With more than 13% of adolescents diagnosed with depressive disorders each year,
prevention of depressive disorders has become a key priority for the National Institute
of Mental Health (NIMH). Unfortunately, the investigators have no widely available
interventions to reduce morbidity and mortality (e.g. public health impact). To address
this need, the investigators developed a multi-health system "collaboratory" to develop
and evaluate the primary care based technology "behavioral vaccine," Competent Adulthood
Transition with Cognitive-Behavioral Humanistic and Interpersonal Therapy (CATCH-IT) (14
adolescent, 5 parent modules). Using this health-system collaboratory model, the full
CATCH-IT program (all modules), demonstrated evidence of efficacy in prevention of
depressive episodes in phase-three clinical trials in the United States and China.
However, like many "package" interventions, CATCH-IT became larger and more complex
across efficacy trials. Thus, adolescents were less willing to complete all 14 modules,
suggesting adolescent dose "tolerability" issues (e.g., satisfaction, acceptability and
resource use, "time as cost"). Similarly, primary care practices have "scalability"
challenges (acceptability, feasibility, resource use, cost), resulting in declining REACH
(percent of at-risk youth who complete intervention). To prepare for implementation
studies and dissemination, the investigators need to address adolescent tolerability and
practice/health system scalability, while preserving efficacy. Multiphase Optimization
Strategy (MOST) uses a systematic analytic approach and a factorial randomized clinical
trial design to address efficacy, tolerability, and scalability, simultaneously. The
investigators will use a MOST approach to optimize CATCH-IT for the prevention of
depression (indicated prevention, i.e., elevated symptoms of depression) in practices and
health systems representative of US geography and population. The theoretically grounded
components of CATCH-IT selected for study and optimization include: behavioral
activation, cognitive-behavioral therapy, interpersonal psychotherapy, and parent
program. The investigators will use a 4-factor (2x2x2x2) fully crossed factorial design
with N=16 cells (25 per cell, 15% dropout) to evaluate the contribution of each
component. The investigators propose to randomize N=400 adolescents from multiple sites:
Advocate-Aurora Health Care (n=200); Lurie Children's Hospital (n=70); NorthShore
University HealthSystem (n=70); University of Chicago Comer Hospital (n=25); University
of Texas (n=20); University of Illinois College of Medicine Peoria (n=15). The at-risk
youth will be high school students 13 through 18 years old, not currently experiencing a
mood disorder, but with subsyndromal symptoms of depression (moderate to high risk).
Using the efficient factorial design, the investigators can assess the contribution to
prevention efficacy of each component. Thus, the MOST study design will enable us to
eliminate non-contributing components while preserving efficacy and to optimize CATCH-IT
by strengthening tolerability and scalability by reducing "resource use." By reducing
resource use, the investigators anticipate satisfaction and acceptability will also
increase, preparing the way for an implementation trial and eventual US Preventive
Services Task Force endorsement to support dissemination. Thus, the primary question is
whether one component, or perhaps two, can demonstrate an equivalent effect to
combinations of other components in terms of efficacy, whilst also demonstrating superior
adolescent/family tolerability scalability over a 12-month follow-up.