The gut-brain connection is important for good health and when it is disrupted it can worsen existing chronic disease. Studies have shown that chronic stress has negative effects on the gastrointestinal tract such as inflammation and disruption of the beneficial bacteria that live there. These negative effects of chronic stress can lead to flare-ups of IBD. Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) is a structured 8 week program that aims to reduce stress by teaching mindfulness techniques. Recent research in people living with IBD suggest that MBSR could improve their quality of life by reducing stress levels. The study aims to investigate the effects of MBSR on both the mental health of people living with IBD, and their physical health. We are studying people who are participating in an MBSR program as well as those receiving standard care at the QEII Health Sciences Centre. This study will assess how effective the MBSR program is compared to standard care at reducing distress and signs of stress and inflammation in people living with IBD. This study hopes to provide valuable insights into how mindfulness techniques could be used to support individuals living with IBD. Ultimately, this research aims to improve quality of life and health outcomes for people affected by this challenging condition.
Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), are chronic immune-mediated diseases that affect the gastrointestinal tract most often diagnosed in the second and third decades of life. IBD can have a deleterious impact on one's personal life, work and career trajectory, and mental and physical health over time. Untreated, IBD often leads to significant impairments in quality of life related to the effect of the disease on both mental and physical health . More than 30 percent of people living with IBD are also struggling with some form of psychological distress (PD) at any given time, which may be a result of the disease or independent of IBD. Forms of PD include, but are not limited to, anxiety, depression, and disease-related stress. . Although psychotherapy interventions have been the main focus for management of psychological distress in IBD, a growing body of literature focusing on mindfulness based interventions (MBIs) in IBD exists . MBI interventions center around the development of greater capacity for "awareness that arises through paying attention, on purpose, in the present moment, non-judgementally". Greater capacity to default to present moment awareness rather than a future focus, specifically, excessive worrying (fuels anxiety) or backward gazing, specifically ruminating (predisposes to depression) has the potential to significantly improve chronic disease-related distress in persons living with IBD. One of the most well-defined, evidence-based MBIs is a structured, standardized, 8-week curriculum centered on experiential learning and mindfulness practices called mindfulness-based stress reduction the promise of MBSR, many questions remain unanswered. Variability in IBD patient populations studied, nature and severity of psychological distress, outcome measures, study design, and overall lack of mechanistic research in IBD are all gaps in existing research that need to be addressed. The benefit of MBSR to target the brain-gut axis and as an adjunctive therapy is also unclear. The Nova Scotia collaborative IBD program is running an 8-week MBSR program for people in N.S. living with IBD. With this prospective observational cohort study, we plan to evaluate how effective this program is in improving quality of life and reducing stress biomarkers and psychological stress scores for adult patients with IBD. This study will compare health outcomes of patients who participated in an MBSR program run by qualified MBSR teachers affiliated with the NSCIBD to a group of patients who've received standard of care. The overall objectives of this study are to: 1. Evaluate the early effectiveness of the 8-week MBSR program and 2. Collect and analyze biological and microbial markers of systemic and intestinal inflammation to understand MBSR-mediated psychological, disease-related, immunologic, neurohormonal, and microbiome impacts in persons living with mild to moderately active IBD compared to controls. This will be an open label, comparator controlled study in which patients with IBD will undergo random allocation to either standard of care + a stress reduction education educational video or standard care + an 8 week MBSR program (MBSR-IBD). MBSR is skills-based, experiential learning program in which participants attend weekly 2.5 hour sessions for 8 weeks plus one full day weekend session. Over the course of these sessions participants learn mindfulness-based skills including, but not limited to, formal and informal meditation. Inclusion criteria include participants 18 years of age or older, having a known diagnosis of IBD that is mildly to moderately active. Health outcome data on clinical disease activity, microbial diversity, and cytokine arrays will be prospectively collected. Psychological questionnaires will also be collected. Data on disease activity, duration, phenotype, as well as medication and surgical history will be collected via targeted chart review.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
70
Mindfulness based stress reduction (MBSR) course. Participants will complete this course, which will have weekly sessions over Zoom (group format) over 8 weeks. Homework exercises will also be part of the course.
Educational stress reduction video
QEII Health Sciences Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Psychological distress (GAD7)
Participant psychological distress, measured by the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Assessment (GAD7) scale
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
Psychological distress (GAD7)
Participant psychological distress, measured by the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Assessment (GAD7) scale
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
Psychological distress (PHQ9)
Participant psychological distress, measured by the eight-item Patient Health Questionnaire depression (PHQ9) scale
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
Psychological distress (PHQ9)
Participant psychological distress, measured by the eight-item Patient Health Questionnaire depression (PHQ9) scale
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
IBD Related quality of life score (SIBDQ)
IBD Related quality of life score, measured by the Short Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire (SIBDQ)
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
IBD Related quality of life score (SIBDQ)
IBD Related quality of life score, measured by the Short Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire (SIBDQ)
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
General quality of life score (SF-36)
General quality of life score, measured by the SF-36 questionnaire
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
General quality of life score (SF-36)
General quality of life score, measured by the SF-36 questionnaire
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
Mindfulness (FFMQ)
Participant mindfulness, measured by the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ)
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
Mindfulness (FFMQ)
Participant mindfulness, measured by the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ)
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
Resilience (CD-RISC)
Participant psychological resilience, measured by the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC)
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
Resilience (CD-RISC)
Participant psychological resilience, measured by the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC)
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
Participant Self efficacy score (NGSE Scale)
Self-efficacy, measured by the New General Self Efficacy Scale
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
Participant Self efficacy score (NGSE Scale)
Self-efficacy, measured by the New General Self Efficacy Scale (NGSE Scale)
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
Psychological Flexibility (compACT)
Participant psychological flexibility, measured by the Comprehensive assessment of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy processes (CompACT) scale
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
Psychological Flexibility (compACT)
Participant psychological flexibility, measured by the Comprehensive assessment of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy processes (CompACT) scale
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
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Participant Fatigue (FACIT-F)
Participant fatigue as measured by the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy - Fatigue (FACIT-F) Scale
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
Participant Fatigue (FACIT-F)
Participant fatigue as measured by the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy - Fatigue (FACIT-F) Scale
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
Fecal microbial diversity
Participant fecal microbial diversity, measured as laboratory based estimates of alpha diversity, beta-diversity, from processed fecal samples.
Time frame: Visit 1 (8 weeks post enrollment)
Fecal microbial diversity
Participant fecal microbial diversity, measured as laboratory based estimates of alpha diversity, beta-diversity, from processed fecal samples.
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)
Fecal microbial abundance
Participant fecal microbial abundance, measured as laboratory based estimates of relative abundance of individual amplicon sequence variants (ASVs)from processed fecal samples.
Time frame: Visit 1 (2 months post enrollment)
Fecal microbial abundance
Participant fecal microbial abundance, measured as laboratory based estimates of relative abundance of individual amplicon sequence variants (ASVs)from processed fecal samples.
Time frame: Visit 2 (6 months post enrollment)