This randomized controlled clinical trial will test a blended intervention that combines Executive Function Training with Cognitive-Behavioral Skills Training (E-CBSST). E-CBSST will be delivered to adults with late-life schizophrenia to determine if it increases Cognitive Behavioral Social Skills Training skills learning more than a supportive contact control condition and leads to improved functioning.
Optimizing Cognitive Behavioral Social Skills Training With Executive Function Training for Older Adults With Schizophrenia
Older adults with schizophrenia are at risk for cognitive and functional decline leading to premature institutionalization. A large and increasing number of older people with schizophrenia will need more effective services. The investigators previously tested a blended intervention that combines Executive Function Training (EFT) with Cognitive-Behavioral Skills Training (E-CBSST) and determined its efficacy for improving Cognitive Behavioral Social Skills Training (CBSST) learning and preventing functional decline in people with schizophrenia. CBSST combines Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Social Skills Training (SST), and problem-solving intervention modules in an 18-session, group-delivered intervention that is repeated to practice the skills for a total of 36 sessions. In an open trial, 54 participants with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder age 60 or older were enrolled to receive E-CBSST for 20 weeks. E-CBSST included an initial 2-week course of EFT that included 3 sessions per week of computerized exercises and strategy monitoring using a worksheet and assistance from a therapist. Participants then completed 2 cycles of E-CBSST with 18 sessions each cycle, delivered twice a week, during which participants received brief EFT at the start of CBSST group sessions. Results from this open trial showed that E-CBSST was feasible with acceptable retention and increased CBSST skills learning.
The current study will compare E-CBSST to a control condition combining supportive contact with EFT (E-SC) in a randomized clinical trial. The study aims include confirming target engagement by showing that E-CBSST enhances CBSST skills learning to a greater extent than E-SC and to determine whether functioning improves significantly in E-CBSST and to a greater extent than E-SC. The same 2-cycle dose of E-CBSST from the open trial will be used and E-SC will deliver the same number of EFT and supportive contact sessions. Outcome assessments will be administered at baseline, after the Executive Function Training course (Week 3), after the first cycle of E-CBSST (Week 13; mid-trial), after the end of the second cycle (Week 23; end-trial), and following a 9-month post-treatment follow-up period.
E-CBSST could become an evidence-based intervention that enhances and not only maintains function and, in turn, reduces personal and societal burden. If successful, the next logical step would be a confirmatory effectiveness trial in a larger sample.