Rice Frances, Powell Victoria, Eyre Olga, Bevan Jones Rhys, Michelson Daniel, Airdrie Jac, Collishaw Stephan, Thapar Anita, Grozeva Detelina, Munnery Kim, Randell Elizabeth, Brookes-Howell Lucy, Garber Judy, Thapar Ajay, Moore Graham, Harrison Neil A, Playle Rebecca, Bisson Jonathan, McNamara Rachel
Wolfson Centre for Young People's Mental Health, Cardiff University Division of Psychological Medicine and Clinical Neurosciences, Cardiff, UK
Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, Cardiff University Division of Psychological Medicine and Clinical Neurosciences, Cardiff, UK.
BMJ Open. 2025 Jun 19;15(6):e100692. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-100692.
Young people (YP) whose parents have depression are at elevated risk for developing depression themselves and could benefit from preventive interventions. However, when parents are in a depressive episode, this reduces the effects of psychological interventions for depression in YP. Moreover, parental depression is often managed suboptimally in usual care. There is, therefore, a case for identifying and optimising parental depression treatment to enhance the effectiveness of psychological preventive interventions for depression in YP.
This is a randomised controlled trial (Skills for adolescent WELLbeing) to determine the effectiveness of a cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) intervention compared with usual care in increasing the time to a major depressive episode in YP by 9-month follow-up (primary outcome). The intervention offers a 12-week treatment-optimisation phase for parents depressed at study entry, followed by randomisation of the young person to a small group manualised online CBT programme facilitated by a therapist. YP allocated to the intervention will receive eight weekly sessions plus three monthly continuation sessions. Secondary outcomes include the number of depression-free weeks, mental health symptoms and functioning. Mechanisms of intervention action will be assessed with mediation analysis of quantitative data and thematic analysis of qualitative interviews. Participants (parents/carers with depression and their children aged 13-19 years) will be identified through existing cohorts of adults with depression, from primary care through health boards in Wales and England, UK, schools and advertising including via social media.
The trial has received ethical approval from Wales NHS Research Ethics Committee (REC) 5, the Health Research Authority and Health and Care Research Wales (IRAS 305331; REC 22/WA/0254). This manuscript is based on V.5.7 of the protocol (17 January 2025). Findings will be disseminated in peer-reviewed journals and conferences. Reports and social media messages will be used to disseminate findings to the wider public.
ISRCTN13924193 (date registered: 15 March 2023).
父母患有抑郁症的年轻人自身患抑郁症的风险更高,可能会从预防性干预措施中受益。然而,当父母处于抑郁发作期时,这会降低针对年轻人抑郁症的心理干预效果。此外,在常规护理中,父母的抑郁症往往未得到最佳管理。因此,有必要识别并优化父母抑郁症的治疗,以提高针对年轻人抑郁症的心理预防性干预措施的有效性。
这是一项随机对照试验(青少年幸福技能),旨在通过9个月的随访(主要结局),确定与常规护理相比,认知行为疗法(CBT)干预措施在延长年轻人首次重度抑郁发作时间方面的有效性。该干预措施为研究开始时患有抑郁症的父母提供为期12周的治疗优化阶段,随后将年轻人随机分配到由治疗师指导的小组手册化在线CBT项目中。分配到干预组的年轻人将接受八次每周一次的课程以及三次每月一次的延续课程。次要结局包括无抑郁周数、心理健康症状和功能。将通过对定量数据的中介分析和定性访谈的主题分析来评估干预作用机制。参与者(患有抑郁症的父母/照顾者及其13至19岁的子女)将通过现有的抑郁症成年人群体、英国威尔士和英格兰的初级保健机构、健康委员会、学校以及包括社交媒体在内的广告来识别。
该试验已获得威尔士国民保健服务研究伦理委员会(REC)5、健康研究管理局以及威尔士健康与护理研究机构(IRAS 305331;REC 22/WA/0254)的伦理批准。本手稿基于方案的V.5.7版本(2025年1月17日)。研究结果将在同行评审期刊和会议上发表。报告和社交媒体信息将用于向更广泛的公众传播研究结果。
ISRCTN13924193(注册日期:2023年3月15日)