The study will test the hypothesis that Cognitive Behavioural Therapy plus Standardised Medical Care (SMC) will have greater clinical and cost effectiveness than SMC alone in treating adult patients with dissociative seizures which had not initially ceased after diagnosis. About 12-20% of patients who attend neurology or specialist epilepsy clinics because of seizures do not in fact have epilepsy. Most of these people have what are referred to as dissociative (non-epileptic) seizures (DS). This means that they have episodes that resemble epileptic seizures but which have no medical reason for their occurrence and instead are due to psychological factors. In younger adults DS are about four times more common in women than men. A high percentage of these people will have other psychological or psychiatric problems and may have other medically unexplained symptoms. It is generally thought that people with DS will benefit from psychological treatments. However, studies on this have been small or have not compared the psychological therapy with the treatment people normally receive (standardised medical care). There is some evidence that cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), which is a widely accepted talking therapy that focuses on the person's thoughts, emotions and behaviour, as well as considering the physical reactions and sensations that may occur in people's bodies, may lead to a reduction in how often people have DS. The investigators have previously developed a CBT package for people with DS. In a relatively small study by our group, published in 2010, people receiving CBT overall showed greater reduction in how often they had their DS. The investigators are now conducting a larger study, across several different hospitals, to obtain more definite results about the effectiveness of our CBT approach for DS. The investigators aim to invite \~ 500 adult patients with DS (but without current active epilepsy), who have been given their diagnosis by a neurologist or specialist in epilepsy, to take part in their study. Up to 698 might be invited if insufficient patients are progressing to the RCT. The investigators will collect initial information about these people and ask them to keep a record of how often they have their DS following diagnosis. Three months after the diagnosis, those who have agreed to take part in the study will be seen by a psychiatrist, who will undertake a psychiatric assessment and ask them about factors which may have led to the development of their DS. Patients who have continued to have DS in the previous 8 weeks and who meet other eligibility criteria and are willing to take part in the trial, will be randomly allocated to standardised medical care or CBT (plus standardised medical care) as further treatment for their seizures. These people will be asked to continue to complete seizure diaries and questionnaires, provide regular seizure frequency data following receipt of DS diagnosis and will need to be willing to attend weekly/fortnightly sessions if allocated to CBT. The investigators initially aim to randomise 298 people (149 to each study arm) although now allow for up to 356 to account for loss to follow-up.
There is an initial observational phase to this study followed by a parallel group, two-arm multi-centre pragmatic randomised controlled trial (interventional phase). In the observational phase patients will be given their diagnosis of dissociative seizures by a neurologist/epilepsy specialist and will be told about the CODES study. In addition to a leaflet on dissociative seizures they will, if interested in the study and are willing to be referred to a psychiatrist, be given an information sheet about DS and about the study and the doctor will document their agreement to be contacted by a research nurse/worker. This person will arrange to contact them, clarify study details, obtain informed consent, collect demographic details and explain seizure diary recording. They will then contact the patient fortnightly (bi-weekly)for seizure data. The investigators initially aim to recruit \~500 patients at this stage. After 3 months the patient will be reviewed by a neuropsychiatrist/ liaison psychiatrist/ psychiatrist with interest in DS who will undertake a clinical assessment, review the patient's eligibility for the interventional phase of the study and if eligible will explain the RCT. Patients will be given a further leaflet on DS and a Participant Information Sheet and the psychiatrist will document interested patients' willingness to again be contacted by a research nurse/worker. That person will then explain the RCT in greater detail, obtain informed consent, undertake a baseline assessment including a MINI and instruct patients to keep seizure records for which data will be collected fortnightly. .Randomisation of between 298 and 356 people (depending on follow-up rates) to either CBT plus standardised medical care (SMC) or to SMC alone will occur after informed consent has been obtained and baseline measures have been collected. The stratification factor will be liaison/neuropsychiatry centre. The research workers and trial statistician will remain blinded. Computer-generated randomisation will be conducted remotely (for more details see www.ctu.co.uk - randomisation - advanced) by the King's Clinical Trials Unit (KCTU) at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience. The investigators will maintain strict allocation concealment. The investigators will test the RWs' blinding by asking them to record when they think that allocation was revealed and record the group to which they thought patients had been allocated. CBT will be delivered over 12 sessions (each approximately one hour in length) over a 4-5 month period with one booster session at 9 months post randomisation. The investigators' treatment model has been developed from a single case study, trialled in an open label study and then in a Pilot RCT. The model is based on the two-process fear escape-avoidance model and conceptualises DS as dissociative responses to cues (cognitive/emotional/physiological or environmental) that may (but not in all cases) have been associated with profoundly distressing or life-threatening experiences, such as abuse or trauma, at an earlier stage in the person's life and which have previously produced intolerable feelings of fear and distress. Written handouts supplement the content of face-to face therapy sessions. The investigators will record therapy sessions and undertake treatment fidelity ratings. Therapists will receive training prior to treating study patients. Neurologists and psychiatrists with an interest in DS will deliver standardised medical care (SMC). They will have guidelines as to the delivery of standardised medical care. Information leaflets will be given to the patients. The research team will provide this material. SMC by psychiatrists will include support, consideration of psychiatric comorbidities and any associated drug treatment and general review but no CBT techniques. The investigators allow for some local variation in the number of neurology and psychiatry SMC sessions after randomisation. Measures will be recorded at baseline, six months and 12 months post randomisation. In addition to quantitative analyses, a nested qualitative study will investigate experiences of CBT and SMC and factors acting as facilitators and barriers to participation, as well as of healthcare professionals'.experiences of delivering the study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
368
12 sessions of CBT (over 4-5 months) +1 booster session. Guided by a therapy manual and patient handouts; will involve setting homework tasks. Although treatment is manualised, it allows treatment to be formulation-based i.e. tailored to the person. Standardised medical as described in other intervention.
Delivered by neurologists/ psychiatrists - both will be involved in discussing diagnosis. It will Include an information sheet about dissociative seizures and direction to self-help websites, general information provision about management of DS and support, consideration of psychiatric comorbidities / associated drug treatment and general review but no CBT techniques.
Derbyshire Community Health Services Nhs Trust
Bakewell, United Kingdom
Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health Nhs Foundation Trust
Birmingham, United Kingdom
University Hospital Birmingham Nhs Foundation Trust
Birmingham, United Kingdom
Berkshire Healthcare Nhs Foundation Trust
Bracknell, United Kingdom
Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals Nhs Trust
Brighton, United Kingdom
Change in seizure frequency
Monthly DS frequency
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation,
Change in informant rating
A rating by an informant as to whether compared to study entry seizure frequency is worse the same better or whether they are seizure free; data collected 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are only collected for data modelling and to maintain participant involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only;
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Change in self-rated seizure severity
Two items from the Seizure Severity Scale (Cramer et al., 2002), asking how severe and bothersome DS were in the past month; data collected at baseline (recorded pre-randomisation) , 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are only collected for data modelling and to maintain patient involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Seizure freedom
Patient's self-reported longest period of seizure freedom between the 6- and 12-month follow-up and whether or not the patient is seizure free in the last 3 months of the trial; data collected 12 months post randomisation; the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
>50% reduction in seizure frequency
The number of patients in each group who at the 6- and 12-month follow-up show \>50% reduction in seizure frequency, compared to baseline (pre-randomisation); data collected at baseline and 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are only collected for data modelling and to maintain patient involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Change in Quality of life (QoL)
Health-related QoL using the SF-12v2 (Ware et al.,1996); data collected at baseline (recorded pre-randomisation) , 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are only collected for data modelling and to maintain patient involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Change in QALYs
We will use EQ-5D-5L (EuroQol group, 1990), a 5-domain, 5-level, multi-attribute scale collected at baseline (recorded pre-randomisation) , 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are only collected for data modelling and to maintain patient involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Change in psychosocial functioning
Work and Social Adjustment Scale (Mundt et al 2002) collected at baseline (recorded pre-randomisation) , 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are only collected for data modelling and to maintain patient involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Change in psychiatric symptoms and psychological distress
We will measure anxiety, depression and somatisation with the GAD7 (Spitzer et al., 2006), PHQ9 (Kroenke et al., 2001) and an extended PHQ15 (Kroenke et al., 2002; Sharpe et al., 2010), derived from the Patient Health Questionnaire which reflects DSM-IV diagnoses. We will also use a general measure of psychological distress, the CORE-10 (Connell \& Barkham, 2007); this assesses self-reported global psychological distress; data collected at baseline (recorded pre-randomisation) , 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are only collected for data modelling and to maintain patient involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Change in patients self-rated global outcome and satisfaction with treatment
CGI Clinical Global Impression (Guy 1976) change score yields a self-rated global measure collected at 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are only collected for data modelling and to maintain patient involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Clinician rating of change
The CGI change scale will be rated by CBT therapists at the end of session 12 and by the SMC doctor at the 12-month follow-up.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Change in health service use and informal care (self-report)
Adapted Client Service Receipt Inventory (Beecham \& Knapp, 2001); data collected at baseline (recorded pre-randomisation) , 6 \& 12 months post randomisation; 6 month measures are collected for data modelling and to give a total health service use over the 12 months of the post-randomisation period and to maintain patient involvement but the trial endpoint was measured at 12 months only.
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 month post randomisation only
Change in health service use
Linkage data sets from NHS Health and Social Care Information Centre (Hospital Episode Statistics) eDRIS (NHS National Services Scotland Information Services Division (ISD) and Wales (NHS Wales Informatics Service)
Time frame: Outcome assessed at 12 months post randomisation
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Cambridge University Hospitals Nhs Foundation Trust
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