TrialPath
← Back to searchRecruiting

Positive Processes and Transition to Health (PATH)

NCT06093906 · Case Western Reserve University
In plain English

Click the button to translate this study into plain language — what it is, who qualifies, and what participation looks like.

Official title
Treatment of Stress-Related Psychopathology: Targeting Maladaptive and Adaptive Event Processing
About this study
Evidence-based psychotherapies for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression consistently produce strong, clinically meaningful effects for many individuals. However, these interventions also have significant dropout rates, a large minority of individuals continue to have debilitating symptoms, and even those who respond may be vulnerable to relapse upon future stressors. More efficient and mechanistically precise interventions are needed. Consistent with the cross-cutting theme of studying the role of the environment in the NIMH Strategic Plan, the etiological role of exposure to destabilizing, stressful life events is common to both PTSD and depression. Not only do they share common distress-related triggers, symptoms, and maintaining processes, but they also commonly co-occur (upwards of 60%). Current PTSD and depression treatments typically focus on their respective disorders rather than on common processes that maintain psychopathology; and, importantly, they do not explicitly target positive adaptive processes associated with resilience. Decades of experimental studies, prospective studies, and psychotherapy trials have identified interconnected maladaptive and adaptive processes associated with persistent psychopathology after stressful, destabilizing events. These maladaptive processes include: 1) unproductive event processing; 2) avoidance; and 3) reward sensitivity and processing deficits. These processes prolong negative mood, interfere with adaptive coping and processing of emotional material, and increase sensitivity to future stressful life events. PATH (Positive Processes and Transition to Health) directly targets these maladaptive processes while also teaching parallel adaptive skills (constructive processing, approach, and positive emotion processing and reward seeking). Six, 90-min sessions target individuals who have experienced a destabilizing life event and have persistent stressor-related symptoms. PATH utilizes life event processing (revisiting, meaning making), focusing repeatedly on an identified destabilizing life event, positive life events, and future events as a framework to identify maladaptive processes and teach constructive processing skills. PATH has the potential to reduce dropout, improve treatment engagement and outcomes, identify potential treatment mechanisms, and ultimately reduce the costly human and economic burden of stressor-related psychopathology. For the open trial's "Go" to be achieved and to proceed to the R33, two criteria must be met. The first is that at least 2 of the 3 primary targets must change via PATH. A moderate effect size (d = 0.60) was chosen to reflect evidence of clinically meaningful target engagement (see Gold et al., 2017), in line with NIMH guidelines for a preliminary signal of target engagement/efficacy in intervention trials. Second, at least one of the secondary measures must show a moderate effect (d = 0.50) from pre- to post-treatment. The investigators included measures of each of the targets, as they are conceptualized as interrelated parts of a "stuck" system. For "Go" to an R01 after the R33, in addition to target engagement, primary outcomes of PTSD and depression must show clinically meaningful gains (e.g., Barth et al., 2016; Cusak et al., 2016). In the R33 phase, if the investigators achieve the "Go" criteria, the investigators will conduct a randomized controlled trial comparing PATH to PMR. PMR is a commonly used control condition that is rated as credible and helpful by patients. PMR will consist of six 60-90 minute sessions, focusing on stress management.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: * Destabilizing life event involving profound loss or threat, with a minimum duration of 12 weeks since the event, but occurred within the last 5 years. * Between the ages of 18 and 65. * Elevated target: Scores of at least moderate (1 or higher) on at least 2 of the 3 target mechanisms: re- experiencing or ruminative processing of the destabilizing event (PSS-I items: 1, 2, 3, 4 or QIDS-C item 11), avoidance (PSS-I items 6, 7, 8), or reward deficits (PSS-I items 12, 13, or QIDS-C item 13). Exclusion Criteria: * Current diagnosis of schizophrenia, delusional disorder, or organic mental disorder as defined by DSM-5. * Current diagnosis of bipolar disorder, depression with psychotic features, or depression severe enough to require immediate psychiatric treatment (i.e., serious suicide risk with intent and plan). * Severe self-injurious behavior or suicide attempt within the previous three months. * Unwilling or unable to discontinue current cognitive behavioral psychotherapy. * No clear memory of the destabilizing event or event occurred before age 3. * Unstable dose of psychotropic medications in prior 3 months. * Ongoing intimate relationship with the perpetrator (in assault related event). * Current diagnosis of a substance use disorder (DSM-5).
Study design
Enrollment target: 135 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: single
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2023-09-12
Estimated completion: 2026-06-30
Last updated: 2025-07-30
Interventions
Behavioral: Positive Processes and Transition to HealthBehavioral: Progressive Muscle Relaxation
Primary outcomes
  • Affective Updating Task (Change from baseline score at 6 weeks (immediately post treatment))
  • Idiographic Behavioral Approach Task (Change from baseline score at 6 weeks (immediately post treatment))
  • Probabilistic Reward Task (Change from baseline score at 6 weeks (immediately post treatment))
Sponsor
Case Western Reserve University · other
With: University of Washington, University of Delaware, National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Contacts & investigators
ContactNoni Shemenski, BA · contact · ptsdlab@case.edu · 216-368-0338
InvestigatorNorah Feeny, PhD · principal_investigator, Case Western Reserve University
All locations (3)
University of DelawareRecruiting
Newark, Delaware, United States
Case Western Reserve UniversityRecruiting
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
University of WashingtonRecruiting
Seattle, Washington, United States
Positive Processes and Transition to Health (PATH) · TrialPath