Background <p>Group therapies address the growing treatment demand-supply gap for depression. This study evaluated whether the novel WISE-Therapy (WISE-T; What’s Important: Schedule and Engage) and Bouldering Psychotherapy (BPT) are more effective in reducing depressive symptoms in an outpatient group therapy setting than treatment as usual (TAU).</p> Methods <p>This randomized, controlled, assessor-blinded, longitudinal, clinical trial was conducted in a naturalistic monocentric setting in Erlangen (Germany) between April 2022 and March 2023, with follow-up until July 2024. 128 adults were randomly assigned to WISE-T (44), BPT (40), or TAU (44). In 10 weekly 2-hour group sessions, WISE-T focused on identifying what is important, scheduling meaningful activities, and engaging in them for long-term mental health, and BPT combined psychotherapy with bouldering, while the control group received TAU. Depression severity was measured with the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale at baseline, post-intervention, and one-year follow-up, and analyzed with a hybrid marginal model.</p> Results <p>Both intervention groups showed significantly greater reduction in depressive symptoms than controls at post-intervention (WISE-T: -5.5 points, 95%-CI [-9.5 to -1.5], P = .007, d = 0.62; BPT: -4.2 points, 95%-CI [-8.2 to -0.3], P = .037, d = 0.48). Response rates were 35.3% for WISE-T, 29.7% for BPT, and 21.1% for controls. Remission rates were significantly higher in WISE-T (17.6%) than in controls (2.6%, P = .047). Treatment adherence was good with minimal adverse events reported. The secondary outcomes showed significant results for anxiety, sense of coherence, self-efficacy, and mindfulness during physical activity.</p> Conclusions <p>Both interventions demonstrated efficacy in reducing depressive symptoms compared with controls in this single-center setting. The study supports the integration of both therapies into outpatient care settings.</p> Trial registration <p>Study procedures received approval from the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg Ethics Committee (Ref. 21-332-B) on December 13, 2021. The Trial was preregistered in March 2022 via <a href="https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN12347878">ISRCTN12347878</a>.</p>

错误:搜索内容不能为空,请输入英文关键词
错误:关键词超出字数限制,请精简
高级检索

WISE-Therapy (What’s Important: Schedule and Engage) and bouldering psychotherapy for depression: A randomized clinical trial

  • Johannes Kornhuber,
  • Piotr Lewczuk,
  • Eva-Maria Siegmann,
  • Sophia Schneider,
  • Lola Eversmann,
  • Leona Kind,
  • Katharina Luttenberger

摘要

Background

Group therapies address the growing treatment demand-supply gap for depression. This study evaluated whether the novel WISE-Therapy (WISE-T; What’s Important: Schedule and Engage) and Bouldering Psychotherapy (BPT) are more effective in reducing depressive symptoms in an outpatient group therapy setting than treatment as usual (TAU).

Methods

This randomized, controlled, assessor-blinded, longitudinal, clinical trial was conducted in a naturalistic monocentric setting in Erlangen (Germany) between April 2022 and March 2023, with follow-up until July 2024. 128 adults were randomly assigned to WISE-T (44), BPT (40), or TAU (44). In 10 weekly 2-hour group sessions, WISE-T focused on identifying what is important, scheduling meaningful activities, and engaging in them for long-term mental health, and BPT combined psychotherapy with bouldering, while the control group received TAU. Depression severity was measured with the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale at baseline, post-intervention, and one-year follow-up, and analyzed with a hybrid marginal model.

Results

Both intervention groups showed significantly greater reduction in depressive symptoms than controls at post-intervention (WISE-T: -5.5 points, 95%-CI [-9.5 to -1.5], P = .007, d = 0.62; BPT: -4.2 points, 95%-CI [-8.2 to -0.3], P = .037, d = 0.48). Response rates were 35.3% for WISE-T, 29.7% for BPT, and 21.1% for controls. Remission rates were significantly higher in WISE-T (17.6%) than in controls (2.6%, P = .047). Treatment adherence was good with minimal adverse events reported. The secondary outcomes showed significant results for anxiety, sense of coherence, self-efficacy, and mindfulness during physical activity.

Conclusions

Both interventions demonstrated efficacy in reducing depressive symptoms compared with controls in this single-center setting. The study supports the integration of both therapies into outpatient care settings.

Trial registration

Study procedures received approval from the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg Ethics Committee (Ref. 21-332-B) on December 13, 2021. The Trial was preregistered in March 2022 via ISRCTN12347878.