Among behavioral cognitive psychotherapies, new "Mindfulness" interventions allow patient to identify, pay attention and accept external (sensory stimuli) and internal (cognition and emotions) phenomena. This "to do with" training has yielded promising results in stress management, prevention of depressive relapse, management of craving and an increase in self-efficacy. Few studies (none in France) have attempted to measure the efficacy of this technique on alcohol relapse, in particular by comparing it with a usual management strategy (conventional relapse prevention therapy). The main objective of this study is to compare the efficacy on alcoholic relapse (measured in the "first glass" consumed), from a Mindfulness therapeutic program to a conventional Relapse Prevention program. Secondary objectives are to demonstrate the efficacy of this program on craving, self-efficacy, and secondary endpoints of relapse (massive alcoholism, number of alcoholisation days).
Each patient will perform 12 psychotherapeutic sessions (Mindfulness or Relapse Prevention) over a period of 6 weeks. Patients will be evaluated by a practitioner different from the practitioner who makes the psychotherapeutic management. Patients will be assessed at inclusion (Initial visit), after the 12 sessions of management (M0), 1 month (M1), 2 month (M2), 3 month (M3), 4 month (M4), 5 month (M5), 6 month (M6), after initial visit as follows Initial Visit * Signature of an informed consent form. * Demographic characteristics (gender, age, family status, professional status, level of education …) * Clinical data (patient status, ongoing pharmacological treatment, withdrawal, previous CBT ...) * Criteria and severity of alcohol dependence (DSM 5) * Evaluation of depressive symptomatology and severity (HAM-D) * Level of pre-intervention alcohol consumption (AUDIT-C) * "Binge drinking" consumption * Craving before alcohol withdrawal (EVA craving) * Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) * Self-efficacy to remain abstinent (QAE-Alcohol) * Drinking habits (QHPBA) After the 12 sessions (M0) * Data on treatments in progress or change in treatment * Depressive symptomatology and severity (HAM-D) * Level of alcohol consumption in post-intervention (AUDIT-C) * "Binge drinking" consumption * Craving after alcohol withdrawal (EVA craving) * Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) * Self-efficacy to remain abstinent (QAE-Alcohol) * Distribution of the 1st Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) At 1 month (M1) * Return of the 1st Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) * Data on treatments in progress or change in treatment * Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) * "Binge drinking" consumption * Self-efficacy to remain abstinent (QAE-Alcohol) * Distribution of the 2nd Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) At 2 month (M2) * Return of the 2nd Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) * Data on treatments in progress or change in treatment * Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) * "Binge drinking" consumption * Self-efficacy to remain abstinent (QAE-Alcohol) * Distribution of the 3th Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) At 3 month (M3) * Return of the 3th Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) * Data on treatments in progress or change in treatment * Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) * "Binge drinking" consumption * Self-efficacy to remain abstinent (QAE-Alcohol) * Distribution of the 4th Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) At 4 month (M4) * Return of the 4th Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) * Data on treatments in progress or change in treatment * Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) * "Binge drinking" consumption * Self-efficacy to remain abstinent (QAE-Alcohol) * Distribution of the 5th Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) At 5 month (M5) * Return of the 5th Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) * Data on treatments in progress or change in treatment * Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) * "Binge drinking" consumption * Self-efficacy to remain abstinent (QAE-Alcohol) * Distribution of the 6th Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) At 6 month (M6) * Return of the 6th Daily Alcohol Logbook (TLFB) * Data on treatments in progress or change in treatment * Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) * "Binge drinking" consumption * Self-efficacy to remain abstinent (QAE-Alcohol)
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
Mindfulness interventions are behavioral cognitive psychotherapies which allow patient to identify, pay attention and accept external (sensory stimuli) and internal (cognition and emotions) phenomena.
It's a conventional relapse prevention program which allow to measure the alcoholic relapse in the first glass consumed.
CHU Clermont-Ferrand
France, France
RECRUITINGNumber of alcoholic relapses
Proportion of patients with an alcohol consumption of at least one glass of alcohol
Time frame: 6 month
Alcohol relapse time
Measurement : Number of days elapsed between the end of treatment and the first relapse compare between the two interventions (classic or "mindfulness")
Time frame: 6 month
Delay in "heavy drinking" relapse
Measurement : Number of days elapsed between the end of treatment and the first heavy drinking (≥4 glasses of alcohol for women and ≥6 glasses of alcohol for men) compare between the two interventions (classic or "mindfulness")
Time frame: 6 month
Frequency of consumption
Measurement : Number of consumption days during 6 month compare between the two interventions (classic or "mindfulness")
Time frame: 6 month
Daily quantities consumed
Measurement : Number of standard glasses consumed per day during 6 month compare between the two interventions (classic or "mindfulness")
Time frame: 6 month
Degree of mindfulness skills
Measurement : Score at the KIMS Scale (Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills) evaluated each month, compare before and after intervention (classic or "mindfulness")
Time frame: 6 month
Severity of alcohol craving
Measurement: Assessed daily on a VAS craving (Visual analogue scale) in the daily observation book, compare before and after intervention (classic or "mindfulness")
Time frame: 6 month
Level of self-efficacy
Measurement: Assessed daily on a VAS self-efficacy (Visual analogue scale) in the daily observation book, compare before and after intervention (classic or "mindfulness")
Time frame: 6 month
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.