Group Therapy for Fibromyalgia:the Effectiveness of Mindfulness -Based VS Cognitive-behavioral Therapy

  • STATUS
    Recruiting
  • participants needed
    90
  • sponsor
    Bar-Ilan University, Israel
Updated on 16 February 2024
anxiety
psychotherapy
behavior therapy
depression
chronic pain
behavioral therapy
fibromyalgia
seizure
group therapy
pain disorder
ache

Summary

Fibromyalgia is a chronic pain disorder, highly co-morbid with depression, stress, and anxiety. the investigators aim to examine the effect of group cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) among fibromyalgia patients. the investigators will also examine which intervention fits which patient, according to one's individual characteristics, in hope that this would enable Maccabi to offer personalized treatment. Furthermore, the investigators wish to identify the underlying cognitive and psychopathological mechanisms (measured during treatment) by which each intervention works.

Description

Fibromyalgia is a chronic pain disorder, highly co-morbid with depression, stress, and anxiety. the investigators aim to examine the effect of group cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) among fibromyalgia patients. the investigators will also examine which intervention fits which patient, according to one's individual characteristics, in hope that this would enable Maccabi to offer personalized treatment. Furthermore, the investigators wish to identify the underlying cognitive and psychopathological mechanisms (measured during treatment) by which each intervention works.

First, the investigators expect that CBT and MBI will lead to greater improvement in physical, psychological, and behavioral measures among fibromyalgia patients compared to waitlist controls. Second, the investigators expect that MBI and CBT will have a differential effect, so that some outcome variables will show greater improvement following one intervention, but not the other. Furthermore, factors such as age, illness duration, symptom severity, and initial psychopathology levels will affect one's level of improvement following these interventions. Finally, the investigators expect to identify differential mechanisms driving each intervention. The study is a randomized controlled trial (RCT), including 90 fibromyalgia patients, randomly assigned to 3 conditions: (1) Group CBT (n=30), (2) MBI (n=30), (3) Waitlist control group, subsequently assigned to treatment (n=30). Participants will complete selfreport questionnaires tapping psychological (depression, stress), cognitive (observing negative experiences "from afar", cognitive flexibility towards pain) and physical (pain, body awareness) aspects, at 4 assessments: pre-/during/post- treatment, and 3 months after treatment.

To date, no RCT comparing CBT and MBI for fibromyalgia was conducted. Comparing them would be highly important, as they are the two most notable psychological interventions for chronic pain conditions. This study would enable Maccabi to offer improved psychological services for fibromyalgia. Furthermore, group therapy may serve as an effective treatment meeting both Maccabi's needs (a short, economic intervention) and patients' needs (a condition-specific treatment, offering group support and stigma reduction).

Details
Condition Fibromyalgia, Fibromyalgia, Endogenous depression, Depression, Depression, dyssomnia, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Stress
Age 18years - 70years
Treatment cognitive behavioral group therapy, Mindfulness-based group therapy
Clinical Study IdentifierNCT04265196
SponsorBar-Ilan University, Israel
Last Modified on16 February 2024

Eligibility

Yes No Not Sure

Inclusion Criteria

Patients diagnosed with fibromyalgia
Hebrew speakers

Exclusion Criteria

Patients who are actively suicidal
Patients who suffering from psychotic status
Patients who are chronically use addictive substances
Patients who had unusual cognitive or physical disability that would prevent them from participating in mindfulness exercises
Clear my responses

How to participate?

Step 1 Connect with a study center
Message sent successfully.
We have submitted the information you provided to the research team at the location you chose. For your records, we have sent a copy of the message to your email address.
If you would like to be informed of other studies that may be of interest to you, you may sign up for Patient Notification Service.
Sign up

Send a message

Enter your contact details to connect with study team

Investigator Avatar

Primary Contact

First name*
Last name*
Email*
Phone number*
Other language

Additional screening procedures may be conducted by the study team before you can be confirmed eligible to participate.

Learn more

If you are confirmed eligible after full screening, you will be required to understand and sign the informed consent if you decide to enroll in the study. Once enrolled you may be asked to make scheduled visits over a period of time.

Learn more

Complete your scheduled study participation activities and then you are done. You may receive summary of study results if provided by the sponsor.

Learn more

Similar trials to consider

Loading...

Browse trials for

Not finding what you're looking for?

Every year hundreds of thousands of volunteers step forward to participate in research. Sign up as a volunteer and receive email notifications when clinical trials are posted in the medical category of interest to you.

Sign up as volunteer
Add a private note
  • abc Select a piece of text.
  • Add notes visible only to you.
  • Send it to people through a passcode protected link.