Telemedicine Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Anxiety After Stroke: Proof-of-Concept Randomized Controlled Trial

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Disabling anxiety affects a quarter of stroke survivors but access to treatment is poor. We developed a telemedicine model for delivering guided self-help cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for anxiety after stroke (TASK-CBT). We aimed to evaluate the feasibility of TASK-CBT i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Stroke (1970) 2020-08, Vol.51 (8), p.2297-2306
Hauptverfasser: Chun, Ho-Yan Yvonne, Carson, Alan J., Tsanas, Athanasios, Dennis, Martin S., Mead, Gillian E., Calabria, Clementina, Whiteley, William N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Disabling anxiety affects a quarter of stroke survivors but access to treatment is poor. We developed a telemedicine model for delivering guided self-help cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for anxiety after stroke (TASK-CBT). We aimed to evaluate the feasibility of TASK-CBT in a randomized controlled trial workflow that enabled all trial procedures to be carried out remotely. In addition, we explored the feasibility of wrist-worn actigraphy sensor as a way of measuring objective outcomes in this clinical trial. METHODS:We recruited adult community-based stroke patients (n=27) and randomly allocated them to TASK-CBT (n=14) or relaxation therapy (TASK-Relax), an active comparator (n=13). RESULTS:In our sample (mean age 65 [±10]; 56% men; 63% stroke, 37% transient ischemic attacks), remote self-enrolment, electronic signature, intervention delivery, and automated follow-up were feasible. All participants completed all TASK-CBT sessions (14/14). Lower levels of anxiety were observed in TASK-CBT when compared with TASK-Relax at both weeks 6 and 20. Mean actigraphy sensor wearing-time was 33 days (±15). CONCLUSIONS:Our preliminary feasibility data from the current study support a larger definitive clinical trial and the use of wrist-worn actigraphy sensor in anxious stroke survivors. REGISTRATION:URLhttps://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifierNCT03439813.
ISSN:0039-2499
1524-4628
DOI:10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.029042