplete treatment-response of comorbid mental health diagnoses. Many dissociative experiences considered transdiagnostic. For example, dissociation is present at a very high rate in psychotic disorders (potentially up to 50%). Crucially, in this context, it may even be instrumental in the development and maintenance of key psychotic symptoms, such as paranoid delusions and auditory hallucinations.

However, dissociation has traditionally been considered within the context of post-traumatic responses. As a result, a fuller understanding of dissociation as an independent construct - rather than simply as another post-traumatic symptom - has yet to be achieved.

This 'neglect', and extensive debate within the field, has also resulted in a lack of clarity about the precise accepted definition of 'dissociation' as a construct. Therefore, in previous work, our research group delineated a subgroup of common dissociative experiences unified by a core phenomenological experience of a 'felt sense of anomaly' (FSA). Thus, the term 'dissociation' is operationalised within this project by focusing on this specific type of dissociative experiences (FSA-dissociation), since this has been demonstrated to be common and transdiagnostic.

  1. What are the psychological maintenance mechanisms of dissociation?

Understanding the psychological mechanisms of a pathological presentation is vital to developing an effective intervention for it. Seminal work developing (now gold standard) cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) interventions for anxiety disorders and PTSD have demonstrated the clinical efficacy of identifying, verifying, and then precisely targeting the underlying causal mechanisms of the problem to be treated. However, much remains unknown about the psychological mechanisms underpinning dissociation. To date, only two experimental studies inferring causality in dissociation have been carried out: one of which was by our group.

In our recent work, we began the process of identifying plausible mechanisms of FSA-dissociation, resulting in a provisional cognitive model of the problem. This model suggests that dissociative experiences are maintained by a two feedback loops. The first is caused by catastrophic appraisals (negative interpretations or beliefs about the dissociative experience), which lead to rumination and counterproductive 'safety behaviours' (actions intended to mitigate potential harm), both of which serve to keep attention focused on the dissociation and reinforce interpretations of this experience as threatening. This first loop therefore proposes three possible maintenance mechanisms: catastrophic appraisals of dissociation, perseverative thinking (rumination), and counterproductive safety behaviours.

The second hypothesised feedback loop explains why the appraisals of dissociation are catastrophic in nature - as opposed to benign or benevolent. Across two large studies of online survey and NHS patient (psychosis) respondents, previous data has indicated relationships between dissociation and both high affect intolerance and low self-efficacy. In essence, people who feared shifts or peaks in their mood, and simultaneously felt powerless to manage or cope with challenges, were more likely to have FSA-dissociative experiences - as was indicated by previous qualitative evidence. This second feedback loop therefore suggests two further plausible mechanisms of dissociation: affect intolerance and self-efficacy.

In this project, the researchers have chosen to focus on the three mechanisms with the largest effect sizes from this research: negative cognitive appraisals of the dissociative experience (causal effect 0.73 in a non-clinical group; 0.72 in a psychosis group), perseverative thinking (rumination) (0.31; 0.52), and affect intolerance (0.26; 0.41).

  1. The current study

The aim of this project is therefore to test the three largest psychological contributors to FSA-dissociation as identified in this previous research: cognitive appraisals, rumination, and affect intolerance. Whilst there is evidence that these are all associated with dissociative experiences in the context of psychosis, to date there has been no experimental manipulation of these factors to demonstrate their role in maintaining dissociative difficulties. Evidence of their causal effect on dissociation is required before a translational psychological intervention can be developed.

Using an interventionist-causal approach (experimentally manipulating the factor of interest via attempting to ameliorate it with therapeutic techniques) allows researchers to combine an experimental test of causal relationships with the first stages of treatment development. This project constitutes an intermediate stage along the trajectory of treatment development, in that the primary aim of these three studies will be to demonstrate proof-of-concept for the interventions, in order that a larger study with adequate statistical power to test for causal relationships and treatment efficacy may be carried out.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
12 participants
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention Model:
Single Group Assignment
Intervention Model Description:
Three N=4 randomised multiple baseline design (MBD) single case experimental design studies, with A1B1A2 structure.Three N=4 randomised multiple baseline design (MBD) single case experimental design studies, with A1B1A2 structure.
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Masking Description:
This study does not involve blinding. However, to incorporate a degree of impartiality, assessments will be carried out by a research assistant, not the therapist.
Primary Purpose:
Other
Official Title:
Treating 'Felt Sense of Anomaly'-Type Dissociative Experiences by Targeting Hypothesised Psychological Maintenance Mechanisms: A Single Case Experimental Design Series
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Sep 1, 2023
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Sep 1, 2024
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Sep 1, 2024

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Treatment

In Study 1: x4 CBT sessions addressing cognitive appraisals of dissociation. In Study 2: x4 CBT sessions addressing rumination/worry. In Study 3: x4 CBT sessions addressing affect intolerance.

Behavioral: Brief CBT
In Study 1: x4 CBT sessions addressing cognitive appraisals of dissociation. In Study 2: x4 CBT sessions addressing rumination/worry. In Study 3: x4 CBT sessions addressing affect intolerance.
Other Names:
  • CBT
  • Outcome Measures

    Primary Outcome Measures

    1. Study 1: Cognitive Appraisals of Dissociation [Through study completion, average of 3 months]

      Visual Analogue Scale (0-100 rating) for cognitive appraisals of dissociation (higher scores = worse outcome)

    2. Study 2: Perseverative Thinking [Through study completion, average of 3 months]

      Visual Analogue Scale (0-100 rating) for cognitive appraisals of perseverative thinking (higher scores = worse outcome)

    3. Study 3: Affect intolerance [Through study completion, average of 3 months]

      Visual Analogue Scale (0-100 rating) for affect intolerance (higher scores = worse outcome)

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    1. Levels of dissociative experience (felt sense of anomaly subtype dissociation) [Through study completion, average of 3 months]

      Visual Analogue Scale (0-100 rating) for FSA-dissociation (higher scores = worse outcome)

    Other Outcome Measures

    1. Acceptability of therapy and study to participants [Through study completion, average of 3 months]

      Qualitative feedback (written or verbal)

    Eligibility Criteria

    Criteria

    Ages Eligible for Study:
    16 Years to 80 Years
    Sexes Eligible for Study:
    All
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
    No
    Inclusion Criteria:
    • Aged between 16 years to 80 years;

    • Outpatient of UK mental health services (at the time of referral to the study);

    • Have undergone assessment for psychological therapy in the NHS and subsequently have been entered onto a waiting list for said therapy;

    • Experiencing significant levels of 'felt sense of anomaly'-type dissociation (defined as a score within the 'moderately severe' or 'severe' range on the ČEFSA-14 (i.e., 39 or above); Černis et al., in prep.);

    • Want help to improve their dissociative experiences;

    • Willing and able to give consent for participation in the study;

    • Available to undertake the baseline assessment in the indicated week;

    • Available to undertake the therapy sessions within the indicated therapy 'window'.

    Exclusion Criteria:
    The participant may not enter the study if ANY of the following apply:
    • Diagnosis of an Axis II ("personality") disorder;

    • Primary diagnosis of alcohol/substance dependency, organic syndrome, or learning disability;

    • Presence of risk issues that would be a clinical priority above managing dissociative symptoms (e.g., moderate to severe self-harm; active suicidal behaviour; etc.);

    • Current engagement in any other individual psychological therapy (or psychological therapy due to begin within the participation window for this study).

    • A participant may also not enter the study if there is another factor (i.e., with higher clinical priority), which, in the judgement of the investigator, would preclude the participant from providing informed consent or from safely engaging with the study procedures.

    Contacts and Locations

    Locations

    No locations specified.

    Sponsors and Collaborators

    • University of Birmingham

    Investigators

    • Principal Investigator: Emma Cernis, DPhil, University of Birmingham

    Study Documents (Full-Text)

    More Information

    Additional Information:

    Publications

    None provided.
    Responsible Party:
    University of Birmingham
    ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
    NCT06054009
    Other Study ID Numbers:
    • RG_23-015
    • 325448
    • 23/NW/0163
    First Posted:
    Sep 26, 2023
    Last Update Posted:
    Sep 26, 2023
    Last Verified:
    Aug 1, 2023
    Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
    No
    Plan to Share IPD:
    No
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
    No
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
    No
    Keywords provided by University of Birmingham
    Additional relevant MeSH terms:

    Study Results

    No Results Posted as of Sep 26, 2023