Promoteur(s) :
Veterans Medical Research Foundation
Recrutement : ouvert
Centres participants
3
Dernière modification : 2025-04-21
DESCRIPTION DE L'ÉTUDE
Résumé de l'étude
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if receiving Trauma-Informed Guilt Reduction (TrIGR) Therapy is as effective as receiving Prolonged Exposure Therapy among veterans with PTSD and trauma related guilt. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Will TrIGR be comparable to PE in terms of PTSD symptom reduction? Will it TrIGR be comparable to PE in improving functioning and reducing depression symptoms? Will it be superior in improving trauma-related guilt and shame?
Source : Importé depuis le centre
Trauma-related guilt is common and impairing among trauma survivors. Guilt is positively associated with severity of PTSD and depression symptoms, poorer psychosocial functioning and suicide risk. Although existing evidence-based trauma-focused PTSD treatments such as Prolonged Exposure (PE) are effective in treating PTSD and trauma-related guilt, many still experience symptoms or maintain their diagnosis after treatment. Preliminary research shows that a brief treatment targeting trauma-related and moral injury-related guilt and shame, Trauma Informed Guilt Reduction Therapy (TrIGR), can reduce guilt, PTSD, depression, and distress among Veterans and help them reengage with meaningful activities. Whether TrIGR is comparably effective to longer, more resource heavy evidence-based PTSD treatments disseminated across DoD and VA, like PE, is a critical question.
The proposed randomized clinical trial aims to determine if TrIGR is non-inferior to a first tier PTSD treatment, PE. Hypotheses are that 6 sessions of TrIGR will be non-inferior to 12 sessions of PE in reducing PTSD symptom severity among Veterans with PTSD who endorse trauma-related guilt. Secondary aims are to evaluate the hypotheses that TrIGR will be non-inferiority relative to PE in improving psychosocial functioning and depression symptoms and superior in reducing trauma-related guilt and shame. The study will also explore treatment differences in change in suicidal ideation and dropout.
Participants will be recruited from mental health clinics across three VAs. 158 Veterans who served since 9/11 and with PTSD and guilt from any type of trauma will be included. TrIGR will be administered over 6 weekly sessions (60-minutes each) and PE will be administered over 12 weekly sessions (90 minutes each). Blind assessors will evaluate participants at baseline and 8-, 16-, and 28 weeks after the first therapy session. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are minimized so that generalizability will be high.
Source : Importé depuis le centre
RECRUTEMENT
Profil des participants
Limites d'âge
minimum : 18 ans
Sexe(s) des participants
ALL
Source : Importé depuis le centre
Condition médicale (spécialité visée)
Domaine de recherche
Donnée non disponible
Critères de sélection
Cohortes
Nom
Condition médicale
Traitement
État du recrutement
trauma Informed Guilt Reduction Therapy
6 session behavioral intervention focused on trauma-related guilt, shame, and moral injury
Donnée non disponible
Inconnu
Prolonged Exposure Therapy
12 session behavioral intervention focused on PTSD symptoms
Donnée non disponible
Inconnu
trauma Informed Guilt Reduction Therapy
État du recrutement
unknown
6 session behavioral intervention focused on trauma-related guilt, shame, and moral injury
Prolonged Exposure Therapy
État du recrutement
unknown
12 session behavioral intervention focused on PTSD symptoms
* U.S. Veterans age 18 or older who served in the military since the start of Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom; OEF/OIF)
* meets diagnostic criteria for PTSD;
* a score of 2 or higher ("true" to "extremely true") on feeling trauma-related guilt much or all of the time or scoring 3 or higher ("very true" or "extremely true") on at least one guilt cognition factor (hindsight bias/responsibility, wrongdoing, or lack of justification) on the Trauma Related Guilt Inventory
* not currently receiving trauma-focused treatment such as PE or CPT
* willingness to attend psychotherapy and assessment sessions
Exclusion Criteria:
* current risk of suicidal/homicidal behavior that requires immediate intervention
* current severe substance use disorder (in the past two months) based on DSM-5 criteria
* current unmanaged psychosis or mania
* life threatening or unstable medical illness
* inability to read
Source : Importé depuis le centre
Cohortes
Thérapie ou Intervention proposée
Cohortes
Nom
Condition médicale
Traitement
État du recrutement
trauma Informed Guilt Reduction Therapy
6 session behavioral intervention focused on trauma-related guilt, shame, and moral injury
Donnée non disponible
Inconnu
Prolonged Exposure Therapy
12 session behavioral intervention focused on PTSD symptoms
Donnée non disponible
Inconnu
trauma Informed Guilt Reduction Therapy
État du recrutement
unknown
6 session behavioral intervention focused on trauma-related guilt, shame, and moral injury
Prolonged Exposure Therapy
État du recrutement
unknown
12 session behavioral intervention focused on PTSD symptoms
Données à jour depuis :
21 avril 2025
Description de l'étude
Description de l'étude
Résumé de l'étude
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if receiving Trauma-Informed Guilt Reduction (TrIGR) Therapy is as effective as receiving Prolonged Exposure Therapy among veterans with PTSD and trauma related guilt. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Will TrIGR be comparable to PE in terms of PTSD symptom reduction? Will it TrIGR be comparable to PE in improving functioning and reducing depression symptoms? Will it be superior in improving trauma-related guilt and shame?
Source : Importé depuis le centre
Trauma-related guilt is common and impairing among trauma survivors. Guilt is positively associated with severity of PTSD and depression symptoms, poorer psychosocial functioning and suicide risk. Although existing evidence-based trauma-focused PTSD treatments such as Prolonged Exposure (PE) are effective in treating PTSD and trauma-related guilt, many still experience symptoms or maintain their diagnosis after treatment. Preliminary research shows that a brief treatment targeting trauma-related and moral injury-related guilt and shame, Trauma Informed Guilt Reduction Therapy (TrIGR), can reduce guilt, PTSD, depression, and distress among Veterans and help them reengage with meaningful activities. Whether TrIGR is comparably effective to longer, more resource heavy evidence-based PTSD treatments disseminated across DoD and VA, like PE, is a critical question.
The proposed randomized clinical trial aims to determine if TrIGR is non-inferior to a first tier PTSD treatment, PE. Hypotheses are that 6 sessions of TrIGR will be non-inferior to 12 sessions of PE in reducing PTSD symptom severity among Veterans with PTSD who endorse trauma-related guilt. Secondary aims are to evaluate the hypotheses that TrIGR will be non-inferiority relative to PE in improving psychosocial functioning and depression symptoms and superior in reducing trauma-related guilt and shame. The study will also explore treatment differences in change in suicidal ideation and dropout.
Participants will be recruited from mental health clinics across three VAs. 158 Veterans who served since 9/11 and with PTSD and guilt from any type of trauma will be included. TrIGR will be administered over 6 weekly sessions (60-minutes each) and PE will be administered over 12 weekly sessions (90 minutes each). Blind assessors will evaluate participants at baseline and 8-, 16-, and 28 weeks after the first therapy session. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are minimized so that generalizability will be high.