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Telemedicine-Delivered Unified Protocol for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Anxiety and Depression

NCT05734313 · Albert Einstein College of Medicine
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Official title
Telemedicine-Delivered Unified Protocol for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Anxiety and Depression in Young Adults With Type 1 Diabetes
About this study
The efficacy of the Unified Protocol for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (UP-CBT) combined with commercial FDA-approved Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) will be tested in comparison to CGM only in a randomized controlled clinical trial. The central hypothesis is that the addition of the UP-CBT intervention will yield clinically significant improvements in anxiety and depressive symptom severity and glycemic control relative to CGM alone. We will recruit 94 adults (age 18-64) with suboptimally controlled type 1 diabetes and an anxiety or depressive disorder from a national population for an entirely virtual 12-month study over five years, with targeted recruitment of racial/ethnic minorities. In addition to standard measurement of hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) for glycemic control and validated patient-reported outcome (PRO) surveys, the study integrates momentary psychological and behavioral data via smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment (EMA) with CGM data to assess day-to-day changes in affect, self-management, and glycemia over the course of the trial. Qualitative information will be collected from people with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) ages 35-64 to solicit suggestions and inform future study decisions. We will create 2-4 focus groups to ask their impressions about our current study and to explore key factors like establishing adult care and attending medical appointments, disease self-management, and adjusting to chronic disease. We will compare interview responses from participant groups who have high vs. low social needs and poor vs. good glycemic control.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: * Type 1 diabetes (T1D) duration ≥ 6 months * 18-64 years old * English- or Spanish-speaking * Anxiety or depressive mood disorder as per structured diagnostic interview. Exclusion Criteria: * Developmental or sensory disability interfering with participation * Current pregnancy * Bipolar disorders, psychotic disorders, severe eating disorders, severe substance abuse disorders, or acute suicidal risk or self-harm * Use of medications or recent medical procedures that would impact glycemic control or use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) over the study * Received cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in last year or plans to initiate CBT; (6) temporary exclusion for recent initiation of psychotropic medication - must be on a stable dose for 6 weeks prior to enrollment.
Study design
Enrollment target: 94 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: single
Age groups: adult
Timeline
Starts: 2023-03-31
Estimated completion: 2027-12
Last updated: 2025-10-30
Interventions
Behavioral: Unified protocol for cognitive behavioral therapy (UP-CBT)Device: Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM)
Primary outcomes
  • Anxiety symptom severity (Baseline and midway through treatment (3 months), immediately post-treatment (5.5 months) and 9- and 12- months post-baseline)
  • Depressive symptom severity (Baseline and midway through treatment (3 months), immediately post-treatment (5.5 months) and 9- and 12- months post-baseline)
Sponsor
Albert Einstein College of Medicine · other
With: Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, DexCom, Inc.
Contacts & investigators
ContactJeffrey Gonzalez, PhD · contact · jeffrey.gonzalez@yu.edu · 646-592-4506
ContactKeyla Ordonez, BS · contact · keyla.ordonez@einsteinmed.edu · 631-747-9325
InvestigatorJeffrey Gonzalez, PhD · principal_investigator, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
All locations (2)
Boston UniversityRecruiting
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Albert Einstein College of MedicineRecruiting
The Bronx, New York, United States