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Medication and Psychotherapy Treatment Trial for Psychogenic Nonepileptic Seizures
The investigators propose that patients who receive targeted pharmacotherapy (sertraline) or focused psychotherapy (cognitive behavioral therapy-informed psychotherapy (CBT-ip) for NES) or combined treatment (CBT-ip + sertraline) will report fewer nonepileptic seizures (NES) compared to patients who receive community care / treatment as usual (TAU). The purpose of this study is to provide pilot testing and data to inform the future multicenter randomized controlled trial based on the hypothesis.
This is a pilot, prospective, multi-center, randomized controlled trial, that assesses the number of NES in patients treated with either flexible dose sertraline (Zoloft), cognitive behavioral therapy-informed psychotherapy (CBT-ip), combined therapy (sertraline + CBT-ip) or community care (treatment as usual TAU). This study will provide outcomes data and the effect size necessary for a future R01, multi-center randomized control trial. Secondary objective variables include reduction in depression, anxiety, impulsivity scores, and improvement in psychosocial functioning. After being diagnosed with NES by video EEG monitoring (vEEG), up to 40 participants will be enrolled and monitored during a two week lead in period for their baseline NES and psychosocial symptoms and functioning. At week 2, they will be randomized to either: flexible dose sertraline (25 to 200mg), CBT, CBT+med, or to the control arm, TAU. Participants randomized to the sertraline arm will be titrated over 6 weeks up to 200mg or to dose limited by side effects. The subjects will stay on their maximum fixed dose for the next 4 weeks. At week 10, the subjects may elect to remain on the sertraline or they can taper off the medication over the final two weeks of the treatment trial. Those randomized to the CBT-ip arm will receive 12 weekly sessions of CBT-ip for NES. Those randomized to the CBT-ip + med arm will receive both treatments. Those randomized to the TAU arm will follow with their treatment providers. After the treatment trial, the subjects will have follow up phone calls at month 4, 8, and 12 after enrollment to assess seizure status, medication usage, and global functioning. Upon enrollment, subjects will be evaluated with a structured psychiatric and neurological exam, and with bi-weekly, 30 to 60 minute appointments where they will complete symptom and function scales. They will keep a seizure diary to evaluate their daily seizure activity.
Age
18 - 95 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Stanford University
Stanford, California, United States
University of Cincinnati
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Rhode Island Hospital
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Start Date
September 1, 2008
Primary Completion Date
December 1, 2012
Completion Date
June 1, 2013
Last Updated
November 10, 2014
38
ACTUAL participants
sertraline
DRUG
CBT-ip
BEHAVIORAL
Combined (sertraline + CBT-ip)
OTHER
Standard Care
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
Rhode Island Hospital
Collaborators
NCT07360600
NCT06793397
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
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