Abstract

BackgroundPreventing recurrence of depression forms an important challenge for current treatments. Cognitive control impairments often remain present during remission of depression, putting remitted depressed patients at heightened risk for new depressive episodes by disrupting emotion regulation processes. Importantly, research indicates that cognitive control training targeting working memory functioning shows potential in reducing maladaptive emotion regulation and depressive symptomatology in clinically depressed patients and at-risk student samples. The current study aims to test the effectiveness of cognitive control training as a preventive intervention in a remitted depressed sample, exploring effects of cognitive control training on rumination and depressive symptomatology, along with indicators of adaptive emotion regulation and functioning.Methods/designWe present a double blind randomized controlled design. Remitted depressed adults will complete 10 online sessions of a cognitive control training targeting working memory functioning or a low cognitive load training (active control condition) over a period of 14 days. Effects of training on primary outcome measures of rumination and depressive symptomatology will be assessed pre-post training and at three months follow-up, along with secondary outcome measure adaptive emotion regulation. Long-term effects of cognitive control training on broader indicators of functioning will be assessed at three months follow-up (secondary outcome measures).DiscussionThis study will provide information about the effectiveness of cognitive control training for remitted depressed adults in reducing vulnerability for depression. Furthermore, this study will address key questions concerning the mechanisms underlying the effects of cognitive control training, will take into account the subjective experience of the patients (including a self-report measure for cognitive functioning), and explore whether these effects extend to broad measures of functioning such as Quality of Life and disability.Trial registrationThis study is registered with ClinicalTrials.Gov, number NCT02407652.

Highlights

  • Preventing recurrence of depression forms an important challenge for current treatments

  • This study will address key questions concerning the mechanisms underlying the effects of cognitive control training, will take into account the subjective experience of the patients, and explore whether these effects extend to broad measures of functioning such as Quality of Life and disability

  • Previous findings indicate that cognitive control training (CCT) shows potential in reducing depressive symptomatology and rumination in Major depressive disorder (MDD) as well as cognitive vulnerability in at-risk undergraduate students

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Summary

Introduction

Preventing recurrence of depression forms an important challenge for current treatments. Research indicates that cognitive control training targeting working memory functioning shows potential in reducing maladaptive emotion regulation and depressive symptomatology in clinically depressed patients and at-risk student samples. The current study aims to test the effectiveness of cognitive control training as a preventive intervention in a remitted depressed sample, exploring effects of cognitive control training on rumination and depressive symptomatology, along with indicators of adaptive emotion regulation and functioning. It has been suggested that reduced cognitive functioning — i.e., impaired regulation of working memory, or ‘cognitive control’ — is not merely a byproduct of depression, but places remitted depressed (RMD) patients in a distinct vulnerable position for recurrence of depression [5, 6]. This mechanism is believed to sustain and increase biological and cognitive vulnerability for recurrent depression (for a review, see [6])

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