Cognitive Behavioral Stress Management for HIV+ Drug Abusers
Cognitive Behavioral Treatment of HIV+ Drug Abusers
1 other identifier
interventional
450
0 countries
N/A
Brief Summary
The primary purpose of this 5-year study is to determine whether a Cognitive Behavioral Stress Management (CBSM) intervention, demonstrated to be effective in reducing distress, enhancing coping, and maintaining health among HIV+ non-drug abusers (see Schneiderman and Antoni, 2000), can be effectively adapted for our target population of culturally diverse, HIV+, low-income "Recovering Drug Abusers" (RDAs). Since the late 1980s, members of our research team (i.e., Schneiderman, Antoni, Klimas, Fletcher) have been developing, refining and evaluating the effects of CBSM among HIV+ Men who have Sex with Men (MSM). In the early/mid 90s, we began to adapt and evaluate the effects of CBSM in other non-drug abusing subgroups that were emerging with increasing levels of HIV seroprevalence (e.g., pregnant women, African American and Hispanic men and women). After accumulating considerable support for the effectiveness of CBSM in these subgroups in the late 90s, our research team (i.e., Malow, Schneiderman, Antoni, Klimas, Page) turned its attention to developing the CBSM for one of the most neglected and understudied populations affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic in this country: "inner city" minority drug abusers. With supplemental funding on two NIH grants to conduct formative stage1 pilot research, our project team has been able to develop and document the feasibility and potential promise of the CBSM approach adapted/translated for RDAs (CBSM-RDA). This application proposes to take the next logical step in continuing this work: conducting a 3, 6, 8, 10, and 12 month follow-up outcome study comparing CBSM-RDA with a matched attention, time and interest value Health Promotion Comparison (HPC) condition, in 225 male and 225 female HIV+ RDAs with respect to key biopsychosocial health endpoints: distress (i.e., depressive symptoms, and mood state), quality of life, drug abuse relapse, unsafe sex, Combination Antiretroviral Therapy (CART) medication adherence and health status indicators (e.g., Viral Load, CD4 count, physical symptoms).
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P75+ for phase_1
Started Sep 1999
Longer than P75 for phase_1
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
Study Start
First participant enrolled
September 1, 1999
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
August 1, 2007
CompletedFirst Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
July 23, 2008
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
July 25, 2008
CompletedJanuary 11, 2017
July 1, 2008
July 23, 2008
January 10, 2017
Conditions
Keywords
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (7)
To evaluate if CBSM-RDA produces therapeutic improvement in distress and quality of life indices to a greater extent than HPC.
SPECIFIC AIM 2: To evaluate if CBSM-RDA reduces drug abuse relapse to a greater extent than HPC.
SPECIFIC AIM 3: To evaluate if CBSM-RDA reduces unsafe sex to a greater extent than HPC.
SPECIFIC AIM 4: To evaluate if CBSM-RDA enhances CART adherence to a greater extent than HPC.
SPECIFIC AIM 5: To evaluate if CBSM-RDA enhances health status to a greater extent than HPC.
SPECIFIC AIM 6: To evaluate the extent to which key variables may mediate the relationships between our intervention and endpoints.
SPECIFIC AIM 7: To evaluate the extent to which key variables moderate the relationships between our intervention and endpoints.
Interventions
Eligibility Criteria
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Sponsors & Collaborators
MeSH Terms
Conditions
Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Officials
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Robert M. Malow, PhD
Florida International University
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- phase 1
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Masking
- SINGLE
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Intervention Model
- PARALLEL
- Sponsor Type
- NIH
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
July 23, 2008
First Posted
July 25, 2008
Study Start
September 1, 1999
Study Completion
August 1, 2007
Last Updated
January 11, 2017
Record last verified: 2008-07