Effects of Internet-delivered cognitive behavioural therapy adapted for patients with cardiovascular disease and depression: a long-term follow-up of a randomized controlled trial at 6 and 12 months posttreatment

European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

21 January 2022
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Abstract

AbstractBackground

Internet-based cognitive behavioural treatment (iCBT) has shown positive short-term effects on depression in patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, knowledge regarding long-term effects and factors that may impact the effect of iCBT is lacking.

Aims

This study therefore sought (i) to evaluate the effect of iCBT on depression in CVD patients at 6- and 12-month follow-ups and (ii) to explore factors that might impact on the effect of iCBT on change in depression at 12-month follow-up.

Methods and results

A longitudinal follow-up study of a randomized controlled trial evaluating the effects of a 9-week iCBT programme compared to an online discussion forum (ODF) on depression in CVD patients (n = 144). After 9 weeks, those in the ODF group were offered the chance to take part in the iCBT programme. The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and the Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale—self-rated version (MADRS-S) measured depression at baseline, 9 weeks, 6 months, and 12 months. Linear mixed model and multiple regression analysis were used for statistical computing. The iCBT programme significantly improved depression at 9-week follow-up and this was stable at 6- and 12-month follow-ups (PHQ-9 P = 0.001, MADRS-S P = 0.001). Higher levels of depression at baseline and a diagnosis of heart failure were factors found to impact the effect of iCBT on the change in depression.

Conclusion

A 9-week iCBT programme in CVD patients led to long-term improvement in depression. Higher levels of depression scores at baseline were associated with improvement in depression, whereas heart failure had opposite effect.

Clinical trial

The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02778074.

Contributors

Mats Westas
Mats Westas

Author

Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences (HMV) Norrkoping , Sweden

Johan Lundgren
Johan Lundgren

Author

Linkoping University Norrkoping , Sweden

Ghassan Mourad
Ghassan Mourad

Author

Linkoping University Linkoping , Sweden

Peter Johansson
Peter Johansson

Author

Linkoping University Norrkoping , Sweden

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