Freeman Daniel, Lister Rachel, Waite Felicity, Yu Ly-Mee, Slater Mel, Dunn Graham, Clark David
Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Warneford Hospital, Oxford, OX3 7JX, UK.
Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, UK.
Trials. 2019 Jan 29;20(1):87. doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3198-6.
Persecutory delusions are a major psychiatric problem and are associated with a wide range of adverse outcomes. Our theoretical model views these delusions as unfounded threat beliefs which persist due to defence behaviours (e.g. avoidance) that prevent disconfirmatory evidence being processed. The treatment implications are that patients need to (1) go into feared situations and (2) not use defence behaviours. This enables relearning of safety and hence paranoia diminution. However, this is very difficult for patients due to their severe anxiety. A solution is to use virtual reality (VR) social situations, which are graded in difficulty and which patients find much easier to enter. We have now automated the provision of cognitive therapy within VR using an avatar coach, so that a therapist is not required and the treatment is scalable. In the THRIVE trial, the automated VR cognitive treatment will be tested against a VR control condition. It will contribute to our wider programme of work developing VR for patients with psychosis.
Patients with persistent persecutory delusions in the context of non-affective psychosis will be randomised (1:1) to the automated VR cognitive treatment or VR mental relaxation (control condition). Each VR treatment will comprise approximately four sessions of 30 min. Standard care will remain as usual in both groups. Assessments will be carried out at 0, 2, 4 (post treatment), 8, 16, and 24 weeks by a researcher blind to treatment allocation. The primary outcome is degree of conviction in the persecutory delusion (primary endpoint 4 weeks). Effect sizes will be re-established by an interim analysis of 30 patients. If the interim effect size suggests that the treatment is worth pursuing (d > 0.1), then the trial will go on to test 90 patients in total. Secondary outcomes include real world distress, activity levels, suicidal ideation, and quality of life. Mediation will also be tested. All main analyses will follow the intention-to-treat principle. The trial is funded by the Medical Research Council Developmental Pathway Funding Scheme.
The trial will provide the first test of automated cognitive therapy within VR for patients with psychosis. The treatment is potentially highly scalable for treatment services.
ISRCTN, ISRCTN12497310 . Registered on 14 August 2018.
被害妄想是一个主要的精神问题,与一系列不良后果相关。我们的理论模型将这些妄想视为无根据的威胁信念,由于防御行为(如回避)阻止了反证的处理,这些信念得以持续存在。其治疗意义在于患者需要(1)进入恐惧情境,(2)不使用防御行为。这能够重新学习安全感,从而减轻偏执。然而,由于患者严重焦虑,这对他们来说非常困难。一种解决方案是使用虚拟现实(VR)社交情境,其难度是分级的,患者发现更容易进入。我们现在使用虚拟化身教练在VR中自动提供认知疗法,这样就不需要治疗师,并且治疗具有可扩展性。在THRIVE试验中,将针对VR对照条件对自动VR认知治疗进行测试。它将有助于我们为精神病患者开发VR的更广泛工作计划。
患有非情感性精神病且存在持续性被害妄想的患者将被随机(1:1)分配至自动VR认知治疗组或VR心理放松组(对照条件)。每次VR治疗将包括约四节30分钟的课程。两组患者均照常接受标准护理。由对治疗分配不知情的研究人员在第0、2、4(治疗后)、8、16和24周进行评估。主要结局是被害妄想的确信程度(主要终点为4周)。将通过对30名患者的中期分析重新确定效应量。如果中期效应量表明该治疗值得继续进行(d>0.1),那么该试验将继续总共测试90名患者。次要结局包括现实世界中的痛苦、活动水平、自杀意念和生活质量。还将测试中介作用。所有主要分析将遵循意向性分析原则。该试验由医学研究理事会发展途径资助计划资助。
该试验将首次对VR中针对精神病患者的自动认知疗法进行测试。该治疗对于治疗服务可能具有高度可扩展性。
ISRCTN,ISRCTN12497310。于2018年8月14日注册。