Irritability is defined as developmentally inappropriate proneness to anger. Irritability is a symptom of several mental health conditions in children and adolescents such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), conduct disorder (CD), depressive disorders, anxiety disorders.Irritability has been associated with poor functional outcomes across the lifespan and was found to be specifically associated with concurrent and longitudinal emotional disorders, suicidality and impaired academic and socio-professional functioning. Children with high irritability also have distinct physiological profiles with hyper-reactivity to stress and perceived threats. Despite the high prevalence and health issues related to irritability, there is little treatment research on this topic. Developing evidence-based non-pharmacological treatment options for children suffering from severe, chronic irritability is therefore a particularly important target for clinical research.
Irritability is defined as developmentally inappropriate proneness to anger. Irritability is a symptom of several mental health conditions in children and adolescents such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), conduct disorder (CD), depressive disorders, anxiety disorders. Both tonic (e.g. negative quality of mood) and phasic (e.g. temper outbursts) irritability are criteria of the DSM-5 Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder and the World Health Organization has considered the addition of a specifier to indicate whether ODD presents with chronic irritability and anger in the revision of the International Classification of Disease. Irritability has been associated with poor functional outcomes across the lifespan and was found to be specifically associated with concurrent and longitudinal emotional disorders, suicidality and impaired academic and socio-professional functioning. Children with high irritability also have distinct physiological profiles with hyper-reactivity to stress and perceived threats. Irritability is included in the negative valence system of RDoC as "frustrative non-reward". According to this neuroscience-based classification, irritability is an excessive response of an individual faced with the impossibility to achieve an expected goal and has been linked to dysregulations of the autonomic nervous system and the reward network. Another pathophysiological line of research conceptualizes irritability as an aberrant response to threat (e.g. irritable individuals may attack more rapidly and in broader contexts). Despite the high prevalence and health issues related to irritability, there is little treatment research on this topic. Developing evidence-based non-pharmacological treatment options for children suffering from severe, chronic irritability is therefore a particularly important target for clinical research. One of the first steps in achieving this goal includes testing new therapies against extant interventions. Parent training programs decrease aggressive behaviours in children and are therefore good candidates for the improvement of irritability. Low parental warmth, lack of positive parental emotion socialization and high parental Expressed Emotions have been linked with irritability in children and could therefore be targeted in parental programs. Research on the biological and psychological mechanisms mediating irritability is also needed to further improve specificity of therapeutic actions. The project includes two ancyllary studies : RESIST-EXP and RESIST-QUAL. * RESIST-EXP: Investigate improvement of irritability in both programs throughout emotional testing while collecting ANS functioning measurements. * RESIST-QUAL: A qualitative interview planned after treatment completion with parents from both parent programme groups.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
270
The program's core features are parental self-control and emotional support. In the NVR program, parents recruit supporters to help them deal with their children's problematic behaviours. Developing emotional control means that the parent opposes non-violent resistance to his child's behaviour, not escalating the explosive situation. 10 sessions (5 sessions per day for 2 consecutive days and two booster sessions at M1 and M3 after completion).
The gold-standard treatment for disruptive behaviour disorder in children and adolescents. The objective is to train parents to cope with the difficult situations they encounter, to teach them effective control strategies that are coherent and adapted to the 'deviant' behaviour of their children to reduce the intensity of events and their repercussions within the family. 10 sessions (5 sessions per day for 2 consecutive days and two booster sessions at M1 and M3 after completion).
The TAU group receives non-pharmacological and pharmacological therapies as usually provided in the participating centres but without having had a structured parent program in the last 6 months assessed at baseline, M1 and M3.
UH of Montpellier
Montpellier, France
RECRUITINGChange from baseline level that measure pleasure and arousal
Change from baseline at 3 months after completion of the program of the Clinician-rated Affective Rating Scale (CL-ARI) assessed by blinded evaluators. This scale gives a range of possible scores from 0 to 12, with frequency and duration of temper outbursts quantified across three different levels of severity: mild, moderate and severe the higher the score.
Time frame: After 3 months follow-up
Secondary efficacy endpoint at 1-month follow-up
Change from baseline at 1 month after completion of the program of the Clinician-rated Affective Rating Scale (CL-ARI) by blinded evaluators. This scale gives a range of possible scores from 0 to 12, with frequency and duration of temper outbursts quantified across three different levels of severity: mild, moderate and severe the higher the score.
Time frame: After 1 month follow-up
Secondary efficacy endpoints at 1 and 3-month follow-up
Clinical Global Impression Improvement (CGI-I) scale from 1 to 7. the CGI-I 7-point scale to rate the patients' total improvement based on comparison with their baseline assessment from 1 = very much improved to 7 = very much worse.
Time frame: Between 1 and 3-month follow-up
Secondary efficacy endpoints at 1 and 3-month follow-up
Change from baseline in the Parenting and Familial Adjustement Scale (PAFAS)
Time frame: Between 1 and 3-month follow-up
Secondary efficacy endpoints at 1 and 3-month follow-up
Change from baseline in Parent-rated ARI and Child-rated Cranky thermometers
Time frame: Between 1 and 3-month follow-up
Exploratory efficacy endpoints and putative moderators and mediators.
Initial score and change from baseline in expressed emotions and reflexivity during the online five-minute speech sample (FMSS) at 3 months
Time frame: After 3-month follow-up
Exploratory efficacy endpoints and putative moderators and mediators.
Initial score and change from baseline in The Child Behavior Checklist for Ages 6-18 (CBCL 6-18) (parent-rated)
Time frame: At 1 month and 3 months follow-up
Exploratory efficacy endpoints and putative moderators and mediators.
Initial scores of personality dimensions assessed with Hierarchical Personality Inventory for Children (HiPIC)
Time frame: After 3 months follow-up
Exploratory efficacy endpoints and putative moderating and mediating variables.
Initial score and change from baseline in parental expressed emotions and reflexivity rated with the Five-Minute Speech Sample (FMSS). The FMSS is scored by considering the following 5 categories: initial statement, relationship, criticism, dissatisfaction and emotional overinvolvement. * Initial statement is scored as positive, neutral, or negative * Relationship is scored as positive, neutral, or negative * Criticism is scored by a frequency count used to score the number of criticisms present in the language sample. * Dissatisfaction is scored as present or absent * Emotional overinvolvement is based on the following 5 categories: * selfsacrificing overprotective behavior , * emotional display , * statements of attitude, * excessive detail and/or irrelevant information about the past, * excessive praise.
Time frame: At 3 months follow-up
Endpoints of the ancillary study: RESIST-EXP
These parameters will be measured on a sub-group of patients by a wristband "E4 wristband" permitting real-time physiological data acquisition: Blood Volume Pulse (BVP) in L/min
Time frame: At baseline ans at 3 months follow-up
Endpoints of the ancillary study: RESIST-EXP
These parameters will be measured on a sub-group of patients by a wristband "E4 wristband" permitting real-time physiological data acquisition: Motor Activity (in steps/day)
Time frame: At baseline ans at 3 months follow-up
Endpoints of the ancillary study: RESIST-EXP
These parameters will be measured on a sub-group of patients by a wristband "E4 wristband" permitting real-time physiological data acquisition: Skin conductance (in Micro Siemens)
Time frame: At baseline ans at 3 months follow-up
Endpoints of the ancillary study: RESIST-EXP
These parameters will be measured on a sub-group of patients by a wristband "E4 wristband" permitting real-time physiological data acquisition: Skin temperature (in °C)
Time frame: At baseline ans at 3 months follow-up
Endpoints of the ancillary study: RESIST-QUAL
Acceptability (questionnaire for all parents and qualitative interview in a subsample
Time frame: After 3 months follow-up
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